Looking out from Archant Towers to a sea of white brings back
childhood memories of days off from forced school closures playing in the snow
in Cromer. Memories of your youth often have key points that not only stick in
your mind but also often come up in conversations with friends such as “what was
the first record you ever bought?”
I can clearly remember going into
Woolworths in Cromer with my mum to buy Ultravox’s Love’s great adventures which
started a love affair with music I still have. Sadly, I now doubt that my boys
will have that same experience and memories. I cannot believe that a click on a
box on a website will illicit such strong emotions some 30 years later. This
brings me to the current retail stalwart to struggle;
HMV.
HMV opened its first store in
Oxford Street ,
London in 1921 and currently has
231 stores all of which are now under threat as it moves into administration.
The future of HMV is now clearly in the balance and there is a strong potential
that it could go the way of Our Price and Andy’s Records as fond childhood
memories. This despite the fact that last year, according to Verdict Research, HMV accounted for 22%
of all music and video sales in the U.K.
Most commentators are putting the
blame squarely on the rise of music e-commerce combined with the growth in
online services such as Spotify and iTunes. Those certainly are major factors
but they have their own pressures. A major online only competitor was Play.com
which has recently ceased to be a straight etailer, caused by the closing of the
Low Value Consignment relief tax loophole which meant that prices were cheaper
as they were imported from the Channel Islands .
But the fact remains that most of the people I know purchase single tracks or
whole albums in digital form only if only to reduce storage space in their
houses.
Other contributing factors have been
glossed over such as the fact that as a nation we are buying less music than we
did 10 years ago. The fact that music retailers faced competition not just from
the internet but also from the supermarkets and their purchasing power, a major
reason for many independent music stores closing. Despite all of this could HMV
have done more to survive?
That is a difficult question.
Certainly you could argue that it could have reacted earlier and more strongly
on the threat from online. You could also argue that the stores could have had
more focus and become more experience focussed. However when revenue pressure
starts and you move down the “pile high discount” model its a difficult one to
escape and to move to creating a store that people want to visit rather than are
afraid about knocking over piles of cheap DVD’s.
What HMV still does have though is
brand value in its name and peoples emotions regarding the brand. On the day of
the announcement #HMVmemories started trending on twitter, you didn’t see that
with Comet. I truly hope that someone recognises a potential here and starts
again with the brand. However they will need to be strong in retail, marketing,
branding and also digital and companies who have managed to master all of these
are extremely rare.
Tim Youngman is head of digital
marketing for Archant follow him on twitter
@timyoungman
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