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Cash-strapped customers want better service from high street

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Published Date: 29 January 2009
HIGH street retailers are slashing prices to attract cash-strapped customers, but the key to keeping shoppers happy is offering a great customer experience, a survey released today says.
However, many of the stores ranked near the bottom of the Which? consumer group's poll of "Britain's best and worst shops" break the golden rules of good retailing and still entice customers through their doors.

Last night retail analysts said
these stores survived because "just enough" customers were willing to put up with poor service to bag bargains.

The survey of almost 100 stores, the biggest ever undertaken of the UK's high street, named Waitrose as Britain's favourite shop for the second year running.

Waitrose and its sister company John Lewis, regularly scored five stars of satisfaction for a high-quality environment, excellent staff and good product range from the 14,000 Which? members who took part.

By contrast, some of the larger stores came in the bottom ten in the survey including PC World, WH Smith and Topshop.

Least favourite were two of the UK's biggest sports shops, JJB and JD Sports, which were criticised by their customers for unpleasant shopping environments and bad customer service. Both scored a dismal one star for environment and staff, and a mediocre two stars for product.

Andrew Turnbull, a retail expert at the Aberdeen Business School at the Robert Gordon University in Aberdeen, explained why stores at the bottom of the league still attracted customers.

"Location is the answer.They are convenient for "just enough" people who might think it would be inconvenient for them to go elsewhere. Combine that availability, visibility and high footfall with the issues of costs such as parking and you have the major reason for their success.

"Also, while the standard of training and quality of service in these stores can be poorer overall, 'just enough' people, a sufficient number, are prepared to overlook these shortcomings to take advantage of the lower prices."

Mr Turnbull added: "The target audience is also important. Shops such as JD Sports and JJB Sports are likely to attract the much younger demographic who have a disposable income without the major financial outgoings such as mortgages of those in the older age range."

Last night Somerfield, Curry's Digital and JD Stores said they did not deserve their poor rankings.

A spokesman for Somerfield which has 850 supermarkets across the UK, including approximately 100 in Scotland, said: "We're clearly disappointed and our ranking doesn't reflect the 30,000 exit polls of customers carried out every quarter.

"We provide fresh produce food that is very competitive and a hell of a challenge.

"Our stock is monitored and varied according to how people shop in different locations. But we can't compete with large supermarkets, which have floor space for products such as electrical goods and clothes."

A spokesman for Curry's Digital, said the company was focusing on training more than 20,000 staff in its new service and product knowledge programme. "As our own research is telling us and as feedback from customers is confirming, we are moving in the right direction. We are confident that results in future surveys will reflect the real progress we are making."

A spokesman for JD Sports said: "We feel that this year's result does not reflect the progress made in the business to achieve our current levels of success and that it in no way reflects the view of our core consumers – our core consumer being on average significantly younger than that of the Which? readership base, which is aged 45+ and predominantly male."


Teenagers spoiling for fights and same old stuff on sale

ALEXA Murray, 41, a housewife from Edinburgh, is a regular shopper at JJB Sports which came second bottom of the Which? survey.

"I have two sons, aged 12 and ten, and they like to go to JJB Sports for trainers and football boots.

"I find it very overcrowded, making it difficult to walk in a straight line, which gets me angry before I've even started.

"There aren't enough staff, meaning waiting for ages to get the right size of boot brought out and then another long queue at the till."

Mrs Murray said she was tempted to shop elsewhere, but JJB Sports was the "shop of choice" for sporty youngers.

"I don't always feel comfortable, because on a number of occasions teenage customers have been on the brink of fighting."

• Steven MacDonald, 21, an IT student from Edinburgh, visits WH Smith about twice a year.

"I have an uncle who always sends me a £10 WH Smith voucher every birthday and Christmas.

"It is great that he still bothers about me but he has been doing this for the last ten years and I can never really find anything I want to buy.

"My first problem is that because I live centrally, I've got to get the bus out of town to a retail park with a WH Smith.

"Once I get there, it always seems to be the same old stuff – books, some CDs, notebooks, pens and endless pencil cases. I can get all those things anywhere.

"Without being ungrateful, it would be fine if I was into books. I usually end up spending the token on magazines and sweets that I could buy anywhere."

TOP TEN

1 Waitrose
2 John Lewis
3 Independent electrical
4= Lush
4= Independent home/garden
6 Independent entertainment
7 Aldi
8= Lidl
8= Waterstones
10 Independent sports/outdoor

BOTTOM TEN

1 JD Sports
2 JJB Sports
3 Curry's Digital
4= WHSmith
4= Curry's
5= Somerfield
5= Topshop/Topman
5= PC World
5= Sportsworld
5= Vodafone
5= Phones 4u



Page 1 of 1

 
1

Dave From Barra,

Western Isles 29/01/2009 07:35:18
Sorry, customers are skint now. No money anymore. It's all gone.

Be as well closing your doors and getting a job with Asda's because most of your stuff is luxury rather than necessity.

Thank GB for that.
2

Fecker,

29/01/2009 08:02:04
Aldi and Lidl in the top ten, I didn't know the jakies that frequesnt these establishments would be which members
3

gus1940,

Edinburgh 29/01/2009 08:14:15
#2

You sound like the sort of intellectual dwarf who votes Labour.
4

paulr,

edinburgh 29/01/2009 08:38:51
I wonder who paid for this rubbish,
waitrose????
good product range????
Expensive and poor product range, more like.
I live opposite a waitrose and I will travel the 5 miles to Asda or Sainsburys everytime for quality and value. I sometimes even go to Tesco.
5

Voice of reason,

EDINBURGH 29/01/2009 09:58:45
Waitrose is a gem of a shop , yes a bit procey but you get what you pay for ....and there is no riff-raff in the shop . The staff are excellent .
No coincidence that many of the worst rated shops are those likely to have the youngest , trendy staff .
6

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 29/01/2009 10:28:55
Buy cheap, pay dear still applies.

If you do still have money left and many people do it's an ideal time to shop around and get a proper bargain but the rule above is still fundamental. No point in getting a real steal if you're spending half your time trying to get whatever it is repaired or there's some fault needing a replacement.
7

drunken proffet,

Tassy 29/01/2009 10:35:06
The good old days when the customer was always right. Have to practice the fawning and bootlicking, your local shop assistant may have got out of the habit.
8

57vintage,

Keith 29/01/2009 12:03:04
Well done John Lewis.

A democratic and participative business model that shows that those who are made part of the organisation and made to feel so will produce a high quality of customer service.
9

Joe Macdelta.,

29/01/2009 16:34:28
I am not surprised that Sumerfield is in the bottom group, I made a complaint 5 years ago about the treatment of my grandson by one of their employees, I'm still waiting for an answer. I now refuse to enter one of their stores ever again, it wouldnt make eny difference how low their prices are reduced, poor staff attitude and dirty stores.
10

A.A.,

Dalkeith 29/01/2009 18:34:36
Bad manners and bad customer service is rife in Dalkeith.
I hate shopping in Lidl's. Most of their check out staff are miserable looking and don't even make eye contact. I wouldn't even bother shopping there if we had a good supermarket in Dalkeith.
One particular person in WH Smith is very snippy and bad mannered.
I could list a few unpleasant shops but it would take too long.

11

Douglas,

Bathgate 29/01/2009 18:51:19
It can be difficult to keep up that cheery front when having to deal with whey faced, skeletal, monosyllabic youth high on drink or drugs. Their greeting of choice 'awright man' followed by a barely intelligable mumble punctuated by f**k loses it's charm after a while.
12

Ewan Oosami,

29/01/2009 19:36:59
The bottom of the heap as far as customer service goes has got to be Ideal World the shopping channel. E-mails and letters go unanswered because they want you to use the rip-off 0870 number. Even when they manage to ring you they are surley (that is if you get one that can speak English)
13

Dragonhead,

Dalian,China 31/01/2009 02:48:17
In China,poor service means go somewhere else.
FREE buses to and from, big shopping complexes,Wal-Mart,Carrefour, Hua Lian,Hymal(Tescos)from multiple published bus routes,Maps out side the store,show routes and timings.
Buy say any household item, as minor as say a washline (complete with hangers,two wind up,wind down rails with 18 coat hangers on each).They come and install it at no extra cost as part of the purchase price.
Buy a bag of rice, a couple of boxes of kumara,potatoes or apples say at the local market, and it is delivered to the door,accompanied by you, at no extra cost.
Service?Now is the time to haggle with those same stores listed above or go somewhere else.They will either learn or go belly up.There choice.Either way you win.

 

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