Happy Snowy New Year - Well what a shambolic start to the year! It has not really been the weather for running a distribution business. It is the first week back after what seemed a very short break, and all hell is let loose. |
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Well what a shambolic start to the year! It has not really been the weather for running a distribution business. It is the first week back after what seemed a very short break, and all hell is let loose.
Author: Paul Hargreaves
Date: Jan 12, 2010 - 10:38:46 AM
Well what a shambolic start to the year! It has not really been the weather for running a distribution business. It is the first week back after what seemed a very short break, and all hell is let loose. Some shops having to close for a day or two due to no staff and others having to close due to no customers. Wholesalers like us trying to move heaven and earth to get customer’s deliveries out, drivers battling through the snow only to arrive at the farm shop half an hour after they have shut early for the day!
I would be interested to hear from retailers how much weeks like this affect your business. As a wholesaler I know we lost around 30-35% of turnover this week compared to what we would have done weather permitting. Clearly retailers also lose out, in some cases because they have to close, but do consumers come out and spend a bit more when they get out and about again as presumably they have a bit more in their pockets after being stuck at home for a few days? Let me know.
I would also be interested to hear how Christmas was for speciality food retailers this week. Our sales in the last quarter of 2009 were 20% up on the previous year’s figures, but, of course, we only know what has gone into the shops, not what goes through the tills. Generally though, through the places I have been since Christmas, there doesn’t seem to be masses of Christmas products on the 50% sales. Is this your experience?
The final few days before Christmas, again massively affected by the weather for us, were incredibly busy. Again we lost a whole day’s deliveries and had to send out 28 pallets one day just to clear some of the backlog. Customers were still ordering Christmas goods right up to 22nd December, which suggests to me considerably more optimism than 2008, when we had quite a lot of Christmas lines left in the warehouse at Christmas. This year there was virtually nothing! Great news for us!
Finally, an HR question! To pay or not to pay staff who don’t make it in on “snow days”. I take the view that we don’t pay those who don’t come in to work when it snows. To pay people anyway not only disincentivises staff to make the effort, but is a bit of a slap in the face for those who have braved hell and high water to get into work, albeit late. We give staff the opportunity to make up the time by working more hours when the weather is back to normal. Am I a harsh old sod or is this becoming general practice? I think the last couple of working weeks will move others to my position!
Visit the Speciality Bites Blog and read the original blog post by organic food supplier Paul Hargreaves
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