“I’m trying to buy something, but there’s nothing here for me to buy.”
Yup. Those were the words of a recent visitor to Essentials. And man, did that hurt.
As a retailer, you develop some thick skin. But still, it’s always hard when someone insults your store to your face. The first thing that comes to mind is the sassy retorts, the things I wish one of us had been clever to say at the moment. Then, later, when the anger has calmed a bit, the reflection. What does someone mean when they say there is “nothing” to buy?
Let me back up a bit and give some context. A woman came to the store last week, asking after the owner, and saying how she wanted to support us after my article on small, independent businesses appeared in the Daily Hampshire Gazette.
She wandered around, and it wasn’t long before she came to Colette. She leaned over, almost conspiratorially and said, “I’m trying to buy something, but there’s nothing here for me to buy.”
Let me show you a quick photo of what one part of the store looks like right now.
Gasp! It’s true! There is nothing here!
Okay, that’s the snark getting the better of me. And that’s not my aim here. (Also, I know the photo is overwhelming. It’s because we’re having a sale people! So come on down!)
Instead of just being dismissive, I want to talk about what that comment made me think.
For that particular woman, it might feel true. Maybe here’s nothing here for her. And there’s a reason for that.
We don’t do everything. And we don’t try to. And sometimes, people are going to be disappointed that we don’t carry the same things we had when the store was in Thorne’s more than 2 decades ago.
It’s because we are ever-changing and evolving, following our interests and those of our customers. We’re not the same store we were 25 years ago, and 3 owners ago. And in my mind, that’s a good thing. Otherwise, we’d all be pretty darn bored.
If you go to Target, or Walmart, or any of the other big boxes, you pretty much know what you’re going to get. It’s the same each visit, consistent and unexciting. Things might change slightly in terms of pattern or print, they might do a run of something by an “independent” designer, but for the most part, it’s the same old, same old.
That’s never been true for us, and never will be. And sometimes, that might disappoint you. But it also means that you can come back in a month or so, and find a completely different set of products, things that might spark your interest anew. Because we are always looking for those kind of things.
Yes, there are some items we do our best to be consistent about carrying. But the tableware that isn’t even made anymore and that we stopped selling 15 years ago? Sorry, but it’s gone.
I am genetically engineered to be a shopper, and I know that as a shopper, I like variety. Some stores in town carry things that aren’t my taste, or don’t meet my needs, but that’s okay because the variety means that it might be perfect for someone else. And it never means not giving that store another chance.
By the way, our disappointed customer? Yup. She did end up buying something. Custom printed stationery from Crane & Co., printed here in-house.
And you know something? There’s not one other place in town she could have gone to get it. That makes me proud.





























