Saturday, 8 January 2011

HMV Group to close 60 stores

Earlier this week I spent part of my lunchbreak in the flagship HMV store on London's Oxford St.  Walking down aisle after aisle filled with products that I could buy more cheaply online - even in the post-Christmas sale -  either as a download or as a physical product, I wondered how its business model could be successful in today's marketplace.  When I got back to my office, I read that the HMV Group was to close 60 stores (40 HMV, 20 Waterstone's) and I was hardly surprised.  Other than a few deeply discounted lines that it couldn't have made much (if any) profit on (DJ Hero, with decks, for £30 for example), I didn't see why anyone with access to the internet would need to purchase from there.  This was particularly true in the videogame section, where some games were more than double the price asked by online competitors.

Last year Game, when announcing its poor half-yearly results, stated that it was going to close 85 of its stores (across the Game and Gamestation brands) by Christmas 2013, a move that will leave it with 550 stores.  Game is a little different from HMV, in that it is a specialist retailer and also that it has a fair amount of overlap in its branches, as a result of the earlier acquisitions of the Electronics Boutique* and Gamestation brands.  In my town (population 84,000 - thanks Wikipedia), there are two Game stores and a Gamestation in the town centre, a pattern that is repeated in many locations in the UK. In the same precinct, there is also a HMV, a Cex and a Tesco that sells videogames - this amount of competition in a falling marketplace is sure to result in closures.

Two years ago, zavvi went into administration and subsequently closed down.  Shortly before, Woolworths, which sold videogames, DVDs and CDs as part of its lines, also went into administration (this was a contributing factor in zavvi's failure, as a Woolworths subsidiary supplied it with much of its stock).  HMV has its differences to zavvi - its larger,  its brand is better established, it sells preowned games, it also owns Waterstone's (itself under pressure from Amazon and the like) - but the core business is essentially the same.   I don't think that HMV is on the brink - and it is clearly acting now to avert problems in the future - but fault lines can be seen in its business model.

The ultimate question in considering the entertainment media retail market is 'can it survive?'.  I'm not sure, in the long-term that it can, other than in flagship locations such as central London,  which can cater to the day-shopper market.  I often pop into Game and HMV in my lunchbreak, or at weekends but a lot of the time I only browse and don't buy anything.  This behaviour essentially turns the bricks and mortar retailers into showrooms for the online customer - not the basis for a successful business.  I think that this is a shame (not least for the thousands of staff that work in these businesses) but, ultimately, this is part of the evolutionary effect of the internet and of digital distribution, which have been very beneficial in many other ways.

Many people in the UK were sorry when Woolworths failed but how much of that was down to nostalgia from shopping or working  there in the past? How many of those decrying its closure had shopped in one its stores recently? As Woolworths' core market had been eroded by the large supermarkets selling similar lines more cheaply, online retailers have done the same to HMV and Game, a trend that seems irreversible.  Will HMV and Game be here in 5 years' time?  Probably.  Will they be here in 30 years' time?  I doubt it.



* it was actually Electronics Boutique that bought Game and then rebranded all the UK-based EBs as 'Game', presumably as 'Electronics Boutique' is such an awful name for a videogame retailer

2 comments:

  1. Wow HMV now closing. Sad but the market is surely changing. I loved HMV when the electronic stuff was just a dream. I loved Tower Records too which I really miss but I don't think many people have the patience to actually physically "look" at music and games. Its become more of the instant download era. And, now with App stores everything is instant gratification.

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  2. Well, it's not quite that bad yet - if they close 40 stores, they'll still have plenty more left in the UK and Ireland (over 200). And the name (and Nipper the dog) will, I think, keep going online even if all the high street stores do close (as zavvi and Woolworths do).

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