Connect with us

Headlines

Pet Pros, Don’t Be Like the Last Blockbuster Store Left in America

mm

Published

on

Be persistent, but change with the times.

In the current era of retail, you have to be persistent.

But you also have to change with the times, accepting — even embracing — changes to your business model and landscape.

Otherwise you could end up like the last Blockbuster video store in America.

The last two Blockbusters in Alaska are closing, the New York Post reports. That will leave just one store, located in Bend, OR.

“How exciting,” the store’s manager, Sandi Harding, told the Post, apparently without irony.

Harding said that there are “no plans on closing any time soon” and that the future is promising.

Advertisement

We wish Harding and the store’s owners luck. If history is a guide, they’ll need it.

The chain once had more than 4,500 stores in the U.S., but the growth of streaming services, automated kiosks and other innovations led to a decline in its rental model. The company declared bankruptcy in 2010 and many of its stores were acquired by Dish Network, with a few continuing to operate.

This week has brought headlines such as this one from the Chicago Tribune: “‘Why are you still here?’: Inside the last Blockbuster left in America.”

A choice line from the Tribune article: “Even the IBM computers are running the same floppy disks from the 1990s, [Harding] said, shocking the younger employees.”

Advertisement

So pet pros, don’t be like the last Blockbuster left standing. Brick-and-mortar retail is still very viable — millennials actually visit stores more than other generations do — but you do have to change with the times.

What are you doing to ensure your business stays relevant and thrives in an evolving retail environment? Leave your thoughts in the comments section below.

Read more at the New York Post

Advertisement

FEATURED VIDEO

NASC Media Spotlight

At first it was just an idea: Animal supplements needed the same quality control that human-grade supplements receive. But that was enough to start a movement and an organization —the National Animal Supplement Council — that would be dedicated to establishing a comprehensive path forward for the animal supplements industry. In this Media Spotlight interview, NASC’s president, Bill Bookout, talks to PETS+ interviewer Chloe DiVita about the industry today: Where it’s headed, what’s the latest focus and why it’s vital to gain the involvement of independent pet product retailers.

Promoted Headlines

Most Popular