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Manga bookstore goes old school
Half Moon Bookstore, which sells manga, anime books and products, relies on word of mouth to attract customers
In a digital age where competition is fierce, a South Vancouver bookstore takes an old-school approach to business.
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Atsuko Yamashita, the owner of Half Moon Bookstore on Main Street near Marine Drive, hasn’t changed her business strategy since she opened the store in 1999 selling manga, anime comics and promotional products.
“I usually don’t deal with things that I don’t know,” Yamashita said.
“I could learn it but I’m busy dealing with [the] store, so I think I’m sticking with a website on Facebook right now.”
Yamashita stays away from social media and instead takes a traditional approach in building oneon -one customer relationships. Her bookstore is among similar businesses in Vancouver that don’t use social media heavily even as they face increased competition online.
Yamashita said that she is “technologically illiterate” and doesn’t know much about social media. She uses a Facebook account and an incom- plete website to post products, but customer who was a student to help her set up a new website for free. ple tools, so some businesses can get away with not using it.
“We are lucky that we have really dedicated customers,” Yamashita said.
She said that the ideal situation is to have a complete website, but she doesn't have the time to build it.
“I don’t think we touched 20 per cent of what we have, but hopefully we will complete the website in the future,” said Yamashita.
“The decision to be on social media or not should be driven by an understanding of the situation,’’ Hoegg said.
Patrick Shaughnessy, owner of Golden Age Collectables in Vancouver, said that he is not dependent on social media, but his business is still thriving.
“We do the Facebook, we do the little bit of YouTube stuff, and the others, but we’re not a huge player in that,” Shaughnessy said.
He said there was a time when businesses were happy when the competition went out of business, but now comic book stores are disappearing.
“At this point, you’re sad when your competition goes out of business because you don't want the comic book collecting or reading culture to go away,” Shaughnessy said.
“It’s good to have good competition. Our competition tends to come more from people who are interested in other things or online.”
Yamashita said competition is getting severe. Previously, her store faced limited competition for Japanese-oriented English comic books in mainstream book stores, but now they are top sellers everywhere and manga is becoming more mainstream.
She said that competition is good for her business.
“I think if you sell manga or sega more people will be involved with manga,” said Yamashita.
Half Moon Bookstore Facts
1. Location
The bookstore is the only one in South Vancouver that sells manga & anime books.
2. Opening both were built by her friends. She lost access to her original website when a friend with the passwords passed away, so she relied on a
The bookstore opened in October 1999.
3. Owner Owner Atsuko Yamashita is a computer science major, but had a manga passion as a kid.
JoAndrea Hoegg, professor of marketing and behavioural science at UBC, said social media is a critical tool, but it’s only one of the multi-