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Indie booksellers thriving during pandemic thanks to new ways of connecting with customers

Independent bookstores across Canada are adapting to the coronavirus pandemic by forging new connections with customers, and they're thriving.

In Amazon's shadow, local bookstores get creative with book-and-wine deliveries, virtual book clubs and more

A customer pays at TYPE Books in Toronto. As readers hunker down to try and ride out the pandemic, what TYPE Books co-owner Joanne Saul and other indie booksellers have observed is an increased appetite for understanding. (CBC)

AskMosaic Books owner Michael Neill about business during the pandemic, and he gets a little embarrassed.

"Overall, it's amazing," he said.

"The past week we were up 44 per cent. Thirty-sixper cent in the last month."

And Neill's not alone.When the pandemic first hit, independent bookstores felt their share of pain.Lockdowns in some regions brought foot traffic to a halt. Publishers began holding back titles, waiting for more favourable conditions.

According to BookNet Canada,sales in Canada's English-language retail book market were down 24 per cent between March and May.

But with the fall came a flood of new titles whilebooksellers across Canada are finding new ways to connect with customers.

With future lockdowns a distinct possibility, Saul of TYPE Books said November is the new December. (CBC)

What good books can do

In Toronto, TYPE Books co-ownerJoanne Saultook todelivering purchaseswhen restrictions closed her doors.

"We had incredible support," she saidof the local customers she met when she and her co-owner jumped in the car.

As readers hunkerdown to try and ride out the pandemic, what Saul and other owners have observed is an increased appetite for understanding.

"People are trying to connect," she said."People are trying to learn, trying to make sense of the world. That's something that good books can do."

Thepush to support the neighbourhood shoppredates the pandemic, saidDoug Minett,executive director of the newly formed Canadian Independent Booksellers Association.

He points to a paper Ryan Raffaelli presented at the American Booksellers Association (ABA) in January, exploring the resurgence of independent bookstores. There was a 49 per cent rise in the numberof booksellers from 2009 to 2018, according to ABA.

"It's called localism," saidMinett. "It's one thing to just type something into your phone. It's another to realize there's someone working with and bringing authors to you."

A Bookshelf employee brings a delivery of wine and books to a customer in Guelph, Ont. (Ben Minett)

Book-and-wine deliveries, tailored subscription services

If you're looking for an example, it doesn't get much more local than The Bookshelf in Guelph, Ont., a storerunby Minett's family. When the pandemic clamped down, he saidthey came up with a complementary pairingof books and wine.

"We had a liquor licence. [Premier] Doug Ford in Ontario said,'Hey, you can deliver it.'"

Minett saidBookshelf's bookand wine deliveries have already reached thousands.

Atchildren's bookstore Mabel's Fablesin Toronto, when the pandemic kept some customers from visiting, general manager Lizzie Ferguson started juggling a slew of weekly virtual book clubs.

"It keeps kids reading, and it's a great way to touch base with our customers," she said.

Mabel's Fables has also started a monthly subscription service where titles tailored to your reading preferences are mailed to your home.

Bookmanager software system founder Michael Neill says stores rushed to enable online sales when pandemic restrictions set in. (CBC)

Indie stores embrace online

With tight margins and limited staff, many smaller bookstores didn't focus on online sales pre-pandemic.Mosaic owner Neill is also the founder of Bookmanager, a software system built for bookstores. While he had hundreds of stores in Canada using the product, many had never really utilized the online sales portion.

Then the pandemic hit.

"We were inundated with phone calls," he said. "How do we turn this on? How does it work?"

His team scrambled to get the stores online and sawa sharp increase in traffic. Between August andOctober of 2019, Bookmanagertracking softwareprocessed 17,000 online orders, Neill said.This year,the same time period saw 116,000 orders.

Knowledge Bookstore owner Sean Liburd says he and his wife have seen a new wave of customers online, following the Black Lives Matter protests. (Knowledge Bookstore)

Knowledge Bookstorein Brampton, Ont.,hasalso witnessed a new rush of online customers.Sean Liburd's Knowledge Bookstorehas been a fixture in the community for decades, selling a wide range of what hedescribes as "African-centred books."

Following theBlack Lives Matter protests, his wife began to notice a jump in activity.

"She's like, 'What's going on with our website?'" he said.

"We've never had thousands of people from Canada. That was extremely surprising to us."

Pre-COVID, 90 per cent of Liburd's sales wasin-store.By June and July, he said 98 per cent of his business was visitors to the bookstorewebsite. A wave ofnew customers was looking for everything from books such as White Fragility and The Skin We're Into classics by MayaAngelou.

With cooler weather approaching and coronavirus cases rising in Ontario,Liburd is trying to stay optimistic.

"I have purchased my Christmas stock. So I'm taking my chances that I'm going to be positive about it, even if there are more restrictions."

Hunkering down for the holidays

With future lockdowns a distinct possibility, Saul ofTYPE BookssaidNovember is the new December.

"We're really encouraging people to shop early,and we're predicting some distribution problems."

With cutbacks at publishers, frustration with shipping delays ispart of the pandemic landscape. Saul saidwith customers leaving home less, some are buying more when they come in and othersalready planning ahead.

"We're seeing people make the piles[of purchases]that we normally are accustomed to seeing in December."

WATCH | Small booksellers thrive thanks to new connections during pandemic:

Small booksellers thrive thanks to new connections during pandemic

4 years ago
Duration 2:02
Despite concerns that theyd be replaced by online retailers like Amazon, some small booksellers in Canada have managed to thrive thanks to some creative ways to connect with customers.

As for Minett, after surveyingmembers of the Canadian Independent BooksellersAssociation,he saidthe biggest issueis the cost of shipping. He'd like to see the federal government extend to bookstores the same low shipping rates libraries currently enjoy.

But overall with the future of big-box bookstoresin flux, he saidCOVID-19 is opening customers to a world of new possibilities.

"I think people are realizing, it isn't just about how you get it.But do you really want to have a community or not?"

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