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Jessops

2

Comments

  • se9addick said:

    Does snappy snaps still exist ?

    I wonder what the average British high street will look like in 30 years time.

    image
  • moutuakilla
    moutuakilla Posts: 7,580
    more 2nd hand shops i predict - some trading shops popping up, bring your old books etc, we'll buy them off you and sell them on cheap. i went to Crawley town centre the other day - it had 4 Costa's within about 3minutes walk of each other - madness - but apparently not as they were all packed. whenever i go in smiths in my town it is always packed. I personally don't like buying clothes off the internet, so would imagine they've got more staying power. and where would we be without all those charity shops?
  • buckshee
    buckshee Posts: 7,868
    It's the way of the world I'm afraid . Anyway more and more of these stores are staffed by foreign labour anyway. Just go into Costa now and you'll see all the staff have name badges on that also have their national flag on , I've yet to see a union flag or George cross on.
  • buckshee said:

    Just go into Costa now and you'll see all the staff have name badges on that also have their national flag on , I've yet to see a union flag or George cross on.

    Costa don't get much call for a badge with a George cross with the name Nathan on.
  • I always had 2 problems with Jessops:

    1: quality of service
    2: price

    The shop staff were often clueless about the equipment they were selling, especially things like filters, camera bags, etc.

    They always seemed to be10 to 15 % more expensive than anywhere else. I would expect to pay more at an independent specialist, but their prices were always more expensive, desipte being a chain and bulk buying!
  • BIG_ROB
    BIG_ROB Posts: 5,274
    Stig said:

    I don't feel sorry for Jessops as a business at all. In the '80s and '90s they expanded aggressively with no regard for their competitors. Many local camera stores were lost at that time. Here in Southend we had a local shop called Patience. Their customer service was second to none, but they couldn't compete price wise. I don't imagine for a minute that anyone at Jessops thought it was anything but good for them when Patience went to the wall. Now they have have been out-competed. What goes around come around.

    For the staff though, it must be awful and I really feel for them. I hope that they can get jobs as soon as possible, but with the economy as it is that's going to be really tough.

    As for vouchers, I've never bought them and never will. Cash is infinitely better because you're not restricting people to where they spend it and if any thing happens that means you can't use cash it will be so catastrophic most of us will be dead anyway. Vouchers smouchers.

    Bit like Tesco, they're the bastards who made me sell my shop! Never used a Tesco since
  • northstandsteve
    northstandsteve Posts: 14,332
    edited January 2013
    so what happens to us all then when all the jobs go ? No jobs for kids , adults, oh dear what a wonderful thing the internet is that it makes the whole country redundant.
  • MrOneLung
    MrOneLung Posts: 26,876
    You can't blame the customer for wanting things cheaper.
  • Crusty54
    Crusty54 Posts: 3,235
    The company that owns most of the shopping area in Woolwich tried to object to the new Sainsburys/M&S at Charlton.

    Objection failed. Shame that they hadn't invested more in their own estate before the arrival of Tesco.

  • MrOneLung said:

    You can't blame the customer for wanting things cheaper.

    no you cant, but if the outcome is more and more jobs going, then it dont matter how cheap it is because people wont have any money to pay for it. I am genuinely worried about where this country is going. I just dont see there being jobs out there in 10-15 years time.

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  • northstandsteve
    northstandsteve Posts: 14,332
    edited January 2013
    .
  • se9addick
    se9addick Posts: 32,059
    Crusty54 said:

    The company that owns most of the shopping area in Woolwich tried to object to the new Sainsburys/M&S at Charlton.

    Objection failed. Shame that they hadn't invested more in their own estate before the arrival of Tesco.

    Where's the M&S in Charlton ?
  • buckshee
    buckshee Posts: 7,868
    se9addick said:

    Crusty54 said:

    The company that owns most of the shopping area in Woolwich tried to object to the new Sainsburys/M&S at Charlton.

    Objection failed. Shame that they hadn't invested more in their own estate before the arrival of Tesco.

    Where's the M&S in Charlton ?
    Being built where MFI was , massive joint thing with Sainsbury like the one in Colliers Wood.

    The current Sainsbury by the odoen is shutting when this one opens meaning that both that and comet will be gone.
  • Stig
    Stig Posts: 29,045

    I always had 2 problems with Jessops:

    1: quality of service
    2: price

    The shop staff were often clueless about the equipment they were selling, especially things like filters, camera bags, etc.

    They always seemed to be10 to 15 % more expensive than anywhere else. I would expect to pay more at an independent specialist, but their prices were always more expensive, desipte being a chain and bulk buying!

    They were also very handy when it came to spotting a novice and selling them loads of unnecessary extras. I remember buying a camera in there years ago and they told me I needed a uv filter because otherwise those nasty uv rays would ruin all of my lovely images. I fell for it, but it wasn't until later that I read up that I found out that in South East England there's no problem with uv at all, because we're so close to sea level: you only need a uv filter up in the mountains. My son had a similar problem with being sold an unnecessary home-brand tripod. Something he didn't need and that was too wobbly to hold a pencil steady let alone a camera.
  • mart77
    mart77 Posts: 5,658
    buckshee said:

    se9addick said:

    Crusty54 said:

    The company that owns most of the shopping area in Woolwich tried to object to the new Sainsburys/M&S at Charlton.

    Objection failed. Shame that they hadn't invested more in their own estate before the arrival of Tesco.

    Where's the M&S in Charlton ?
    Being built where MFI was , massive joint thing with Sainsbury like the one in Colliers Wood.

    The current Sainsbury by the odoen is shutting when this one opens meaning that both that and comet will be gone.
    Is this definitely getting the go ahead buckshee?

  • Thought the Charlton Peninsular Sainsburys was there flagship store ? All Eco friendly and the like ?
  • cafcfan
    cafcfan Posts: 11,200
    Addickted said:

    I suppose my £50 Christmas voucher is down the swanny then?

    Almost certainly if it was bought with cash. And if it was purchased on a credit card you are stuffed as it's under the £100 limit set out in the Consumer Credit Act. You would have to join the (bottom of the) long list of creditors.
    Your only chance is if the person that bought it for you paid for it on their bank debit card. In which case, they (not you) can claim back the £50 through the bank's charge-back scheme. You can then ask them politely for a nice crispy £50 note (just check the intaglio print to make sure it's not snide).

  • masicat
    masicat Posts: 5,010
    Could never picture this happening.
  • not funny
  • masicat
    masicat Posts: 5,010

    not funny

    Snap out of it, was funny..

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  • masicat said:

    not funny

    Snap out of it, was funny..
    Negative
  • sorry peeps but anybody losing their job in the present economic climate is nothing to joke about.
  • masicat
    masicat Posts: 5,010
    Wasn't joking about people losing their jobs. However, most staff leaving Jessops will get snapped up by Halfords.
  • masicat said:

    Wasn't joking about people losing their jobs. However, most staff leaving Jessops will get snapped up by Halfords.

    You clearly are making a joke of it, twat.
  • Stig
    Stig Posts: 29,045
    edited January 2013
    masicat said:

    Wasn't joking about people losing their jobs. However, most staff leaving Jessops will get snapped up by Halfords.

    Now that is a firm I've often wondered about: Just how do they keep going? Abysmal customer service and sky high prices. Not usually a combination you'd expect in the model of a successful business but they, somehow, manage to survive.
  • masicat
    masicat Posts: 5,010

    masicat said:

    Wasn't joking about people losing their jobs. However, most staff leaving Jessops will get snapped up by Halfords.

    You clearly are making a joke of it, twat.
    My humour may not be yours. To be honest, anyone who even thinks they should call someone a twat because something has been posted they don't agree with must be driven nuts on here. I ignore a lot of stuff where I feel my post would be nothing but a personal insult as I really have nothing to say. I suggest you do the same. Won't call you a twat as I suspect the word doesn't go anywhere near describing you. C### would do it, but I'm not allowed.

    Now, get your brain in gear and post something derogatory or funny smartarse.
  • red_murph
    red_murph Posts: 2,460
    Stig said:

    I always had 2 problems with Jessops:

    1: quality of service
    2: price

    The shop staff were often clueless about the equipment they were selling, especially things like filters, camera bags, etc.

    They always seemed to be10 to 15 % more expensive than anywhere else. I would expect to pay more at an independent specialist, but their prices were always more expensive, desipte being a chain and bulk buying!

    They were also very handy when it came to spotting a novice and selling them loads of unnecessary extras. I remember buying a camera in there years ago and they told me I needed a uv filter because otherwise those nasty uv rays would ruin all of my lovely images. I fell for it, but it wasn't until later that I read up that I found out that in South East England there's no problem with uv at all, because we're so close to sea level: you only need a uv filter up in the mountains. My son had a similar problem with being sold an unnecessary home-brand tripod. Something he didn't need and that was too wobbly to hold a pencil steady let alone a camera.
    Agree on that Stig. Thankfully I do know a bit about it so managed not to fall for the spiel. When I went in to pick up my pre-ordered camera they tried to get me to buy all sorts of stuff, really quite forceful about it. I almost told them to stick it and shove the fairly considerable sum where the sun doesn't shine but was desperate for the camera at the time and had to spend my voucher there.
  • se9addick said:

    Does snappy snaps still exist ?

    I wonder what the average British high street will look like in 30 years time.

    Big big question as retailers, local and central government and planners need to think this one through ... fast!

    If I'm looking for a camera or new fridge etc I will look on line but prefer to browse a real shop and talk to someone about choices... I will buy there and then if they can price match... but business rates for retail will have to be slashed to enable high st to compete AND offer local jobs... Why would government do that? Well if its on the web then the smart companies sell from Ireland and Luxembourg meaning no corporation tax...
    I really think there is a future for high streets and town centre retail with the old style mix and markets etc. With specialist advice and people interacting.

    As for Jessups, I thought it would come back with some stores closing - hadn't realised it had been in trouble for years.

  • McBobbin
    McBobbin Posts: 12,052
    Talking about this today. Chelmsford seems to be thriving, and not all pound shops. We are soon getting a John Lewis and a waitrose in town which are big draws. I people like a thriving high street of they can afford not to he everything online or from the supermarket. I think chelmsford is maybe quite affluent. But you need a plan to stop town centres dying. Maybe subsidise rates for independent shops? Might attract more people to the area.
  • The only hope i have is we see the return of much more independant stores, as im one of possibly the very few that would pay a little more to buy from and support a store like that, over some nameless internet/chain business.