Continued rioting and public unrest across the UK at the beginning of last week led to a significant 4.8% decline in the number of shoppers visiting High Streets, as some town centre stores were vandalised and looted.
In parts of the north of England, footfall was down by as much as 12.9%.
On Wednesday 7 August, the number of people on the UKโs High Streets dropped by as much as 7.5% as consumers became concerned about a threatened new wave of far-right demonstrations that, fortunately, did not materialise.
These results from the real estate firm MRI Software reflect findings from the delivery expert Parcelhero that parcel shipments and home deliveries jumped by at least 2.5% in the first half of last week.
People chose to shop from the safety of their own homes and have items picked up rather than visit city centres.
Parcelheroโs Head of Consumer Research, David Jinks M.I.L.T., says: โAs was the case during the Covid pandemic, when shoppers grow wary of crowds or potential trouble, they often opt to shop online instead. Based on Parcelheroโs own figures and anecdotal information from our partner courier organisations and retailers, there was a marked uptick in online orders in the first half of last week when, usually, town centre stores would have been teeming with families on holiday.
โThis week, it seems that the impact of swift sentencing and rapid response policing has calmed the situation and consumer patterns seem to have returned to normal.
โAs well as supermarkets and shoe shops, what was particularly concerning was the number of attacks on corner shops and community pharmacies. More than half of the UKโs pharmacy teams are reported to have felt unsafe because of the unrest. Thatโs entirely unacceptable.
โThe number of summer shoppers should have soared last week as schools were out and family day trips should have been in full swing. Now, however, itโs likely that last weekโs High Street sales figures will be notably down on the same period last year, as well as down week-on-week.
โOnce again, though nobody wins under such circumstances, those stores with a combined High Street and online offering will have suffered the least overall drop in sales. The ability to offer a combined omnichannel approach to retail does give sellers some protection against events outside of their control.
โParcelheroโs influentialย reportย โ2030: Death of the High Streetโ has been discussed in Parliament. It reveals that retailers must develop an omnichannel approach, embracing both online and physical store sales.’
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