At times during
lockdown, some Llangollen businesses were doing a week’s worth of business in a
day with no or few extra staff and little notice to stock up.
An exhausting,
but welcome, change following years of our independent retailers losing sales
to supermarkets and national chains. Some had to change their business models
overnight shifting from shopfronts to delivery, and some from wholesale to
selling direct to customers.
Through the member group Llangollen & Dee Valley Food & Drink (formerly the Good Grub Club) local businesses have released a thank you to everyone who has shopped locally during lockdown, and to explain why it is so important to keep doing so as lockdown eases.
It launches today linked to the Welsh Government’s #CaruCymruCaruBlas / LoveWalesLoveTaste campaign in partnership with Taste North East Wales under the hashtag #KeepLocalAlive / #CadwchLleolynFuw
Through the member group Llangollen & Dee Valley Food & Drink (formerly the Good Grub Club) local businesses have released a thank you to everyone who has shopped locally during lockdown, and to explain why it is so important to keep doing so as lockdown eases.
It launches today linked to the Welsh Government’s #CaruCymruCaruBlas / LoveWalesLoveTaste campaign in partnership with Taste North East Wales under the hashtag #KeepLocalAlive / #CadwchLleolynFuw
Robyn Lovelock, from
the group’s committee, explained: “When supermarkets couldn’t deliver back in
March, our local food and drink shops stepped up. They recruitedextra staff and
volunteers to ensure everyone was able to access essentials and more, and worked
so many overtime hours. Many local businesses worked together for the first
time and generally moved mountains to deliver up and down the valley.”
Tracey Hughes, from
Porters Delicatessen in Llangollen, said: “Expanding our home delivery service has been crucial in supplying our
regular customers and has helped us find new ones too. And working with other
local shops, particularly Dee Valley Produce, has also helped us reach more
customers than we would have been able to on our own.”
Rachel Burns,
from Rachels Vegan Cakes in Bwlchgwyn, has been overwhelmed with the demand and said: “I never expected to be so busy! People wanted to surprise or cheer
up friends, people with birthdays and all sorts. I've loved writing little
notes to people from their loved ones. I feel so grateful that people have
trusted me to make their friend or relatives day.”
This experience
in Llangollen and the Dee Valley are in line with national trends which,according to research from Barclaycard, has
found that food and drink specialist stores – off-licences, greengrocers,
independent convenience stores, butchers and bakeries – saw 38%increase in
consumer spending while overall spending fell by 37%.
But as we head out of lockdown, the local
business group wants to emphasise how much local businesses will be reliant on
their new-found support.
Jo Edwards, from Aballu Artisan Chocolates in Rossett,
describes the ways she has adapted and investments she has made in new systems
“We’ve offered free local deliveries, invested in a payment system that enables
our customers to pay using contactless or paying over-the-phone, and have
worked long hours to compensate for furloughed staff. It’s been a steep
learning curve for us, but I appreciate the support that people have given Aballu
by choosing to buy from us rather than a big online company, and hope they will
continue to do so."
Robyn says “We have to appreciate that
spending our money with these local businesses, perhaps buying less but buying
locally, means we are investing in our own community. These businesses have
proven through lockdown they are here for us, - for essentials, for treats, for
gifts.
"Our #KeepLocalAlive message thanks them for what they’ve done, as well as
emphasises all the other benefits that shopping locally can providesuch aspersonalisedcare
and attention, ability to order from a distance, quality of products,
convenience of delivery, and more.”
June Lister, a Dee
Valley Produce customer from Llandrillo, said: “Being in the
vulnerable category and living in a remote village, I was worried how I would
access regular supplies. Dee Valley Produce delivered to my door without fail
throughout lockdown, with payments over the phone, and have kept me healthy
throughout. It’s the personal attention that makes the difference, they know
who I am and care about my order. Supermarkets failed to provide that service
when I needed them most, and certainly cannot provide that level of customer
service”
The research from Barclaycard suggests that over half of shoppers want to
increase their support of non-essential local businesses, and the group is
hoping this is the case.
As people start to return to shops and high streets, Robyn Lovelock says the
message from the group is: “Customers
have seen they can trust local businesses to deliver what they want, safely and
reliably, even in a crisis.
"Let’s thank them for their support during lockdown
by continuing to shop with them as the new normal emerges."
* For more information
on the #KeepLocalAlive and the #CaruCymruCaruBlas campaigns and local food and
drink businesses, please follow Llangollen & Dee Valley Food & Drink on
social media @TasteDeeValley
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