71
Fashion Jobs
L'OREAL GROUP
Multi-Brand Education Manager
Permanent · JOHANNESBURG
L'OREAL GROUP
E-Commerce Manager
Permanent · JOHANNESBURG
BEIERSDORF
Brand Manager
Permanent · DURBAN
G-STAR
Key Account Manager
Permanent · CAPE TOWN
ESTÉE LAUDER COMPANIES
Marketing & Sales Operations Manager (Sub Saharan Africa)
Permanent · JOHANNESBURG
ESTÉE LAUDER COMPANIES
Marketing & Sales Operations Manager (Sub Saharan Africa)
Permanent · JOHANNESBURG
PUMA
Payroll Administrator
Permanent · CAPE TOWN
ADIDAS
Senior Manager Sales: Shoe Channel - em South
Permanent · CAPE TOWN
ADIDAS
Senior HR Business Partner (6-Months Maternity Cover)
Permanent · CAPE TOWN
L'OREAL GROUP
Product Manager
Permanent · JOHANNESBURG
TREK
Country Manager
Permanent · SANDTON
L'OREAL GROUP
E-Commerce Key Account Manager
Permanent · JOHANNESBURG
ADIDAS
ic pp Data & Analytics Specialist - em
Permanent · CAPE TOWN
BEIERSDORF
Precision Marketing & Audience Specialist
Permanent · DURBAN
CLINIQUE
Clinique - Roamer - Edgars Eastgate, Gauteng - 40 Hours - Full-Time - Permanent
Permanent · JOHANNESBURG
PANDORA
Sales Assistant Ppt 96 Hours Balito
Permanent · DURBAN
L'OREAL GROUP
Data Analyst
Permanent · JOHANNESBURG
HTNK
High-End Fashion/Denim Designer
Permanent · JOHANNESBURG
H&M
Talent Acquisition Specialist
Permanent · CAPE TOWN
ADIDAS
Specialist Franchise Excellence - Ems Africa Export
Permanent · CAPE TOWN
LOVISA
Full Time Team Member | v&a Waterfront, Cape Town
Permanent · CAPE TOWN
LOVISA
Store Manager | v&a Waterfront, Cape Town
Permanent · CAPE TOWN
Published
Aug 30, 2022
Reading time
2 minutes
Download
Download the article
Print
Text size

UK bank holiday footfall buoyant on resilient consumer appetite

Published
Aug 30, 2022

UK retail footfall was reasonably buoyant in late August with the public holiday weekend not denting consumer appetites for visiting stores, two reports showed on Tuesday.


Image: Heart of London Business Alliance


That said, the figures for the whole week of 22-28 August from Ipsos Retail Performance’s weekly tracker showed that across the UK, footfall was still down 12.3% compared to 2019 in the non-food sector.  And it was down 1% week on week.

But for the holiday weekend, the big news was that footfall was actually up 4.3% against the same pre-pandemic weekend and was also up week on week, with an 1.8% rise.

Towns outperformed cities by 7% points with city footfall up 2.4% against 2019 and 0.5% against the previous week, while for towns the figures were +7.5% and +1.5%.

Shopping centres looked good against 2019 (up 6%) but only rose 0.6% against the previous week, while for high streets the figures were 3.6% and 0.3%. Retail parks again outperformed, with rises of 8.1% and 5.5% against 2019 and last week.

But as mentioned, the flurry at the weekend clearly came at the expense of other shopping days earlier in the week. That dragged the figures down as a whole.

High streets were down 9.1% compared to 2019 and -0.8% compared to the previous week. For retail parks the figures were deficits of 12.8% and 1.2% respectively and in shopping centres there were down 14.8% compared to 2019 but up 1.1% week on week.

Looking at the weekend activity in more detail, alternative tracking specialist Springboard’s figures showed a UK-wide rise of 5.4% on Saturday and 5.3% on Sunday, but a 6.4% drop on Monday.

Diane Wehrle, Director of Insights at Springboard, said: “The favourable weather over the bank holiday encouraged shoppers to visit UK retail destinations. High streets benefited from the warm and sunny weather, and were the winners with footfall 8% higher than the week before on Saturday and 9.4% higher on Sunday.

But she also said “Monday appeared to be a day for consumers to either travel or to stay home, with a drop in footfall from the previous week across all UK destinations. The drop in activity on Monday was driven by high streets and shopping centres where footfall declined from the week before by 10.1% and 11.5% respectively. However, footfall in retail parks rose by 6.8% as shoppers replenished food and groceries for the week ahead.”

She added that across the different types of high streets, the clear winners were those towns that are attractive to visitors, with a strong uplift on Saturday and Sunday in coastal and historic towns, and also in market towns and in regional cities outside of London across the UK. 

On Sunday footfall in coastal towns was 24.3% higher than the previous week and 17.7% higher in historic towns.  Shoppers also visited city centres across the UK over the weekend, with an average rise in footfall of 10.4% over Saturday and Sunday, versus just 3.1% in Central London.

Copyright © 2024 FashionNetwork.com All rights reserved.