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Auntie Kate The Resale Expert

Kate Holmes of TGtbT.com talks with consignment, resale & thrift shopkeepers about opening, running, & making their shop THRIVE!

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A cartoon only a consignment, resale, or thrift shopkeeper would think funny. »

Top 10 Reasons to Shop Local. And to Shop Resale, natch.

October 30, 2011 by Auntie Kate of Too Good to be Threw

Go ahead, make a Shop Local sign that will get word of mouth!Okay, everyone wants folks to Shop Local and we all know all the reasons to use in our marketing and press releases. Or do we? Here’s a fresh look at

Top Ten Reasons to Shop Local

1. Protect Local Character and Prosperity

By choosing to support locally owned businesses, you help maintain your community’s diversity and distinctive flavor.

2. Community Well-Being

Locally owned businesses build strong neighborhoods by sustaining communities, linking neighbors, and by contributing more to local causes.

3. Local Decision Making

Local ownership means that important decisions are made locally by people who live in the community and who will feel the impacts of those decisions.

4. Keeping Dollars in the Local Economy

Your dollars spent in locally-owned businesses have three times the impact* on your community as dollars spent at national chains. When shopping locally, you simultaneously create jobs, fund more city services through sales tax, invest in neighborhood improvement and promote community development.

5. Job and Wages

Locally owned businesses create more jobs locally and, in some sectors, provide better wages and benefits than chains do.

6. Entrepreneurship

Entrepreneurship fuels America’s economic innovation and prosperity, and serves as a key means for families to move out of low-wage jobs and into the middle class.

7. Public Benefits and Costs

Local stores in town centers require comparatively little infrastructure and make more efficient use of public services relative to big box stores and strip shopping malls.

8. Environmental Sustainability

Local stores help to sustain vibrant, compact, walkable town centers-which in turn are essential to reducing sprawl, automobile use, habitat loss, and air and water pollution.

9. Competition

A marketplace of tens of thousands of small businesses is the best way to ensure innovation and low prices over the long-term.

10. Product Diversity

A multitude of small businesses, each selecting products based, not on a national sales plan, but on their own interests and the needs of their local customers, guarantees a much broader range of product choices.

From Stacy Mitchell, The Institute for Local Self-Reliance via http://staylocal.org/facts/why/
 

* Note from Kate: How interesting a figure is THAT for us consignment, thrift and resale shopkeepers. The shopper’s dollar goes THREE TIMES as far in supporting the health of our community… AND our business gives them THREE TIMES the value since we’re resale! So they can use $30 to buy $30 worth of stuff at the national chain, of which only $10 stays locally… or for that same $30, get $90 worth of merchandise in OUR shop and all $30 stays local….

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Posted in economics of resale, Shopkeeping talk | Tagged advertising, shop local | 3 Comments

3 Responses

  1. on October 30, 2011 at 6:42 pm mimi's avatar mimi

    Can we use your image?


    • on October 30, 2011 at 7:11 pm Auntie Kate of Too Good to be Threw's avatar Auntie Kate

      Glad you like it. Unless your shop is called one more time, probably not a good idea to use my creation. But the image is free to use on Microsoft’s images, and you can add your own wording with picnik.com in your choice of fonts, colors, and wording. Tell us where to see YOUR version of this idea when you get it done!


  2. on October 30, 2011 at 6:39 pm mimi's avatar mimi

    Like.



Comments are closed.

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