THE RIGHT
RANGE
Independent retail consultant, Liam Kelly explains why retailers needs to put profit before pride and kitsch before chic
I
’ve always admired follies, those enigmatic buildings and structures that were de rigueur on many a country house estate in previous centuries, set on a hill or in a glade, often with no true purpose other than to showcase wealth, ostentation or just to have a talking point when one went for a promenade around the meticulously
well-kept gardens of society’s elite back in the day. Notwithstanding that some of these projects were created for more altruistic reasons such as community employment in times of social crisis, they still remain a testament to people’s need for ornamentation and features that are decorative accents to their gardens, erected to add to rather than take from the planting and landscaping into which they either nestle, or in some cases dominate. Of course adding decorative features to your garden didn’t have to be on such a grand scale, so statues, birdbaths and sundials amongst other structures were also used in abundance for a similar purpose, albeit on a much smaller scale. Indeed this kind of accessorization was the norm from a certain period, as any well-to-do house owner would at the very least have a statue of Apollo sitting on a plinth in their pleasure grounds, or a cast iron bower clothed in scented, climbing roses at the end of their herbaceous walk. And even the gardens of smaller homes featured some sort of ornamentation, perhaps homemade or cobbled together from old tools or farm machinery but decorative nonetheless. In the intervening years, we have swapped one kind of folly for another - as many a forlorn hot tub, pizza oven or other fad purchase can attest to, none of which weather in the same way as an elegant heap of granite, a copper sundial, cast iron birdbath or even a weathervane made from a few pieces of scrap metal. So homeowners have always decorated their gardens with more than just plants, and in an ideal retail world we would be selling someone a 21st century folly, but sometimes we need to simplify things a little, as the majority of gardeners don’t have huge formal gardens. It’s also worth remembering that not everyone has a few hundred euro or more to spend on a new-fangled-whatsit that will be used or admired for six months and then go resented and unused for the remainder of its stay in that outside room. This doesn’t mean that I think you shouldn’t stock ‘The Next Big Thing’ but more so that at times you need something more to scale and more saleable,
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accessible and affordable for the flurry of summer gardeners who will be hitting the garden centre in the coming months. The fact is that many retailers are not capitalising as well as they could on this lucrative category of garden decor for a multitude of reasons, not least of which is the snobbish factor of not wanting to stock what many business owners wrongly class as ‘tat’, which they think is best left to German supermarkets and discounters, or for the simple fact they do not personally like a range of products, which is irrelevant in retail. Admittedly your shopper demographic plays a part in the goods you choose to stock but very, very few retailers can be picky enough to base their stocking regime on the fact that the majority of their customers are all discerning high earners with plenty of disposable income. And what’s not to say they don’t like a little bit of whimsy in their gardens anyway? Or conversely that those or lower incomes won’t want to splash the cash on a high-end garden accessory?
'I think it’s fair to say that the customers themselves are changing much more rapidly than many retailers are' After all, a €500 fire pit is a great sale but will only appeal to a small segment of customers, while a €40 wind spinner, a €50 birdbath or a €20 wind chime will appeal to a much larger number. If we look at the maths its worth considering that adding a modest average of €20 euro to the shopping basket of one in three shoppers is more profitable than selling that fire pit to one in 200. (In case the fire pit wholesalers start rattling their flaming sabres in this direction, it’s not that I am advocating one range over the other, my argument is that garden centres should be stocking both.) My point is that too many of the small to medium retailers in this sector think their stores and sales revolve around plants, pots and garden care with a few sets of furniture and a range of barbecues – which apart from the big brands are becoming increasingly more and more difficult sell – stocked for the summer months. At best they will stock a small section of plastic windmills and the occasional citronella garden torch to pacify those who ask, instead of allocating space to a serious,
Spring 2019 / www.horticultureconnected.ie / HORTICULTURECONNECTED
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