Despite
losses, CBA
leader is
'encouraged' with the number of stores opening versus previous years Despite
several Christian
retailers recently going
out of business,
including former
CBA Chairman Jim Whitaker closing his longtime store, the
head
of the
Christian booksellers
association says he
is encouraged with the number of stores opening versus previous
years.
Although 54
stores closed in 2011, 32
stores opened last year—more than twice as many opening in 2010,
according to CBA. In 2010,
77
stores closed, while 14 stores opened that year.
“We're
encouraged by seeing a number of stores opening versus previous
years,”
CBA Executive
Director Curtis
Riskey told Christian
Retailing.
“Their
model has changed. They're doing things differently. Those are things
we're taking a look at. They're approaching the market differently,
and that's a good thing.”
However, some
veteran retailers
decided to shutter their
businesses this summer. Citing
the
tough economy
and
stiff competition,
Whitaker
and his wife, Bonnie, closed New Life Christian Stores in Lynchburg,
Va.,
at
the end of August.
“After
23-plus years of serving the Lord through Christian retail, we feel
God has something else He wants us to do,” the
couple wrote on the stores'
Facebook
page.
“With growing competition and a weak economy, we do not believe it
is His will for us to struggle to make ends meet.
“We
covet your prayers as we make this transition and seek God's plan for
each member of our family,” they
added.
“We do intend to keep New Life Laser Engraving in operation [out
of our home].”
The
Whitakers closed
their
6,000-square-foot location in July 2009, after steadily losing sales
to increased local competition—including a LifeWay Christian Store
that opened nearby. They moved
to two smaller stores farther out of the city a few miles away, but
the
remaining store
closed in August.
Whitaker resigned
in October 2009 as CBA chairman, the same day then-CBA President and
CEO Bill Anderson stepped down.
“Even
though we will not have a brick-and-mortar store, we do plan to keep
some vendor accounts open to serve a few customers with some bulk
orders,” Whitaker said. “We are keeping the store website open
for a while to allow customers to still buy some product through us
that way. … One of the hardest parts of closing our bookstore is
not being involved in an industry we love.
“We
have many good friends that are part of Christian book-selling around
the world,” he
added.
“We will greatly miss seeing these friends, but we intend to keep
in touch through Facebook and other media.”
Meanwhile, Becky
Hall Brown, owner of Place of Grace Christian Bookstore in Princeton,
W.Va., decided
to close her
business in
August.
The store, which she
opened in
2002,
had
steadily declined in sales since late 2009.
“We have had
plans of moving locations for several months,”
said Brown,
who also has a photography business since 1997.
“However,
when we had exhausted all our personal financial efforts into the
business, we made a very abrupt, but necessary, decision to finally
close our store. Even with our myMEDIA
BurnBar system in place, which enabled us
on-site creation and delivery of music CDs and soundtracks, customers
continue to choose Internet ordering for their soundtrack needs.
“It
so annoys me to see the local Christian bookstore struggling these
days,” she
added.
“Having
given my heart and life to this ministry and industry for several
years, I see the lack of concern for the small, local business most
Christians have. ... Those who stand by the local store and truly
savor our service and ministry to the community are those I will miss
most.”
Elsewhere,
Kira
Brant, owner of Kira's Cottage Christian Store in Franklin, Ind.,
closed
her store in May after nine years.
“It
was time to close, even though I wasn't ready for it,”
she
said. “It
was one of the hardest decisions I ever made, and the closing sale
was almost unbearable at times. I was angry, confused, hurt. I
wondered why we weren't supposed to make it.
“It
wasn't that our store wasn't supposed to make it, it wasn't that we
weren't good enough, strong enough or even rich enough,”
Brant
added.
“It's
that God had accomplished what He wanted to with Kira's Cottage, and
it was now time to move on. That season was over in my life and I had
to let it go.”
Brant
is now teaching art classes, which she had done after graduating
from college.
“Seeing
so many other stores closing breaks my heart,”
she
said. “The
money problems, fear of bills, worrying over what to do. It is so
hard and I ache for anyone going through it. … I continually pray
for all [the people] in the Christian retail industry.”
Another
store—Come
to the Waters Christian Books and Music in Alabaster, Ala.—was
to shut its
doors at the end of this month.
“We
want to urge you to continue supporting small independent stores like
us. Especially small independent Christian stores,” Warren Hamby,
who opened Come to the Waters in
2001, wrote
on the store's
website. “Thousands have had to close during the last decade, and
there are only two reasons we have been open this long. The first is
that God wanted us to be here. The other reason is you.”
Riskey said
“the loss of a Christian store often is like the loss of a friend
or relative in the community.”
“It
is truly a sad day when any Christian store closes,” said
Riskey, who closed
his store, BASIC
(Brothers and Sisters in Christ) Books and Cafe in Oshkosh, Wis., in
2010 due to
difficulties in running
the business from a distance. Riskey moved to Colorado in 2007, when
he joined CBA as strategic solutions executive.
“As
the ways of business change, the role of all brick-and-mortar stores
also is being redefined,” he
added.
“God certainly has a call on our lives as Christian retailers, and
the gospel message and ministry will continue to be shared in some
fashion through physical stores. As an industry, we are finding new
ways to meet needs and provide Bible-based resources and materials to
build faith and witness.” |