Tag Archives: local markets

The Stag and Hounds, in Bristol’s Old Market, prides itself on being one of the city’s top music pubs. It has another claim to fame that most regulars won’t know: it was home to one of England’s longest-lived Piepowder Courts.

Piepowder Courts (from the French pieds poudres, or ‘dusty feet’) were established in mediaeval times to oversee traditional markets

Piepowder Courts (from the French pieds poudres, or ‘dusty feet’) were established in mediaeval times to oversee traditional markets, dispensing summary justice to pickpockets, thieves and cheating travelling merchants. Bristol’s Piepowder Court continued to sit until 1870.

Sometimes, though, the cursory consideration of a few local dignitaries was not enough to keep the markets and fairs running smoothly. In Nottingham the city’s annual Goose Fair, a huge event that would draw crowds from across the midlands, became the scene of the famous Cheese Riot of 1766.

Thomas Bailey’s Annals of Nottinghamshire, published in 1852, describes how irate crowds ran amok after complaints that traders were overcharging for cheese, grabbing cheeses from the stalls and rolling them down the streets. ‘The mayor, whilst endeavouring to quell the disturbance, was knocked down by a cheese, hurled at him by one of the mob, and severely stunned,’ Bailey recounts.

These days the equivalent of the cheese riot is Black Friday in Tesco

I came across the story of the great cheese riot while researching my book, How to Save Our Town Centres. Since then more than one reader has suggested a re-enactment of this historic occasion. Others might argue that these days the equivalent of the cheese riot is Black Friday in Tesco, while traditional markets have become a haven of decorum.

There are other conflicts over our markets, though, that should worry us more. Some are over the cost of trading and the rents demanded by private (or local authority) owners: Brixton and Oxford have both seen disputes over rents in recent years. The closure of Sheffield’s Castle Market and its relocation to a new building on the other side of the city centre has attracted complaints that both traders and traditional customers are being priced out.

What is at stake is not just the markets themselves but the character and vitality of our town and city centres

What is at stake is not just the markets themselves but the character and vitality of our town and city centres. Go to Bury in Lancashire, home of the black pudding, and you’ll see one of the most successful traditional markets in England. Every year up to 1,500 coachloads of visitors descend on this former mill town to sample the wares at nearly 400 stalls. Market traders boast that you can get everything you need from cradle to grave. There’s even a man who’ll do your headstone.

But at the other end of town, the new Rock shopping centre is stretching Bury’s retail core, offering a glass-and-concrete panorama of Marks & Spencer and Superdry, Costa Coffee and River Island. In between, at the 1990s Mill Gate shopping centre – itself a replacement for a 1960s precinct – every other shop is a discount store and there’s an acne of ‘to let’ signs.

Planners across the UK have swallowed the myth of ‘retail-led regeneration’

Bury’s planners, it would seem, like planners across the UK, have swallowed the myth of ‘retail-led regeneration’, imagining that shiny new shopping centres will revive their towns. In the process the traditional markets are often left behind, physically distanced from the new developments and reduced to either a throwback to a bygone age or a curiosity, providing a retail diversion for people with plenty of disposable income and time on their hands.

High-end retailers concentrate their brands in prime locations and struggling locations become dominated by pound shops and charity shops

Places that used to be social levellers, providing something for everyone and where well-off and hard-up would rub shoulders and exchange banter, are now becoming socially polarised. At the same time an economic segregation is dividing successful from unsuccessful towns, as high-end retailers concentrate their brands in prime locations and struggling locations become dominated by pound shops and charity shops: a lifeline to the hard-pressed, but a signifier of failure to investors and planners.

We won’t get town centres right until we start thinking about what creates good places, not just about how retail can work better

In my book I argue that we won’t get town centres right until we start thinking about what creates good places, not just about how retail can work better. To think about placemaking demands an understanding of how places can work for everyone, not just those with money to spend. I discuss how we can create places to be, not just places to buy.

There are two ways in which we can think of ‘the market’ in that context. One is as a gathering place: a place of trade, but most of all a space for relationships and connections. I use the example of the ancient Greek agora: buying and selling was just part of the mix. It was where justice was done, athletic contests were held, children were schooled and religion was practiced. As the urban historian Lewis Mumford commented, it was ‘above all a place for palaver’.

The other way of thinking about the market is purely as an economic construct: a place where people act according to narrow financial self-interest and where value is equated only with rates of return and capital gains. This view of the market prizes and privileges development-led ‘investment’ and focuses on the big numbers of jobs generated in construction and retail without considering what is being displaced. And inevitably, the capital and revenue flows accrue to those with the wherewithal to join in a game in which the price of entry is increasingly high.

Questioning and challenging such ideas of investment is not anti-business. What it does is to highlight that there are different ways of doing business, different views of value within business communities, and different ways of envisaging what it means to thrive and prosper. How to Save Our Town Centres aims to bring some of those questions to the surface.


 

How to Save Our Town CentresHow to Save Our Town Centres is published by Policy Press and available at www.policypress.co.uk or www.urbanpollinators.co.uk. To contact Julian Dobson about workshops or speaking engagements email [email protected]

 

 

 

 

 

Quarterbridge would like to thank Julian Dobson for so generously contributing this article.

 

At the risk of sounding London-centric, the changing face of London markets is providing an astonishing example of how good markets successfully adapt to their constraints and circumstances.

Recently, I have been hearing success stories emanating from the East End Chatsworth Road Market in Hackney, London E5 (It used to be Clapton in my day). A traditional street market, the linear High Street includes rows of lock up shops fronted by market stalls, catering for the newly mixed demographic of different ages and ethnicities.

I speak somewhat informatively as from the age of eight, I had to work on my father’s Chatsworth Road stalls every Saturday and during school holidays in what was at the time a largely poor neighbourhood where the most exotic products to be found were Fry’sTurkish Delight bars, more accurately described as FTD – misshapes.

Chatsworth Road was of fundamental importance to the local community, selling everything from live eels to white goods

The market and fronting shops were always exceptionally busy as locals performed their daily shop and I can’t remember  there being any form of supermarket back in the late 60’s and early 70’s within walking or bus journey distance. Chatsworth Road was of fundamental importance to the local community, selling everything from live eels to white goods.

If I am honest, I feel more nostalgic now with fond memories of how life used to be and have forgotten the freezing cold winter days: flashing out at six in the morning and sweeping up at six at night, but life was straight-forward and honest and my parents earned a decent living from the market.

It appeared as though the retail core had been sucked clean out of Hackney

During the 80’s I worked as a civil engineer in London and would occasionally take a nostalgic drive to Chatsworth Road and was shocked by the desertification of the area. It appeared as though the retail core had been sucked clean out of Hackney by the supermarkets: shops were boarded up and to all intents and purposes, the market had disappeared. However, the sun now shines once more over Chatsworth Road as it has learned to provide the good folk of E5 with what they want and cannot find in the big five – multi-ethnic variety, professional service, tremendous food, cafe culture and above all, unadulterated honesty, a theme which transcends the generations.

Chatsworth Road is just one example of successful and organically developed market regeneration

Chatsworth Road is just one example of successful and organically developed market regeneration in London, of which there are many more. The notion of delivering what people want will filter through other British towns and cities, further underpinning the great British Market renaissance.

 

With thanks to I Love Markets for kind permission to use their images in this article.

 

I Love Markets celebrates London’s markets and all of the wonderful things that can be found within them. We believe that to discover the heart of London, you need to discover London’s Markets. No market is the same and we want to help you discover the unique experiences that each one has to offer. Find the latest news, markets and events at www.ilovemarkets.co.uk

Colchester market

Two years ago Quarterbridge was appointed by Colchester Borough Council to undertake a complete study of the town’s Charter Market, incorporating assessments of location and operational management, providing a complete overview and to make recommendations on how the Council could improve the market.

Key recommendations included reunification of a disjointed market and relocation to a prime footfall area

Our report delivered several recommendations, key amongst them was the reunification of the currently disjointed market and relocation to the prime footfall area of Colchester High Street. Whilst we undertake this type of report several times a year, this particular project was made that bit more interesting and was particularly close to our heart as our head office is based in Colchester.

The relocation is now proceeding with the launch of the New Charter Market in Spring

Colchester Borough Council understand the importance of the market to the town and since the presentation of our report we have worked closely with the council to assist in making our joint goals of a relocated, re-energised and much improved new Charter Market, come to fruition. Through budget allocated as part of the New Homes Bonus, the relocation is now proceeding with the launch of the New Charter Market in Spring this year. We have provided detailed on-going assistance on financial planning, the tender process for new stalls and ground anchors, trader liaison, operational documentation and guidance.

‘The new Colchester Market will create a strong focal point for the town, with a more modern feel’

Councillor Nick Barlow, Portfolio Holder for Street and Waste Services said: “Colchester has a strong market tradition and we know other towns such as Lincoln and Bury have experienced a positive impact on the reputation of their towns. The new Colchester Market will create a strong focal point for the town, with a more modern feel. The introduction of electricity will be a huge boost for existing stallholders and will allow the market to attract a wider range of stalls moving forward. These changes also unlock the potential for evening markets in the future.”

We look forward to continuing to work with the excellent team at Colchester Borough Council and enjoying the new market… right on our doorstep!

Adam Corbally motivation

I was having a weekend away in North Yorkshire last week with my family when I found out that there was a ‘local produce market’ on nearby. Now I love to visit a market anytime and see what is on offer especially whilst on holiday, so off I went to see how other people do things and what was on offer.

Great British markets truly are the original supermarkets

The weather was great, the market was packed and some of the products on offer were nothing short of amazing - best of all the market was on a Saturday and had integrated with the regular traders so you could literally get anything you wanted, proving that Great British markets truly are the original supermarkets!

I looked around to see who was manning the stall and I could see a tall lady sat on a stool with a ’50 Shades of Grey’ covering her face.

One of the first stalls I came to was a real ale stall and I put a great order in with a very knowledgeable local brewer. Next up was an art gallery. Now a lot of people would disagree with me when it comes to art as I truly believe that we are all experts in our right. When it comes to art I think that we all have our own tastes, make our own interpretations and of course, ‘beauty is in the eye of the beholder’. So, as I started to browse I did so with a very open mind and unbiased opinion, not really looking for anything in particular, then I spotted a lovely oil painting of the countryside and lifted it out for a closer look. It really was beautiful and weirdly, seemed very familiar? I looked around to see who was manning the stall and I could see a tall lady sat on a stool with a ’50 Shades of Grey’ hardback book covering her face. I presumed she must be running the stall so I said, “excuse me, are these your paintings?” She lowered her book and replied, “yes” before raising it back up in front of her face! There were no prices in sight and the lady made me literally feel like I was interrupting. So, I walked away and had a look around the other stalls, chatted to traders, soaked up the atmosphere, loving the banter and filling my boots with everything from giant loom band sets for the kids to home-made sausages, spending a good couple of hours enjoying the full shopping experience you can only get on a market.

She still hadn’t mentioned the price which was nowhere to be seen

As I was leaving, I walked back the same way I had come and noticed the lady with the art who had been reading the book was packing away early, so I asked her the question, “quiet day today?” “yes”, she replied, “waste of time really, only sold one, not even took my rent!” I asked her about the landscape picture again and pretty much had to force her into a conversation if I am totally honest. It turned out that she had painted all of the pieces herself and that the one I had liked was of Holm Firth, the home of Last of the Summer Wine and 20 minutes from my home town, although she still hadn’t mentioned the price which was nowhere to be seen! So I asked her, she told me and this master piece now hangs proudly in my kitchen and is probably the best £25 I have ever spent, with a great story behind it.

On her return I was chatting away with customers and had already sold two paintings.

I then asked the trader what her background was and she said she had always worked in admin although was trying to get her dream of being a successful painter off the ground. I asked if she wanted to be a book critic or an artist? She looked confused so I asked her WHY she had bought the book she was reading earlier? She still looked confused although she went on to explain that she saw the book in a book shop, read the summary on the back of the book at which stage the lady in the shop said it was a great read. “THERE YOU GO” I said. Finally, the penny dropped with the lady and after chatting with her I persuaded her to stay a little longer and go and get the brews in whilst I looked after the stall. She was concerned about my knowledge of art as the café was quite far away although I reassured her I would be fine. On her return I was chatting away with customers and had already sold two paintings.

There are no secrets out there, it’s just a case of talking to your customers and letting them know you care!

The lady was so grateful it was unreal and asked “what is your secret?” The truth is, there are no secrets out there, it’s just a case of talking to your customers and letting them know you care! 

Of course there are a lot more tips to being good at sales, but talking to people is crucial and a great start. As I said at the beginning of this column, our markets are the original supermarkets and please, please let’s not forget what makes us better than the supermarkets: having great product knowledge and the ability to communicate with our customers! 

All good relationships are built on great communication. Happy trading.

Keep in touch,

Adam Corbally


 

Adam Corbally is a professional guest speaker, motivational coach, and serial entrepreneur, managing a series of successful businesses and brands in the UK.

Adam’s appearances on a number of T.V. shows has helped make him a well-known public figure.

Adam found his own way in life, learning as he went, quickly carving himself out a serious career as a businessman, he is now in the position to pass on that knowledge.

His fun-loving, approachable nature helped make his early venture an instant hit. Eager to build on his commercial knowledge and skills, Adam sought out business leaders and mentors who could help him develop his knowledge.

This training helped Adam realise that, armed with solid business fundamentals, he could apply his positive approach to other walks of life and enjoy similar success. The growth of his wholesale operation, veg-box delivery service, and property business are testament to this philosophy.

Adam’s unconventional route to commercial success is a popular topic at his professional speaking events, conferences, schools, colleges and universities. With Adam, what you see is what you get. He’s the same infectiously positive, open, and unashamedly outspoken. 

www.adamcorbally.co.uk

@Theadamcorbally


unit to let

Quarterbridge Commercial Director, Hayden Ferriby gives you his top tips for successfully letting market units.

 

Letting units in any market hall can be very tough going, regardless of the location. As with all property lettings, there are key points to follow to ensure presentation is excellent to attract the perfect business to your market.

The appearance – sell the vision

It goes without saying that high levels of cleanliness and maintenance should be upheld within your market; make sure the unit you wish to let is the same. Remember, you are selling a prospective business their new home – not everyone has the foresight to imagine how a unit could look when occupied, and not just how it looks as an empty shell.

 

  • An unused unit is a magnet for children’s rides, rubbish and other tenants’ old stock – make sure it is kept clear, clean and presentable
  • Undertake minor repairs – small, simple fixes can make the world of difference Make sure the unit number is visible
  • Turn the lights on, ensuring all the bulbs work!

If there is any equipment being let with the unit (coldroom, serve-over counters, for example), check they are fully functioning, are odour free and clean. Ideally, ensure they are serviced and the service history is up-to-date. This will make life much easier for the incoming tenant.

Advertising – find the right tenant

Gone are the days that passive advertising alone will find you the perfect business for your market. These days, market managers need to go out knocking on doors to attract the best businesses – though luckily there are ways of doing this ‘virtually’ to save both your time and shoe leather.

 

  • Decide on the user clauses you wish to attract to your market – set yourself a goal and don’t just accept the first business that comes along. Prepare to be flexible though – you never know when someone will come up with a completely different idea that will be perfect for you.
  • Use social media to advertise for new businesses. It is free, easy to use and wide reaching across age ranges, demographics and geographical areas.
  • Facebook advertising is cheap, easy to control and simple to use. This can help you reach out to thousands of people for very small outlay.
  • Use internet search engines to source contact information for local and regional businesses that fit your user clause aspirations. Write to them all, showing how your market would be the perfect home for them. If possible, include some well-taken photos of the unit and the market hall. Describe the fantastic environment they will be joining and sing the praises of the events you run. Remember to follow up with an email or letter.

And very importantly… make sure you put a big, bold To Let board up in the unit with the correct contact information on!

The process – keep it simple

Once you’ve found the perfect business to fill your empty unit, you need to take them through the lettings process. You will need to advise them on whether they are signing a lease or licence, what documents they need to provide, deposits to make and how long the process will take. Even if you have gone through the process hundreds of times and it seems simple to you, remember this will be an exciting but probably anxious time for the applicant so explain everything clearly and make them feel at ease throughout. Having worked with many markets across the UK, we know that the lettings process varies from one market to another with some markets even including elements such as approval of an applicant by all existing market traders. Whatever your lettings process, ensure it is as seamless as possible by adopting the following points:

 

  • Simplify the process as much as possible.
  • Make a step-by-step applicant’s guide to the process.
  • Include an explanation of key phrases such as ‘licence’ or ‘service charge’ – this is especially useful when dealing with start-up businesses.
  • Keep in regular contact with the applicant and let them know how their application is progressing.

market cuts

 

When Journalist and Broadcaster Alistair Cooke joined the New York Times he was puzzled by a large sign – KISS – hanging on the wall of the newsroom. His editor explained: ‘Keep It Simple, Stupid. Your readers have 10 minutes on the subway to read and understand your article. Then tomorrow it will be on the bottom of their budgie cage’. The business consultancy Deloitte did just that in December with their annual ‘State of the State’ report published in partnership with independent Think Tank ‘Reform’ it showed the progress the coalition government has made in restructuring the economy after the 2008 financial crisis.

A Deloitte reports suggests that: ‘Councils are likely to move away from providing services they are not legally required to provide ‘ i.e. discretionary services such as Markets.

According to Deloitte/Reform just under half of the necessary spending cuts have been achieved but all the quick fixes – public sector pay freezes and redundancies etc – have now been used up. The second half of the necessary cuts is going to be MUCH tougher. The report suggests that of necessity ‘Councils are likely to move away from providing services they are not legally required to provide ‘ i.e. discretionary services such as Markets. There’s also a nasty sting in the tail with the warning that: ‘Whilst early spending cuts took place in a recession, the coming ones will be in a period of economic GROWTH. Citizens are more likely to experience roads in disrepair, dirtier streets, unkempt parks, and fewer pools and libraries’. The UK may now have emerged from recession and be the fastest-growing economy in the EU but government spending needs to be savaged for years to come. The report suggests ‘the UK’s governance, public sector and citizen experience of public services is likely to change profoundly’ i.e. ring their Contractor, not the Council if your bin isn’t collected on time. The report illustrates the enormous growth in the public sector over the last 50 years which in inflation-adjusted figures has risen from £190 billion in 1964 to £730 billion in 2014. Public sector spending now represents an unprecedented 44% of the UK’s Gross Domestic Product.

£1.4 trillion of debt was borrowed to buy Royal Bank of Scotland to prevent total economic meltdown. This debt continues to rise and costs the taxpayer £1 billion per week in interest payments – more than the government spends on education.

The report steers clear of political point-scoring but does confirm the record annual budget deficit of 2010 meant the government spent £159 billion MORE than it received in income. This annual deficit has now been reduced by about half after the coalition government set itself the ambitious target of eliminating it entirely by 2018/19. Once this has been eliminated by ‘fiscal consolidation’ HMG can start paying back the £1.4 trillion of debt borrowed to buy Royal Bank of Scotland etc and prevent total economic meltdown. This debt continues to rise and costs the taxpayer £1 billion per week in interest payments – more than the government spends on education. If this isn’t reduced then by 2023 the interest payments will be three times greater than total expenditure on the armed forces. Whichever government we have after next May the need to buy-down the debt is so pressing that hoping economic growth will make the problem go away is not an option.

Quarterbridge has unrivalled experience of securing investment and restructuring Markets services to meet the challenges

If you cast your mind back to 2010 you’ll remember the long overdue creation of the independent Office of Budget Responsibility to produce ‘Whole Government Accounts’ for the UK. In retrospect it’s amazing that prior to then there was no set of trading accounts for the government. That’s not exactly the way to run a Business or a Markets Service or Country, but it happens. The good news is Quarterbridge has unrivalled experience of securing investment and restructuring Markets services to meet the challenges.

You can download a copy of the Deloitte report from: http://www2.deloitte.com/content/dam/Deloitte/uk/Documents/public-sector/deloitt-uk-state-of-the-state-2014.pdf

aubergines

Just discovered an interesting article by Debbie Davies on thisismoney.co.uk looking to discover if people really can save money on fruit and veg if they buy from their local market – anyone who works with or on markets already knows what the answer will be!

The big four supermarket groups are failing to match street market prices across a range of popular fruit and veg, research conducted by This is Money and MailOnline suggests.

On average shoppers can save 32 per cent buying fruit & veg from market stalls compared to supermarkets, according to research undertaken by one of London’s most popular markets.

We tested the claim – and found that on certain items of produce, the savings were even bigger.

Read more