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Pushcart Retail = Entrepreneurship? - Page 1This is a thread in the Retail Entrepreneurship forums.I have come across this line of questioning several times in other forums. I thought it would relevant to raise ... |
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#1 |
Member
![]() Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 26
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![]() I have come across this line of questioning several times in other forums.
I thought it would relevant to raise this topic here given that many members are pushcart vendors or do fleas. What do you think? It seems that certain people "look down" on small scale retailing because they don't have a high tech angle like technology start-ups. No flames please ![]() Cheers |
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#2 |
Member
![]() Join Date: May 2007
Location: CCK
Posts: 12
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![]() Yeah. I read somewhere also. I personally feel pushcart retail is only a beginning of entrepreneurship and not entirely equal to it. Some people may kind of "look down" on pushcart businesses because it is small scale business. Buy and sell only...not much technology kind of thing involved, very much like roadside lelong lelong. Moreover,most are selling very low value items. Low value items are usually perceived by most people to be of low quality.
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#3 |
Member
![]() Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Hougang
Posts: 10
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![]() This may be so... but some bigger fish are now entering the pie. Example: Amara Hotel F&B is operating a push cart (it almost seem permanent) at the Amara shopping centre selling cakes and some local food. The second-hand books sellers (I always see people browsing & buying from them; although those are not push cart. And these are book store retailers). Some car retailers, furniture retailers...
The way I look at it is - the bigger fish are entering into this smaller business. Why? Obviously some have made a reasonable profit out of it. if you have a good product or good concept of a product; if you display your stuff to make it look really value for money... you can get a following. There are too many cheap accessories in the market (1 for $2 / 3 for $5) with similar designs (may have got it from the same wholesalers). If too many pushcart operators sells the same things, and sell it like 'lelong', or side-by-side in the same event - it couldn't generate enough public interest to walk to your pushcart to browse and buy. Sometime too much is too much. I would be interested to hear comments from operators who had shared push carts (a variety of products) - is there a noticeably increased in sales? If there is, I think, more of us small operators should consider sharing! ![]() |
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#4 |
Senior Member
![]() Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: sg
Posts: 46
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![]() I've heard that the hey-days of pushcart biz is over. in the past, a pushcart can easily gross $2k one weekend. now? it's lucky you can cover the month's rent. n ya, there are more big fishes testing their prodts with pushcarts cos it's so much more economical than an entire shop. more permanent than event space too~ meaning if the smaller fishes wanna have a bite, they gonna need to find their own niche~
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#5 |
Member
![]() Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Singapore
Posts: 11
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![]() you can say pushcart retail is a kind of entrepreneurship, however, whether it is an effective route or not it is another issue.
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#6 |
Senior Member
![]() ![]() Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Singapore
Posts: 344
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![]() i used to do online sales, and my friends call me an entrepreneur too haha. well, it doesnt matter how big or small scale your biz is. the founders of Ya Kun Kaya Toast and Mr Bean started their business small in hawker-centre-like stores, and even now they are selling humble foodstuff, they're making it big on the F&B business scene!
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