So #
Posted Monday 2nd February 2009 16:44 GMT
will you be able to buy Pic n mix online and get it delivered?
Posted Monday 2nd February 2009 16:44 GMT
will you be able to buy Pic n mix online and get it delivered?
Posted Monday 2nd February 2009 17:13 GMT
What's the point? the brand name is associated with being out of date and a failure of modern retailing. The brand has little to no real value apart from nostalgia. Why not come up with something new that would cost nothing rather than building on the corpse of one of the most public failures of 21st century in the UK.
Posted Monday 2nd February 2009 17:13 GMT
I expect nothing less than a fully web 2.0 compliant AJAX app to allow me to pick out all the good bits from the pick and mix, to be swiftly rushed to my door via free next day delivery.
Posted Monday 2nd February 2009 19:04 GMT
I heard an interview with someone involved in this venture on Radio 4 this morning. The chap was gamely trying to convince us that it will be the same old Woolies only online. Yes, they're cashing in on the name, that's business, but why all the publicity crap about it being the same as the good old Woolworths? I suppose if they didn't bother trying to publicise it in that way, it would reveal the venture to be what it is, just another cookie-cutter e-tailer. I suppose it's Commodore and Littlewoods all over again.
Posted Monday 2nd February 2009 19:04 GMT
You beat me to the question.
In the meantime there is http://www.oldestsweetshop.co.uk/ which I've been meaning to order from.
Posted Monday 2nd February 2009 19:04 GMT
27,000 jobs lost and Wollies will still live on, how many jobs will be created with it's shift to online only.
Not exactly the death knell for high street retailers but it's still quite scary for that such a large retailer will stil live on and the 27,000 staff are wondering how they will live.
I wonder how much they bought the brand for?
Posted Monday 2nd February 2009 19:04 GMT
When the hlaf price fire sale will be.
The Woolworths brand is now damaged goods (actually it has been damaged goods for along time now). All this shows, is how dumb the Barclay Brothers really are. (unless they bought it for less than a tenner).
Posted Monday 2nd February 2009 19:04 GMT
IF they can still get the original suppliers: those Chad Valley toys and Ladybird clothes were reasonable value .
Credit crunched father of young one.
Posted Monday 2nd February 2009 19:04 GMT
@Anonymous Coward - those brand values should fit perfectly with the rest of the portfolio. Kays?
Posted Monday 2nd February 2009 19:04 GMT
That reminds me of this:
Web 2.0
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=topeBoB-ApQ
Especially love the bit with the pizza.
Posted Monday 2nd February 2009 19:04 GMT
Assuming they paid peanuts for the brand all they have to do is replicate one of their existing websites and add 'Woolies' to the systems the call centres use to service all their brands.
One very cheap extra outlet, trade on the name until it falls into disrepair and then get shot. Quite astute really. Only thing is of course that they just made a shed load of call centre employees redundant, maybe they'll need some back....
Posted Monday 2nd February 2009 19:04 GMT
It used to be that Woolworths was everywhere, even small market towns. They pulled out of Brigg in the Seventies, and WH Smith the same. But Brigg has more now than it did then. Boots never went away. There's Poundstretcher and Lidl and Wilkinson and Tesco.
The last time I was in Woolworths it was nothing special. Can't eat the sweets, and the DVDs were less expensive than in HMV, but nothing special.
And what is going to be different about an on-line Woolworths?
OK, maybe the name is worth something, but what for?.And how can they sell it?
Posted Monday 2nd February 2009 19:04 GMT
If the name alone was such a great selling point, why did they fail? I'm still not sure why we're all supposed to be cheering the fact that the name lives on.
If there were no longer any jam doughnuts in the world and I bought the name to describe my new kick-you-in-the-bollocks service, there wouldn't be crowds of people in the street celebrating the fact that I had saved jam doughnuts.
The may be people strewn across the street ruing the day they tried to buy a doughnut, but I'm not sure how that helps anyone.
Posted Tuesday 3rd February 2009 02:17 GMT
If you look up Woolworths on a certain user-edited encyclopedia you'll find a long list of companies trading under the name in many countries of the world.
Presumably the majority, but perhaps not all, of these originally had some connection with the original Americanl FW Woolworth but who actually owns the rights to the name now?
I'd agree with the other posters. The name has no cachet now and, as with Littlewoods, the new owners must be hoping to cash in on misplaced nostalgia.
Posted Tuesday 3rd February 2009 02:17 GMT
In a shambling zombie sense? "Store of the Dead"?
Or is it more a Frankenstein's Monster / Herbert West affair - a bolt of digital lightning here, a shot of AJAX there?
What I think it most reminds me of is the part in "Hellraiser" where Frank Cotton, the escapee from Hell, has consumed his brother Larry and is wearing his skin.
Posted Tuesday 3rd February 2009 02:17 GMT
Er, didn't they already have an on-line operation (Big Red Book) that was a dismal failure?
Those who don't learn from history, etc...
Posted Tuesday 3rd February 2009 02:17 GMT
Seems the buyers have had the Woolworths pulled over their eyes!
Posted Tuesday 3rd February 2009 10:10 GMT
An article about this on the BBC News site also added that Shop Direct are having problems of there own - having recently made quite a few staff redundant.
Posted Tuesday 3rd February 2009 11:56 GMT
Then I could probably run a business that would bankrupt small family owned shops too. Why are people so sentimental about the demise of a parasite?
Posted Tuesday 3rd February 2009 11:56 GMT
I think they'll find that the band name "Woolworths" is now associated with closing down sales, mass layoffs, empty shops and failure.
Posted Tuesday 3rd February 2009 14:47 GMT
I always wanted to visit an online shop that was dirty, sold crappy DVDs of awful movies and was full of staff who had to look at their hands to count to 12.
Posted Tuesday 3rd February 2009 16:34 GMT
I think I'm losing heart in Albion.
UK:
- Woolworths - No
- C & A - No
- Snow - Probably just the wong kind.
Other paces in Europe.
- Woolworths - thriving
- C & A - Major brand and growing
- Snow - prepared for
- And nurses can probably pray too.