Real shame to see another tackle shop (or any other high street business) down the tubes.
Mail order / Internet or not, tackle is a difficult business to be in. Shops have overheads, staff, utilities, business rates etc, mail order / internet only businesses do not have quite so many.
I can only speak from my own experience that 70% plus of sales come from about 20% of the overall products in stock but without the other 80% of stock on the shelves, very few customers would bother to travel to a shop.
Why would anyone bother to spend on fuel, parking and time to go to a shop that only sold WF5, 6, 7 & 8wt & 9/10 & 10/11 fly lines, 9'6" - 10' & 14 & 15' rods selling for <£300, waders & clothing in size large, tippet in sizes 6lb - 15lb, braided loops and a hand full of fly patterns? I'm not sure I'd bother taking the time, trouble or expense to go to such a shop even if what I needed was in the above list. It wouldn't be a very interesting trip, I like to see a few reels, lots of cool stuff I've personally got little interest in buying, a good selection of rods to drool over and lots of really useful but non essential items and, be able to get a bit of banter and info when I go into a tackle shop.
The problem is that to stock the rest of the interesting but slow turning stock costs money, when trade becomes tight due to poor financial climate, the first things that have to go are the things that are not making money or are turning slowly, the range gets thinner and the visit to the shop becomes less inviting as there is less to see there. Less customers means less core product sells and things can fast go into a downward spiral.
That said it is nice to "finger" the tying materials or see the gear you are buying, right ? !
That's how I like to buy fishing gear Lindsay but when things get tight, folk have less in their pockets and start to buy online to save a quid on a spool of their favourite tippet etc, the local "material fingering" places start to disappear
An operation without a public facing retail base only needs to stock the fast turning gear and can order the odd outsize item as and when it is paid for over the web etc, doesn't matter as there is no one physically browsing their shelves on a daily basis. This is one of the reasons internet prices for big brand gear can be so much lower than high street prices for the same item.
Quite often I find myself listening to moans about something being 99 pence cheaper online and the crap selection in whatever tackle shop in the same sentence. Go figure!
However, I do not see the internet as a threat to these businesses ..... it is an opportunity! Rather than depending on tourist visitors in rural areas, the internet opens the door to a global customer base all year round
I'd agree with that but, I'd also hate to see everything go online and global only with the high street side of these businesses fading & dying away with the knowledge that it's not a problem if you don't like what you've bought as you're covered by distance selling regs.
The above is strictly my own opinion and no, it does not mean Orvis is going bust or struggling, it's just how I see things. Nor does it mean that I hate anyone that retails through a website
I can understand the buying online thing, I tend to do it with clothes but this is mainly because I'm sick of getting harassed by some over enthusiastic twelve year old asking me stoopid questions and telling me to have a "great day" (that really makes me want to kill things, slowly) rather than for reasons of cost.
Cheers
Ben