A Simple Plan - Revitalizing Small Town
America & Helping Small Businesses
The “Walmartization” of America
Has Walmart opened a new store in your community yet? How’s your local
downtown business district? Are you seeing empty strip store buildings? I
was in one of my local Subway stores getting Veggie Delight sandwich for
lunch the other day. While standing in line, I overheard the store owner
talking with a customer about how Walmart has just signed a HUGE deal with
Subway to put Subway outlets in all of the Walmart stores. Good for Subway
Corporation, not so good for the little privately owned franchise across
the street from Walmart located in a strip store building with a few empty
store spaces.
Wall-Mart is literally taking over the retail world. There is a story on
the Portland Independent Media Center website reporting on a proposed
Walmart close to an ancient Mexican pyramid. Here’s the link...
A group of native Mexicans opposed the new Walmart by climbing the pyramid
with their protest signs. Walmart is building a store a half mile from the
ancient pyramid. Why not make the pyramid a Walmart?!
Closer to where we live in New Jersey, the same man in the Subway shop
told me that the Audubon Shopping Center, in the town next to where I grew
up in Oaklyn, New Jersey, is being bulldozed down for a new Walmart. And,
in the neighboring town of Deptford, THREE new Walmarts are being built!
Although Walmart likes to talk about bringing jobs to communities, the
fact is that most of those jobs are 32 hour a week positions with NO
benefits and low wages. The low prices thrill customers, but the net
result in communities is that someone goes to the local hardware store,
sees a Black & Decker drill for $39.95, and thinks, “Gee, I could get this
for $29.95 at Walmart.” And out the door they go.
The New Addiction Sweeping
America -
Low Prices & Cheap Products
Walmart has systematically ADDICTED Americans to cheap, low prices. “Hey,
times are tough and we have to stretch our dollar.” we like to say. But
what happens to your community eventually? And this “cheap prices
addiction” hasn’t afflicted just the average citizen, the upper class
folks are addicted to cheap prices. Here’s an example.
A few years ago, a good neighbor friend was doing some tutoring on the
side to make some extra income. We live in a very affluent community.
Although our home is very modest, right down the road are homes that sell
for over one million dollars and have property taxes of over $12,000 a
year. Do the arithmetic and you can quickly see that some folks have a
very large nut to cover each month and are able to do so. (This isn’t a
bash against the affluent, just a statement of what is so.)
One of my friend’s tutoring students lives in such a community. BIG house,
nice kid, nice parents. One day, my friend was in Walmart and bumped into
Mrs. Nice with a cart full of stuff. “Oh I just LOVE this place! The
prices are fantastic!” Like most of us, she’s become addicted to cheap
stuff.
Now, here’s the very dark down side of what’s happening. Owning your own
small business has been one of the foundations of life in America since
the beginning of our nation. So a person decides to open a five & dime
store to serve the community’s needs. People walk or take a short trip
downtown and shop. Shopping downtown supports the local merchants and
keeps downtowns alive. When people evacuate local business districts to go
to the local Walmart super store, the local merchant suffers. Eventually,
he or she will close their doors for good. “OUT OF BUSINESS” the signs
says. How sad. How tragic. Some might say, “well, that’s progress.” But is
it? I don’t think so.
The only way that companies can get goods produced that can carry the
prices that they must have to be competitive at Walmart is to have their
goods manufactured outside of this country. I used to be a toy designer at
Mattel, Mt. Laurel (formerly Tyco Toys). The toy business would be dead
and buried if they couldn’t get their product made in China. From a cost
standpoint, it is IMPOSSIBLE to make a Matchbox or Hot Wheels toy here and
sell it for 99-cents at Walmart.
So not only is the small retailer being squeezed out of business, but the
manufacturing jobs are being taken away, and even many of the supporting
design services are being done in the Orient. It all adds up to an almost
total removal of the business of making and designing products. Did you
hear that “loud suckin sound”? Thank you Ross Perot.
An Alternate Proposal
The Walmartization of America has a built-in ripple affect that will touch
everyone in this nation, unless consumers make a different choice with
their dollars. But I have a proposal for you. If this rings true for you,
you can take it and run with it as your own. This is a grass roots concept
that is VERY simple and has two parts.
Part 1 - Support Your Local
Merchants.
Look around your community for the local mom & pop shops and do business
with them. Support them. They are sitting there every day waiting for
customers to come in. Their livelihood depends on customers coming into
the store and buying. I’d rather support my neighbor’s book shop rather
that give my money to the Walton family, the owners of Walmart. They’re
rich enough, thank you. I’d rather help my neighbor who is trying to make
a go at it with his hardware store rather than make a megawealthy family
more wealthy. Here’s a link to an interesting and telling article on the
Lyndon LaRouche website...
Believe it or not, there’s a little local five & dime store in my town of
Medford, New Jersey. “Binkley’s 5¢ and 10¢ Store” is owned by one of the
oldest families in the area. When I shop there, I always let them know
that I’d rather give my business to them, than a big chain retailer. You
should see the looks on their faces. I always get a sincere, “Thank you,
VERY much.”
About eight miles from us is a genuine relic of the marketplace, the
Berlin Farmer’s Market. This place really has character. It’s a long, low
building that is almost the complete opposite of the ascetics of any local
mall. It’s filled with characters, smells, and working class people.
During the warm months, there’s on outside flea market that’s a real hoot!
Every year, I buy my jeans and sneakers from two small, locally owned
vendors there. Even though the Levis jeans are now made in Mexico and the
Nike shoes are made in the Orient, I’d rather give my money to “Mike’s
Shoes” and Jerry’s Jeans” than to the Walton family.
As the major chain stores continue to offer every conceivable consumable
item, the day is quickly coming when there will be no more local
businesses. Not only is Walmart the number one retailer, they are also the
number one grocery retailer and have a substantial share of the
bookseller’s market and the toy business. Toys R Us is about to go
bankrupt. Unless consumers do something different, we will all have to
shop in the big mega stores because there won’t be any small stores left
in business.
But there’s a longer term, bigger picture here folks. If we don’t take
care of our communities, a big part of what made America great will be
stomped out of the marketplace.
Shopping locally will not bring down the Walmarts of the world. For better
or worse, they’re here and probably won’t be going away. But if you like
the sense of community, support your local businesses whenever you can. So
what if the drill or the t-shirts are cheaper at Walmart? Help your
community and shop local.
Part. 2 - Support Small Online
Retailers.
Privately owned internet-based businesses are the new “mom & pop shops” of
our time. For as little as a few hundred dollars a month, anyone willing
to do the hard work of setting up a retail website can have their own
business. Many got snookered in the late ‘90s thinking that all you need
is a “dot.com” and BAM, you make lots of money. WRONG! There’s no
subsitiute for hard work. There’s no free lunch. Our mothers all told us
that.
We considered opening a very small metaphysical gift store in our town.
After looking into what it would take to do that and the monthly overhead,
we said, no thanks. So instead, we started another website... http://www.freespiritgiftshop.com
It’s actually an extension of our existing eBay store.
eBay is a fantastic way to start your own web based business. The best
part is that it’s a completely level playing field. When you put up an
auction, or open an eBay Store, you stand the exact same chance of getting
a sale as any big business does.
In the same way that the big mega chain stores such as Walmart aren’t
going away, neither is the Internet. Every year that goes by, more and
more people are becoming comfortable shopping online. Systems such as
PayPal make it easy to make payments and receive payments. Services such
as ProPay allow the smallest online retailer to easily process credit
cards without a monthly merchant account. You can even get an 800 number
for free from IDT so that your customers can just call you to place their
order.
Having an online business is not “fall off a log” simple, but it’s not
brain surgery either. Like any business, you have to find suppliers,
research your market, promote the value of your products, and price your
products accordingly. Sure, you’ll make mistakes from time to time, but
hey, even big businesses do that every day.
The point is that with a vision, persistence, and effort, you can have
your own mom & pop online retail store. Just remember, that when
opportunity knocks, it’s usually wearing work cloths.
So, in the same way I’m suggesting that we all support our local shop
owners, we can all support small online retailers. My wife Karen and I are
online retailers. We have 3 websites that offer reproductions of my
automotive art, an eBay store that offers my car art, some nostalgia drag
racing products and a wonderful selection of metaphysical and
inspirational gifts. And lastly, there’s the newest website, http://www.FreeSpiritGiftShop.com
that offers the same metaphysical and inspirational gift items, but lives
outside of the world of eBay.
When we get sales, we REALLY appreciate them! I’m a VERY happy cowboy when
I see that we have overnight sales when I check my email in the morning.
Like most businesses, things slow down in the summer. But just like those
first cool, refreshing, crisp days of Autumn, it’s means so much when the
customers come back. Which got me to thinking, “I ought to support and buy
from other small online retailers, so that they can continue on with their
little enterprise.”
A Simple Suggestion
So I’m suggesting to all of my friends, family, and aquaintences to
support your local store owners. If you can’t find something locally, hunt
for it online, and buy from a small online retailer. I’m not suggesting
that you NEVER shop at Walmart, although that’s been my personal choice.
But before you automatically head on out to the mega store, shop at your
small local stores.
Our culture certainly has changed in the last ten years, and not all for
the good. But one of the things that has made America great is our
creativity resourcefulness, and tenacity. The Bible instructs us to “be
your brother’s keeper,” not as a “rule” to be enforced, but as a
“concept,” a “way of being” because truly, we are all One. When we help a
local store owner, we’re helping him or her to continue on providing goods
and services, which in turn, help the people of the community. It’s all a
big circle. To quote John Lennon from his song, “I Am The Walrus”... “I am
he, as you are he, as you are me, and we are all together.”
Right on Brother! See ya downtown.
*********************************************
K. Scott Teeters is a Reiki Master and author of" It’s Time To Wake Up:
Reiki & Other Essential Tools For Spiritual Awakening" published by
Llumina Press. Scott’s website is a metaphysical candy shop loaded with
essays, insights, awakening tools and tips, amazing images, and more. The
site website address is:
http://www.itstimetowakeup.com
Scott and his wife Karen have just launched a new online metaphysical
store, “Free Spirit Gift Shop.” It’s loaded with all sorts of fun, cool
metaphysical gifts: Gemstone Merkabs, Sacred Geometry Pewter Pendants,
Fairy Figurines, Chakra Stone Kits, “My Favorite Chakra Shirts, and much,
much more. Stop by for a visit at:
http://www.freespiritgiftshop.com
Scott lives in Medford, NJ with his wife and business partner Karen, Spudz
their beagle dog, Mittins the tuxedo cat and Twiggy the tabby cat. He’s
always working on their websites, as well as the follow up book to “Wake
Up,” titled, “101 Ways To Stay Awake.” The new book will be out Summer
‘05.