Shop Local Saturday
Nov. 25-Dec. 1, 2020
HOLIDAY GUIDE
SMOKY MOUNTAIN NEWS
Support local businesses onsite and online
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BY BOYD ALLSBROOK CONTRIBUTING WRITER his yearâs post-Thanksgiving weekend of shopping holidays will be unlike any other. This should come as no surprise when one considers a market made unpredictable in the wake of a global pandemic, large swaths of the consuming public now reticent to venture outside and their consequent move to the safety of purely online vendors. The entire cultural zeitgeist around what Americans mean by in-person shopping has shifted from âa leisure activity I enjoy doingâ to âa calculated risk I sometimes have to take.â As Black Friday and Shop Local Saturday approach, some wonder if Cyber Monday will steal the show. Western North Carolinaâs many momand-pop shops have weathered the pandemicâs curveballs to the best of their ability, with varying means and degrees of success. Some local vendors have adopted online options as part and parcel of their day-today operations, while others say they havenât needed to. Some, like Jo Gilley of Hazelwoodâs Blue Ridge Books, have taken advantage of unique programs like Bookshop.org in addition to maintaining limited in-person hours. âWhat weâre doing is kind of different,â said Gilley. âIndependent bookstores all got together and formed Bookshop.org â but it isnât through us, itâs through our distributor. So youâre not actually shopping books from our store, but we still get a little piece of the action.â The website is essentially a way for over 800 independent bookstores to pool their resources, to help each other make it through a time where Amazonâs convenience dominates the bookselling world. Bookshop functions similarly to mega-sites like Amazon, with one key difference: if you select your local bookstore on the site, they receive the 30 percent of the profit, without having to worry about inventory or shipping. Even unspecified purchases help local stores â they all share 10 percent of the websiteâs general purchases, just for being members. âItâs helped all of us a lot,â Gilley said. âIt started right at the beginning of COVID, and we all get a profit sharing, a little piece of the pot.â Even with Bookshop.orgâs added monthly support, however, Blue Ridge Books is still struggling. Though theyâve expanded hours since the pandemicâs initial losses, Gilley said that sheâs still afraid they might close every day. âWeâre gonna try our best to keep going,â she said. âWe still donât have normal hours, just because thereâs no reason for me to pay somebody to stay here just to sell a newspaper or two.â
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to single out particular indie bookstores.â Though times are still harder than usual, between their website, Bookshop.org, and strong local support, City Lights is doing just fine. âWe had five local authors drop new books this season. Any one of those books would have made a month for us in a normal year, and we had five! We had strong sales in July and August,â Wilcox said. âWe were back down a little bit in September, but hey â back down a little bit is a new up. So weâre holding our own and weâre grateful for it.â He emphasized the importance of people shopping locally, saying, âyouâre betting with your pocketbook on the importance of having a strong local economy.â
Gilley cited an outpouring of local support as the reason theyâve lasted this long. âWe were very fortunate that customers from all over were ordering books from us just to keep us viable during that bad time. We had other customers who just donated money to us, bought gift cards. Weâre very grateful to all of them,â she said. Sylvaâs City Lights Bookstore dealt with similar challenges at the onset of the pandemic. âA couple off-site events that we depend on were cancelled in March. We had to lay City Lights Bookstore in Sylva. everyone off which was very painful,â said owner Chris Wilcox. âWhile we closed the shop floor, the cat and I stuck around to do curb service, the website, phone orders, text, Facebook messenger â we were taking orders however we could. That was it until we got into phase one of reopening.â Though City Lights was significantly hampered by reduced occupancy â they still only allow nine people in the shop at one time â they were aided by their longrunning independent website. âWeâve been doing e-commerce for 20something years,â said Wilcox. âSo we were glad we had a little leg While many small vendors like Blue up. Itâs a pretty full-functioning website. It Ridge and City Lights have leaned into works pretty well â people can opt to either online shopping, others surprisingly havenât pick up here, curbside, have things mailed. needed to. Patricia Miller of Waynesvilleâs Weâre trying to help people stay home, stay Affairs of the Heart, a gift boutique, said safe if thatâs what they need to do.â that she considered e-commerce in early Wilcox was more prepared than most March, but now simply doesnât have the local vendors. Already well-practiced in time. mailing books all over the country, when âWeâre technologically challenged,â she COVID hit, City Lights had a system in place laughed. âI do think at the beginning it was for locals to turn to. tough for us not to have online shopping, âA lot of customers whoâd never really but now weâre so busy!â had occasion to use it were like, âOh, yeah, Affairs of the Heart closed in early March they do have a website!â and so a lot of our for a few weeks before reopening to sell old friends suddenly became web shoppers,â hand sanitizer and masks along with their said Wilcox. âHaving the website means that regular inventory. they can shop online and still shop local.â âWe opened a little early â weâd been City Lights also joined Bookshop.org. doing curbside service, offering pick-up on âThat organization is doing good work Facebook. But the real turning point was â they kind of take care of all the fulfillwhen we opened our doors again,â said ments so thereâs not really a local pickup. Miller. âPeople were getting their stimulus They donât really have some of our more money but were going to the big box stores locally published stuff though, so we still feel for gifts, because they were the only things that our own website is a very useful tool. open. So thatâs when we decided that we But weâre very grateful for what Bookshop is were essential.â doing,â Wilcox said, adding, âItâs also a great Affairs of the Heart was curiously shieldway for authors to say, âyou can get my ed from the brunt of COVIDâs economic books through bookshopâ instead of having hardship.
âIf youâd have told me in March that weâd be where we are now, I wouldnât have believed you, said Miller. âBecause once people started moving, it has been really busy. People are flocking to the mountains. Theyâre not going to the cities â they wanna come here and be outside and hike, so business has been phenomenal. I think weâll actually end up on an up year!â Though this influx of travelers increases the risk of COVID transmission, Miller believes that if weâre careful, we can walk that line. âItâs a double-edged sword. All these people are coming in and you donât know where theyâre coming from and, yeah, thatâs true, but you have to work. This is not a hobby for
me,â she said. âSo, we wear our masks, and we wash our hands, and thatâs all we can do.â Affairs of the Heart still offers pick-up orders and more socially-distanced options, but Miller said that she hasnât had any requests. âI would do it â I made a video for Shop Local Saturday saying âmessage me! Weâll pick out anything you want and have it ready for you outside. Weâll empty the whole shop for you to browse alone!â But they havenât asked for it.â Miller, like Gilley and Wilcox, cited strong local support as the lifeblood of her pandemic success. âPeople have been so supportive,â she said. âThe locals, who even way back bought gift cards and made a point to just come in and buy something, we are so grateful for. Though tourists are what help keep us in business, we truly love our locals, and we wish we had more of them. Weâre very blessed.â For those planning to shop local this weekend or on Cyber Monday, remember to check with your favorite local shops to see what they have to offer online or by curbside pickup to support the local economy.