OPINION28 March 2013

Saving the high street

Opinion

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Adopting a different approach to measuring and sharing shopper opinion could save the UK high street, says independent consultant Peter Shreeve.

The decline of the high street as a fully functioning and vibrant place for business is well documented. Such is the scale of the problem that retail expert Mary Portas was appointed by the government in 2011 to conduct an independent review.

Portas outlined many causes for the poor health of the high street. “The phenomenal growth of online retailing, the rise of mobile retailing, the speed and sophistication of the major national and international retailers, the epic and immersive experiences offered by today’s new breed of shopping mall, combined with a crippling recession, have all conspired to change today’s retail landscape,” she said.

“For the high street to survive, businesses need to start thinking longer-term and consider their impact on the broader retail environment”

The large number of recommendations outlined in the published report were reflective of the multiple stakeholders (councils, landlords, local communities, national brands, independent shopkeepers) who have an interest and some influence in making the changes required to save the high street: whether that’s easing restrictions in existing legislation, rethinking how decisions are made on the use of retail properties, the development of sites or the setting of rates.

Ultimately, collective action is needed. Portas wants to create “Town Teams” – what she describes as “visionary, strategic and strong operational management teams for high streets”. These teams will need to gather information about what high streets’ need in the context of a town’s broader strengths and uniqueness. It is the analysis of this data that will build the foundations for the Town Team’s vision.

Research to the rescue
Assuming it is possible to create effective Town Teams – and Portas’s 10 pilot schemes are trying to prove it is – providing access to and sharing secondary research data, like geodemographic profiles, would be useful.

Primary research could also be used to understand the barriers shoppers face in using the high street and to discover what high streets need to do to make them into vibrant places. In many situations a survey of locals would provide a good indication to an entrepreneur as to whether their business is viable. Perhas they could even present their business plan to the Town Team and test their ideas on townsfolk before committing to a long lease (like a community based Dragons’ Den)? This approach could help to improve their chances of survival.

Survey panels could be built up over time to represent the general community. Online surveys, discussion boards and focus groups should attain good levels of response given the vested interest in making the community’s high street a success.

Demand surveys and assessments of economic profitability are nothing new, of course, but they are normally driven by and are commissioned for the sole use of large retailers rather than being shared for the benefit of the broader trading community. For the high street to survive, businesses need to start thinking longer-term and consider their impact on the broader retail environment.

As Portas points out: “Responsible big businesses support and care about the high street. As well as government putting town centres first, businesses have a responsibility for considering their impact on the local area. Supporting high streets to thrive is an economic win for business but also a key part of their social responsibility”.

Perhaps clientside insight professionals working in retail should start considering ways in which they can help the high street as well as their own firm? Maybe agencies should be giving more back to the town’s where they work or where their executives live. Local knowledge and empathy combined with professional advice could help high street businesses make the right decisions.

Peter Shreeve is an independent research consultant