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Sam Boal

It won't be anything like a normal Christmas but some retailers are hopeful online sales will keep things ticking over

Business owners wonder what the shortened seasonal lead-in will mean for them.

WITH ALL THE discussion this week about Level 5 and how it will impact on our Christmas experience this year, you would be forgiven for thinking Santa is coming down the chimney next week and not in two months’ time.

But for many businesses forced to close their doors to customers for the next six weeks, the latest round of public health restrictions has telescoped their traditional lead-in to the holiday.

It means they’re having to think long and hard about their priorities ahead of the seasonal rush.

“At this moment in time, we know that we will be able to sell books online. We don’t know that we’ll be able to open the shop to customers but we hope to,” says Galway bookseller Tómas Kenny.

“So we’re putting our eggs in the online basket at the moment.”

Alongside his family, Tómas runs Kenny’s Bookshop on the Tuam Road in Galway City.

Even if the Level 5 restrictions are lifted in early December, Kenny says he’ll be navigating uncharted waters.

“Generally, the first two weeks of December are absolutely insane. That’s our absolute best two weeks online for the entire year because people traditionally stop ordering online on about 14 or 15 December,” he explains.

“That’s the two weeks they’re talking about lifting the restrictions when — obviously everything going to plan — we might be able reopen our bookshop to customers.

“If we’re very busy online in those first weeks of December, it might be very difficult to divert resources to the shop.

“Now, it’s a happy problem to have too many orders but it’s definitely something I’m a bit worried about. It’s only going to be a three or four-week Christmas — are we funnelling all of the customers in too quickly?”

That says, he thinks the pandemic will have changed a lot of habits and he doesn’t see book lovers “pivoting totally back to retail at the December”.

“Even if there’s a decent amount of people coming into the shop, it won’t be anything approaching a ‘normal Christmas’. People are just going to be buying online — they’re just too nervous.”

Family business

If any family in business is well-placed to speak to the impact the pandemic has had on online sales, it’s the Kennys.

Having launched their first website in 1994, a year before Amazon, their bookshop can claim to be first in Ireland to have an online presence and one of the first in the world.

So even before Covid, online sales were a massive part of their revenue stream.

Kenny’s already sold a huge amount of books internationally, shipping to as many as 165 countries per year, Tómas says.

A large portion of that international business is gone, he explains, because the pandemic has made posting and shipping a lot more difficult.

Tómas doesn’t think it’s coming back either, at least not in the short-term.

But something very interesting has happened since March — Irish customers are doing more and more of their book shopping online.

All going well at Christmas, Kenny says, Irish online sales may have increased by 300% this year.

While he says he’s “not foolish enough or hopeful enough” to think that this increase will cover totally the loss of a chunk of his shop’s international business, it will make up for a lot.

Crucially, he thinks “the website itself is going to generate enough sales to keep everybody’s job here for the foreseeable future”.

Younger audience

Paraic Horkan is also hopeful that his Christmas plans will be saved by online sales.

He co-owns Horkans Garden Centres, operating four stores across the country, in Mayo, Galway, Sligo and Wicklow.

Garden centres, like bookshops, are also not included on the list of essential retailers published by the government this week.

Speaking to TheJournal.ie last Tuesday, Horkan said he was frustrated with the logic of the decision, which means he’ll have to pivot completely to online and collection services over the coming weeks.

“We do have a strong online presence and that traded very strongly during the early Covid period,” he said.

“In fairness, the younger — the families, the young couples and so on — did switch to buying their plants online are obviously not the same level, but we did have a relatively strong online business.”

The flipside, Horkan says, is that it’s “kind of unfair” to ask his older customers to buy things online if they’re not particularly “digitally aware”.

He anticipates a busy Christmas period, however, and he’s delighted to be able to keep staff on during the Level 5 restrictions.

“That’s our strategy at the moment. We’re going to maintain our staff during the six week period because we’re expecting a very, very busy December,” he said.

Like Kenny, Horkan things the pandemic has changed certain consumer habits, some for the better in his case.

Coming out of lockdown in the summer months, “we had a huge amount of people getting into gardening and visiting the garden centres,” Horkan explained.

He believes that interest will be maintained in the coming weeks.

“We expect to see a huge cohort of people going online but once we reopen, the fresh Christmas trees will be in,” he added

“So we’ll bear the six weeks. We’ll get through it with the expectation that we’ll have a fantastic December.”

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    Mute Vladimir Macro
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    Oct 25th 2020, 7:42 AM

    A severe dose of reality is needed. Most small retail will not survive after Christmas.

    Bottles of vodka are essential.
    Childrens clothes are not.

    “Elite sport” aka Senior GAA Championship which is a contact sport is essential.

    Both these measures were left in place to appease the masses.

    In a time of emergency there is no appeasing the masses.

    If I cant get my child clothes or bring her to the beach for some fresh air and exercise then I shouldn’t be able to watch a contact sport on TV with a bottle of Vodka.

    If you’re happy to accept these conditions then you’re happy for your community to have mass unemployment next year and your local shops disappear, for good.

    174
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    Mute Critical Thinker
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    Oct 25th 2020, 9:33 AM

    @Vladimir Macro: elite sports include horse racing and greyhound racing, but not show jumping which is an Olympic sport. Michael McNamara asked the government to explain the epidemiological reasons behind the decision. No answer was given so he presumes the rationale is betting.

    43
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    Mute Michael McGrath
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    Oct 25th 2020, 11:11 AM

    @Vladimir Macro: All the clothes aisles in Dunnes Tesco and any non essential items in the supermarkets are cordoned off the 1diocy behind these restrictions smacks of wealthy civil servants that have no idea of the reality of life outside of the bubbles they float in. Since when is clothing not essential. By the way 1diocy is now regarded by the journal censor as toxic.

    31
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    Mute Maurice O Neill
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    Oct 25th 2020, 7:24 AM

    I’ve told the kids the get their house in order over the next few years and get ready to leave this god forsaken place. They will be paying back all this debt for years to come . Can’t keep bouncing between levels

    131
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    Mute Eric McTible
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    Oct 25th 2020, 7:40 AM

    @Maurice O Neill: God forsaken place really? Any chance you could go with them when they leave.

    144
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    Mute Vladimir Macro
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    Oct 25th 2020, 7:47 AM

    @Maurice O Neill: There isnt much hope we can save ourselves on the current governments trajectory. The opposition are complicit too, with many not even turning up to debate these measures.

    Local TDs should he bombarded with querys at such a time.

    65
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    Mute Macca Attack
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    Oct 25th 2020, 7:48 AM

    @Maurice O Neill: where will he go, every other country is in the same boat unless you try china

    51
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    Mute Tony Humphreys
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    Oct 25th 2020, 7:51 AM

    @Maurice O Neill: anyone who earns a middle income wage is making plans to leave if the taxes go up as they are already as high as we will tolerate. Continuing restrictions and threat of restrictions will just speed that up. The high paid it workers already know they can work from anywhere.

    42
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    Mute pkunzip doom2.zip
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    Oct 25th 2020, 7:59 AM

    @Maurice O Neill: the grass isn’t always greener

    30
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    Mute Vanessa
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    Oct 25th 2020, 8:03 AM

    @Macca Attack: You may wonder but some of my colleagues are already leaving or preparing. One goes to Portugal, one Spain and another tries if he could get something in Germany.

    It’s not the virus which is quoted as it’s around everywhere but the restrictions seem quite different around Europe. Ireland may have some of the toughest since the start but the case numbers were even going faster up as f. E. in Germany which allowed that people meet even during Lockdown and small concerts outside the eevents. Add the travel issues for seeing family abroad and you have a mix of reasons.

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    Mute Fabio Dillon
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    Oct 25th 2020, 8:03 AM

    @Maurice O Neill: who bred with u? Jesus

    18
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    Mute Sam Harms
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    Oct 25th 2020, 8:16 AM

    @Tony Humphreys: so you’re saying the will leave and go to another country in search of a better life, much like the refugees, asylum seekers and other immigrants who come here for a better life who people seem to have a problem with?

    13
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    Mute Macca Attack
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    Oct 25th 2020, 8:22 AM

    @Vanessa: Spain is going into red alert today and case numbers rising dramatically all over europe except Finland. Better the devil you know

    18
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    Mute Vanessa
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    Oct 25th 2020, 8:30 AM

    @Macca Attack: I can only give the explanations I have received. From my understanding is Spain not responding as a nation but the regional governments are in charge.

    11
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    Mute Carol Oates
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    Oct 25th 2020, 10:18 AM

    @Maurice O Neill: Where in the world will they go that they won’t be paying back for this pandemic?

    15
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    Mute Critical Thinker
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    Oct 25th 2020, 11:38 AM

    @Vanessa: True. It would be easier to see my family and for my parents to see their grandchildren this year for Christmas if I lived Spain rather than Cork. We’ve been warned that December would only bring us back to level 3 which means confined to your county. The restrictions here really are extreme

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    Mute Tom Bombdadil
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    Oct 25th 2020, 7:18 AM

    Another calamitous decision by NPHET, supported by the calamitous government.

    108
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    Mute Bobby
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    Oct 25th 2020, 7:27 AM

    @Paul Furey: Time will tell but they could have given level 3 a chance, before prematurely going to level 5

    71
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    Mute Macca Attack
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    Oct 25th 2020, 7:46 AM

    @Bobby: lower figures ( still too high) for last 2 days purely down to last weeks track and trace f up. Level 3 wouldn’t work like that and my belief level 5 wont either. Get ready for bigger numbers as those 3000 positive from last weekend infect more this weekend. This is far from over

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    Mute Euge80
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    Oct 25th 2020, 7:49 AM

    @Tom Bombdadil: Well, if people had just left their ballot blank at the time… we’d be in a worse position…

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    Mute 2thFairy
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    Oct 25th 2020, 7:51 AM

    @Tom Bombdadil: …. because you know better than the scientists….. It takes a strong calibre of an individual to make the difficult decisions. I’m glad Tony Holohan is that calibre of man. I’m glad we have a government that listen to experts.

    24
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    Mute Tom Bombdadil
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    Oct 25th 2020, 8:17 AM

    @2thFairy: ya because they hospitals have been devoid of patients on trolleys and over crowding every winter for the last 20+ years, this is simply trying to hide that fact, our Heath service is a shambles, Level 3 was plenty. However let’s borrow another 2 billion and put 1000 out of work and backtrack the economy even further, it’s all Monopoly money now at this stage anyway.

    33
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    Mute windbag
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    Oct 25th 2020, 9:36 AM

    @Tom Bombdadil: That’s a calamitous statement you made there…

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    Mute 2thFairy
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    Oct 25th 2020, 9:44 AM

    @Tom Bombdadil: yeah let’s throw even more money at a health service that’s run by consultants who protect their own interests. It matters not a jot how many more millions you pump into the HSE it won’t change anything. It never has.

    14
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    Mute Tom Bombdadil
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    Oct 25th 2020, 10:46 AM

    @2thFairy: it’s not the money that’s thrown at it it’s how that money is used.

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    Mute 2thFairy
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    Oct 25th 2020, 11:09 AM

    @Tom Bombdadil: I agree

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    Mute Tom Bombdadil
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    Oct 25th 2020, 12:49 PM

    @windbag: that’s your windbag opinion and you are fully entitled to it and I fully support your right to it, however the same applies to mine and if you can’t see the calamity that is the HSE I worry.

    9
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    Mute Mick McGuinness
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    Oct 25th 2020, 7:46 AM

    Feel sorry for the owner’s and worker in retail, restaurants, pubs or anywhere that can not open. Will things ever be the same, will Grand Parent’s be able have family around, will weddings happen, can people mourn their loved one’s again. 2020 is the break down of humanity as we know it.

    76
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    Mute Claude Saulnier
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    Oct 25th 2020, 9:13 AM

    @Mick McGuinness: given Level 5 lockdown won’t make the virus disappear, if there are still small businesses, restaurants, etc left, the Government might take a different decision in March/April before the 3rd lockdown.

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    Mute Vanessa
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    Oct 25th 2020, 8:08 AM

    At the end of all this we will have a much larger percentage of big international chains in the country. The same happened aftet the last crash. If you go to town you may notice that you could get everywhere a coffee and a haircut but other than that the choices are getting smaller.

    Small businesses are also part of identity.

    48
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    Mute Sam Harms
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    Oct 25th 2020, 8:23 AM

    @Vanessa: actually I would say the opposite. Alot of small Irish businesses seem to be thriving while large companies aren’t. Where I live there is a Starbucks and two independent Irish coffee shops, Starbucks is always dead whereas the other two always have queues out the door. It’s different this time to last, people are supporting small businesses and have discovered so many nice Irish businesses that they probably never would have heard of, hopefully shopping habits have changed and they continue to do so.

    46
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    Mute Vanessa
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    Oct 25th 2020, 8:31 AM

    @Sam Harms: That’s awesome to hear. :-)

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    Mute Anthony Sweeney
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    Oct 25th 2020, 10:17 AM

    It all depends on what you sell

    12
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    Mute Layla Moroney
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    Oct 25th 2020, 10:46 PM

    I’ve ordered a couple of books from Kenny’s recently as they offer free postage. Both times books arrived speedily. Happy with their service.

    2
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