Holiday Shopping Outlook Bright For W.Va. Retailers

The holiday season is the peak time for the retail industry but this year has come with some unique challenges. Eric Douglas spoke with Bridget Lambert, the president of the West Virginia Retailers Association, to find out how things were going for Mountain State retailers.

This interview has been lightly edited for clarity. 

Douglas: Let’s talk about the holiday season for retailers in West Virginia. How’s it going so far? 

Lambert: This season, as you know, we went into it with a little trepidation, because I don’t think we knew exactly what to expect with all the changes we’ve seen this past couple of years during the holidays. It’s been a very strong season for retailers in our state and across the country. We also saw them wading through supply industry issues that we have not seen previously. It’s been unprecedented. However, our industry seems to be ever-evolving. So they responded as best they could. And we’ve seen a very strong shopping season this holiday so far.

Douglas: Is there any one sector that’s stronger than another? Or is it just kind of across the board.

Lambert: It’s across the board, as it usually is. When people are shopping for the holidays they shop for everyone — from their elderly relatives to the youngest people in their family. So everyone has different and varied interests, and we’re seeing that play out. Black Friday seemed to take precedence over the other four days and it outpaced Small Business Saturday, actually.

We saw a slight decrease on Cyber Monday this year. As you can imagine Cyber Monday was always a growing trend as people started shopping online. And I think industry representatives have alluded to the fact that people have become very accustomed to shopping online now in ways that they didn’t previously. So Cyber Monday was not the big bang it usually is for consumers.

Douglas: I’ve heard some speculation nationally, that part of the reason for that might be the supply chain issues, that people were worried about not being able to get things online or being sold out online. So they were shopping directly. Have you heard anything to that effect?

Lambert: There’s a two-fold answer to that question. Foot traffic in the stores was very heavy this weekend. We saw people come out. We think people want to be out shopping, they want that interaction with other consumers and the retailers. They want to see the merchandise that they’re purchasing, they want to feel it and check it out.

The other thing is, yes, people are aware that we were having some industry supply chain issues. About 84 percent of shoppers have disclosed that they started shopping early this season all the way back even in October, and about 52 percent of shoppers have not completed their holiday shopping this year.

Douglas: What are some of the challenges facing retailers in general and especially for the holiday season?

Lambert: Any challenges we may be facing are the ones we’re hearing about. Retailers have prepared. They’ve got a lot of stock in their stock rooms, they’re doing the curbside pickup, the items are already in the store when you order online for same day pickup. So we’ve done a lot to prepare in the industry for the supply chain issues that we’re dealing with. However, people do need to continue to be diligent with what they want. Shop locally in stores. If one doesn’t have it, look at the others. And that’s really a consumer concern.

One of the other issues retailers have been dealing with, of course, is labor issues. We have a lot of signs in our windows asking for employees. And so we are definitely hiring this holiday season that continues, and will be for several more weeks. Labor shortages and supply chain issues are the two things that our members have been most concerned about, but I think that they adapted as best they could. And savvy shoppers will have the ability to get the items they need this year.

Douglas: Have you or any of your retailers in the association seen any of these direct supply and supply chain issues that they just can’t get some of the things that they were expecting to have?

Lambert: Some of the retailers that I represent are the retailers who have lots of merchandise sitting off the coast of California on a cargo ship. Are we seeing consumer complaints to a huge level about that in our stores? No, we’re not. As I said our retailers have, and are, looking at different ways or different shifts in the supply chain. Many of them recently had a meeting at the White House with President (Joe) Biden to discuss the supply chain issues that are occurring, and to find solutions to get this backlog released so we can just go on to business as usual once we get to 2022. But, it’s a work in progress. I don’t think anyone has a magic bullet for the solution at the moment.

Douglas: How is inflation affecting retailers in this state?

Lambert: Inflation is impacting our industry as most industries. However, during the shopping season, our state is always very family-oriented. And inflation a lot of times does not seem to impact West Virginia’s holiday shoppers. We’re not seeing a huge impact. If you look at the number of customers shopping over this past holiday weekend, we’re having a very strong holiday season. I think that’s the proof of where retail is at this point.

Douglas: I saw nationally the other day that they were predicting that people would be spending between 8.5 and 10.5 percent more this year than in previous years. 

Lambert: Yes, the retail industry is projecting sales this holiday season nationally between 8.5 and 10.5 percent over spending in 2020. The last five year averages or so we average between 5 and 8 percent. As recently as just yesterday, our retail industry and all of the surveys they’ve taken, we are exactly on those numbers. We are on trend.

How Local Shopping Helps W.Va.'s Economy

With only two days left until Christmas, how many of you are still out looking for that one final gift? Well, there’s lots of ways to find that last present – big superstores, malls, or online – but what about shopping locally?  The West Virginia Small Business Administration says, small, local businesses employ nearly half of all West Virginia workers.

 

 

 

During the holiday season, DeFluri’s Fine Chocolates in Martinsburg often sees a consistent line of people looking eagerly through their large, glass candy case at the back of the store.

 

“The milk chocolate pretzels are my favorite,” said Shepherdstown resident, and DeFluri’s regular Tammy Kershner, “But my dad likes the chocolate covered cherries, and so instead of buying him the cheap, nasty box for three bucks at the grocery store, I come here and get him these.”

Credit Liz McCormick / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
DeFluri’s showroom.

Quality is what DeFluri’s co-owner Brenda Casabona says helps her small business compete with the mass market like Hershey’s or Nestle.

 

“People that want a better product,” she explained, “and they realize that a better product entails a higher cost in general, on a food product because of the quality of your ingredients, so, that would be our target market, people that really do want a quality product.”

 

Brenda and Charlie Casabona opened DeFluri’s Fine Chocolates in downtown Martinsburg in 1998. Charlie says part of the attraction of shopping locally at a small business is the customer service and the ability to personalize products – especially at Christmas.

 

“As we get closer to Christmas,”Charlie said, “people come in and they pick every box, and the full service candy case is what they come in for.”

 

Credit Liz McCormick / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Two conveyor belts in DeFluri’s chocolate factory.

Through a door in the back of the showroom is DeFluri’s own chocolate factory. It’s one, massive12,000 square-foot room with machines that swirl the chocolate, conveyer belts that cover the various candies with chocolate, and even an antique foil-wrapping machine.

 

“We make creams the old fashioned way that are cooked, so they’re very soft and flowy; jellies, nut clusters, authentic butter crunch,” Charlie noted, “There are 17 flavors of truffles in the case.”

 

Charlie and Brenda say making and selling chocolate takes a lot of work, but it’s always worth it in the end when they see how much people love their product.

 

But shopping local at a small business, like DeFluri’s, has more impact than just choice and quality. Small businesses actually make up a large portion of employers in West Virginia. In fact, the West Virginia Small Business Administration, or SBA, says there are over 100,000 small businesses in the Mountain State, making up 95.6 percent of the state’s employers and 50.5 percent of West Virginia’s workforce.

Credit Liz McCormick / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
DeFluri’s chocolate factory in the back of the building.

 

Randy Lewis is the Executive Director of Main Street Martinsburg, which is part of a statewide initiative called Main Street West Virginia that tries to encourage people to shop more locally and revitalize communities.

 

He says shopping local, especially during the holidays, really makes a difference.

 

“It makes our community a sense of pride giving back, because you are supporting local jobs as well as showing support for them, so we need to keep that local economy local,” he explained.”

Lewis says small businesses help make West Virginia towns a destination – and being a destination often means bolstering the local economy.

Exit mobile version