UK Music Jobs Blog

Saving the Record Store

February 26th, 2009 by Lee Jarvis
Posted in Lee Jarvis, Music Industry Career Advice

My first Mecca when I started DJing and collecting music was Trackmasters in Romford; a great place, run by an awesome guy with a solid knowledge of dance music; it was purely the digital revolution that killed them off. All across the UK, independent music stores are closing at an alarming rate, as the buying habits of the general public have changed remarkably, and the shift from CD to digital is now obvious for all to see.

The ‘adult’ shoppers who were wanting to replace all their vinyl and cassette collection with new CDs have pretty much completed that transition. Getting them into new music on a regular basis is pretty rare. That leaves the general music buying youth, and, well, they are obviously all illegal downloading pirates (according to the RIAA/PRS/ASCAP etc), who rarely set foot in a physical retailer for anything anymore.

There is hope. In order for these traditional retail stores to keep afloat, they must adapt to the new music 2.0 world and attract customers by a variety of means. They must expand their revenue sources in order to survive. I’m sure that some if this will involve mp3s, and developing a working strategy for in-store downloading. For example, a customer can come in with their personal mp3 player, maybe share a few songs with an in-store music specialist, then receive recommendations for new music purchases. A ‘top-up card’ system could be implemented, where a customer can buy 5/ 10/ 25 downloads in advance, select tracks from in-store machines, then insert the card and link up their mp3 player to receive their new tracks. This will also sell well as presents for friends and families at Christmas. Branching into mp3s can also tie-in with the sale of personal mp3 players, mobile phones with music packages and the accessories that accompany them i.e. headphones, earphones and mini-speaker / home stereo link-up systems.

Box sets and limited edition CDs are a good way to add extra value, relative to the price of a ‘normal’ CD. They could have extra features that are not available with the original, such as extra photos and information published in the inlays(s), enhanced CDs that will play music videos in home computers, and possibly bonus tracks / unreleased mixes / original studio recordings / remastered versions. Much of this would not be available online, or at least would mean more to own physically for the loyal fans of each artist.

Brick-and-mortar retail outlets should also consider moving into other products associated with a variety of mainstream and niche artists and strong music brands, from Michael Jackson concert DVDs to Marilyn Manson dolls to Def Jam T-shirts to Glastonbury / SXSW tickets. Supporting local bands is one way they can even have an edge over the large brands such as HMV / Virgin etc. Rather than trying to sell a thousand megastar albums, selling 25 albums of 40 different local acts will create the same income and possible evolve more loyal, longer term custom.

Anything they can do to think outside the box and expand their store into a community once again is the way that the physical retailers can fight back and survive. I, for one, would hate to see the last remaining few disappear from our streets, and honestly think that by becoming more of a community / lifestyle / hang out joint, and turn the shop itself into a trusted, authentic and knowledgeable brand, then they can regain not just one-off customers, but regular long-tail fans.

Lee Jarvis.

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6 Responses to “Saving the Record Store”

  1. johnlong41 Says:

    it involves packaging an mp3
    possibly a usb:thumbdrive.
    suitable for an mp3 port – jL

  2. Danny KZ Says:

    just read your article ’saving the record store’ – really enjoyed it!

    i lived much of my teens in my local record shop, rayners lane record and disco centre, run by jon jules. (i first went there with mum who who was after some japanese jazz funk)!!

    it was a mecca for someone like me…there was a real community feeling as we just went there to meet up, chat, and of course, listen to the new tunes…there was never any pressure to buy, but you always would…

    in my early days when i couldnt afford ‘imports’, i would go through the sale stock, and picked up gems like joe smooths promised land, etc…

    almost every weekend, jon would close the shop and kick out all the kids who just hung out at the arcade machines, we would have a lock in and jon would start mixing it up!!

    i never realised it but a flurry of important movers and shakers in the dj/record world would also pop in – people like the late great james hamilton from record mirror, who came in to borrow records to review for his bpm section; chris paul who started a very famous night called orange at the rocket, whch went on to camden palace…i were many others but i cant recall…

    as i grew older, i would venture into the west end and on to groove records, tag records, black market and uptown records…also hmv and virgin – i never knocked the mainstream shops because sometimes they had the hidden jems…for example, in the portishead essential mix, there was an amazing reworks of shirley temples light my fire, but i never knew anymore about it…then years later, in my local virgin, i saw light my fire remixed by louie vega on a unknown label…bought it on the off chance and wham!!! – the very same tune! thats the thing about buying vinyl, you dont necessarily get with downloads…

    i am a vinyl junkie because thats what i grew up with, and in some respects, feel very sorry for the youngsters of today, who wont be able to ever have what we did…

    the heart and soul of record buying has truly vanished from the high street, and now that major dance labels like defected have stopped pressing vinyl too, i cant see it ever lasting…

    i know we have to embrace the future, and the dj revolution has well and truly begun…its just a shame thats no way (at present) to transfer the ‘digging’ culture that you and i both grew up with!

    just out of interest, if you havent seen it yet, i highly recommend a film called scratchin…i wont say anymore than that!…

  3. Daniel Says:

    Nothing wrong with this, at all, people should get it more.

  4. jj Says:

    Trackmasters in romford was okay after a few years of opening but when that skinny little fucker started working in there/running it, it went down hill.

  5. Ian congdon Says:

    Dan i also went to that record store. starting out i dj in regals uxbridge got all my top tunes from jon j.
    sadley them days have long gon my friend but always live in my memory…

    good bless you all.

  6. Hire Teen Says:

    This is really interesting. Thanks for the sharing.

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