Author: Leigh Sparks
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February 2023 – New piece for The Conversation on online retailing (see commentaries tab)
January 2023 – Roll over of some areas for new year, plus The Conversation piece on Christmas trading updates published (see commentaries tab) and main posts
December 2022 – End of year tidying up and re-arrangement, including link to EDAS podcast on places and towns (see presentations tab)
April 2022 -new journal article published (Journal Articles page) on Twenty-One Years of Going Shopping and Marketing History
Top Posts & Pages
- Personal Announcement: FRSE
- A Japanese Eataly? In Singapore?
- Retail change and why we fell in love with supermarkets?
- Grocery Market Shares in Great Britain 1997-2021
- UK Grocery Market Share 1997-2019
- Strange Things in Self-Service
- Twenty One Years of UK Grocery Market Share
- The Buttercup Dairy Company
- Grocery Market Shares in the UK 2020
- What Should We Value about Retailing and Towns and What Should We Do About Them?
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Tag Archives: SGF
Scottish Grocers Federation Conference: Issues and Opportunities
Just over a year ago, I did my first F2F presentation in a long time, when I presented at the Scottish Grocers Federation annual conference in Glasgow. This was apparently one of the very first such events held in Glasgow … Continue reading
Posted in Community, Consumers, Convenience, Convenience stores, Cost of Living, Costs, Crime, Deposit Return Scheme, Energy Costs, Food Retailing, Go Local, Local Retailers, Producers, Retail Strategy, Retailers, Retailing, Reverse Vending, Scotland Food and Drink, Scotland Loves Local, Scottish Government, Scottish Grocers Federation
Tagged Convenience Retailing, Convenience stores, Crime, Deposit Return Scheme, Energy Costs, Go Local, local shops, Retail Strat, Retailing, Scotland, Scottish Government, SGF
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Convenience and Community
In the disaster zone that was the Tesco half year results finally released the other week, there were two figures that confirmed again the changing structure of British grocery retailing. And for a change neither of them were really to … Continue reading