Sensormatic IQ Data - Neighbourhood Retailer https://neighbourhoodretailer.com The authoritative voice of the grocery industry in Northern Ireland Fri, 09 Jul 2021 08:40:55 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://neighbourhoodretailer.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-NR-SIte-Icon-2-32x32.png Sensormatic IQ Data - Neighbourhood Retailer https://neighbourhoodretailer.com 32 32 178129390 Footfall Fiasco – Drop adds to retailers’ worries, says NIRC https://neighbourhoodretailer.com/footfall-fiasco-drop-adds-to-retailers-worries-says-nirc/ Fri, 09 Jul 2021 08:40:55 +0000 https://neighbourhoodretailer.com/?p=17752 NIRC-SENSORMATIC IQ FOOTFALL MONITOR – JUNE 2021 Footfall drop adds to retailers’ worries – covering the five weeks 30 May – 03 July 2021 2020

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NIRC-SENSORMATIC IQ FOOTFALL MONITOR – JUNE 2021

Footfall drop adds to retailers’ worries – covering the five weeks 30 May – 03 July 2021

2020 was a turbulent year in which much of retail bounced between being open and closed, impacting footfall significantly. To make meaningful comparisons to changes in footfall, all 2021 figures are compared with 2019 (pre-pandemic). This means our 2021 figures are now year-on-two-years (Yo2Y), rather than year-on-year (YoY).

According to NIRC-Sensormatic IQ data Northern Ireland footfall decreased by 20.6% in June (Yo2Y), a 5.7 percentage point decrease from May. This is above the UK average decline of 27.6% (Yo2Y). Northern Ireland saw the shallowest decline in footfall of all UK regions.

Shopping Centre footfall declined by 16.9% in June (Yo2Y) in Northern Ireland, down from -4.2% in May.

In June, footfall in Belfast decreased by 22.3% (Yo2Y), a 2.0 percentage point decline from May.

Aodhán Connolly, Northern Ireland Retail Consortium Director, said:

“Although Northern Ireland still leads the pack in footfall bounce back across the UK, we are still 5 percentage points worse than last month and 20 percentage points down on the last comparable year which was 2019. This shows that there is still much to do and that our towns, cities and shopping destinations are still feeling the pinch of workers not being back in the office and the spend that generates on everything from food to go to clothes.

Added to that we have seen increased costs due to covid continue as well as a squeeze coming from global shipping and commodity prices which will particularly affect non-food items. This is compounded on the food front, as we still are no closer to agreeing a trusted trader scheme between the EU and the UK which we need to keep choice and affordability for NI households. We need the Government and the EU to work together to deliver this scheme with urgency and live up to their commitments to the people of Northern Ireland. “

Andy Sumpter, Retail Consultant EMEA for Sensormatic Solutions, said:
“The UK’s footfall in June was mildly better than what we saw in May. This small uplift in footfall (only seen in England and Wales) was perhaps unsurprising given that COVID rules were, by and large, the same. Whilst confidence from the vaccination program and some indoor dining might have given a much-needed boost, the delayed rollback of restrictions, due to the accelerated spread of the delta variant will have dampened the impact.

“With most restrictions expected to be lifted on the 19th of July, we can finally hope to see what the somewhat over-referenced new normal may actually look like. As more people start to venture back to their offices, the much-missed commuter business will be a welcome return. Retailers will also be hoping their customers have missed browsing without restrictions, as much as they have missed their customers.”

MONTHLY TOTAL NORTHERN IRELAND RETAIL FOOTFALL (% CHANGE WITH 2019)

UK FOOTFALL BY LOCATION (% CHANGE WITH 2019)

TOTAL FOOTFALL BY REGION (% CHANGE WITH 2019)

GROWTH RANK REGION % GROWTH Yo2Y
1 Northern Ireland -20.6%
2 South West England -20.6%
3 East of England -21.6%
4 East Midlands -22.1%
5 North West England -24.1%
6 South East England -24.6%
7 Wales -25.6%
8 West Midlands -25.9%
9 Yorkshire and the Humber -26.2%
10 England -27.9%
11 North East England -28.2%
12 Scotland -29.5%
13 London -38.9%

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TOTAL FOOTFALL BY CITY (% CHANGE WITH 2019)

 

GROWTH RANK CITY % GROWTH Yo2Y
1 Portsmouth -21.6%
2 Belfast -22.3%
3 Liverpool -23.1%
4 Leeds -24.5%
5 Cardiff -24.6%
6 Bristol -26.2%
7 Nottingham -27.3%
8 Glasgow -30.3%
9 Manchester -33.0%
10 Birmingham -36.7%
11 London -38.5%

 

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Footfall bounceback has begun but still much work to be done https://neighbourhoodretailer.com/footfall-bounceback-has-begun-but-still-much-work-to-be-done/ Fri, 04 Jun 2021 11:03:38 +0000 https://neighbourhoodretailer.com/?p=17333 NIRC Sensormatic IQ Data – Covering the four weeks 2 – 29 May 2021 2020 was a turbulent year in which much of retail bounced

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NIRC Sensormatic IQ Data – Covering the four weeks 2 – 29 May 2021

2020 was a turbulent year in which much of retail bounced between being open and closed, impacting footfall significantly. To make meaningful comparisons to changes in footfall, all 2021 figures are compared with 2019 (pre-pandemic). This means our 2021 figures are now year-on-two-years (Yo2Y), rather than year-on-year (YoY).

According to NIRC-Sensormatic IQ data Northern Ireland footfall decreased by 14.9% in May (Yo2Y), a 40.5 percentage point increase from April. This is above the UK average decline of 27.7% (Yo2Y). Northern Ireland saw the shallowest decline in footfall of all UK regions.

Shopping Centre footfall declined by 4.2% in May (Yo2Y) in Northern Ireland, up from -64.2% in April.

May footfall – down 20%

In May, footfall in Belfast decreased by 20.3% (Yo2Y), a 35.0 percentage point improvement from April.

 Aodhán Connolly, Director of the Northern Ireland Retail Consortium, said:

“The recovery in shopper footfall gathered momentum in the first full month that shops were able to open since NI’s lockdown was lifted in late April with a surge as shoppers returned to our high streets, shopping centres and other retail destinations in May.”

“But as we predicted this will not be a V shaped recovery. Visits to retail destinations still languished almost 15% lower than during the comparable period two years ago. We are still missing our cohort of workers in our towns and cities who are still working from home and others have yet to venture to our retail destinations.”

Slow pace of recovery

“This slow pace of recovery is particularly felt by those fast-food retailers and self-service cafes who simply don’t have the capacity or the business model to deliver the table-only service that has been mandated by the Northern Ireland Executive in a move the prevents them from opening fully and competing with others that can. This draconian measure needs lifted immediately as our member have gone above and beyond to provide covid safe spaces for customers and colleagues alike.

Magic bullet

“Reopening alone has yet to prove a magic bullet for our hard-pressed retail industry. Without a rebound in footfall and increased demand, many retailers will struggle to make ends meet, placing a question mark over the viability of stores and jobs and the vitality of our retail destinations. Retailers are playing their part in trying to tempt shoppers, but policy makers need to think more creatively too about how they might reignite consumer confidence, entice people back into our retail destinations.”

 Andy Sumpter, Retail Consultant EMEA for Sensormatic Solutions, said:
“May saw a slow but steady recovery for the High Street as shoppers continued to return to bricks-and-mortar stores.  The improved shopper counts will have been helped by the reopening of indoor hospitality, which helped drive ambient footfall as consumers combined store visits with leisure and socialising.

While still down compared to pre-pandemic levels, we’ve seen cautious but consistent improvement to footfall with each passing month as society unlocks and the vaccine roll-out continues at pace, giving retailers a cause for cautious optimism.  However, the prospect of a sustained recovery is still very much hanging in the balance, with variants of concern and an uptick in infection rates threatening to undermine consumer confidence.”

MONTHLY TOTAL NORTHERN IRELAND RETAIL FOOTFALL (% CHANGE WITH 2019)

 

UK FOOTFALL BY LOCATION (% CHANGE WITH 2019)

 

 

TOTAL FOOTFALL BY REGION (% CHANGE WITH 2019)

GROWTH RANK REGION % GROWTH Yo2Y
1 Northern Ireland -14.9%
2 East Midlands -23.6%
3 East of England -23.6%
4 North West England -24.1%
5 South West England -24.4%
6 Scotland -24.7%
7 South East England -25.7%
8 West Midlands -28.1%
9 Yorkshire and the Humber -28.1%
10 England -28.5%
11 North East England -28.8%
12 Wales -30.1%
13 London -37.5%

 

TOTAL FOOTFALL BY CITY (% CHANGE WITH 2019)

GROWTH RANK CITY % GROWTH Yo2Y
1 Belfast -20.3%
2 Liverpool -22.5%
3 Glasgow -23.1%
4 Leeds -24.3%
5 Cardiff -25.2%
6 Bristol -27.9%
7 Nottingham -28.1%
8 Manchester -29.1%
9 Portsmouth -34.1%
10 Birmingham -35.6%
11 London -36.6%

 

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