Toronto Star

People looking for more than Netflix

Pandemic boredom paying off for some companies.

- JOANNA CHIU STAFF REPORTER

Kristi Leardo, who was an accountant for many years, dreamed of opening a crafts and knitting supply shop, but wasn’t sure if opening a brick-andmortar store in the middle of a pandemic was a good idea.

Before her 50th birthday last July, she made the leap. And now, she’s struggling to keep her shelves stocked.

“I’ve barely had to advertise. People are watching knitting and crocheting tutorials on YouTube and coming in to get all the supplies they need,” Leardo told the Star.

“What I find surprising is the young people and I mean young teenagers and 20-somethings who want quality fibres and yarns. They’re making their own accessorie­s and doing a lot of gift-giving,” she said. “People don’t want to just watch TV. They want to do things that could give them some satisfacti­on.”

With people across the country running out of Netflix shows to watch as the COVID-19 pandemic drags on, boredom seems to have given a boost to some Canadian companies.

Leardo’s company, the Bee’s Knees Yarn Shop, is located in Summerland, B.C., where businesses often experience a winter lull in the tourist area. But locals are supporting her business, and other crafts stores and distributo­rs are similarly struggling to keep up with orders.

According to the Retail Council of Canada, which represents about 45,000 businesses, home products, hobby and kitchen supplies are a lifeline for retailers as consumers want to improve their quality of life at home.

And there are more surprising success stories, too.

Dog trainers say they’re more in demand than ever because of all the pandemic puppy purchases, while adults are returning to pastimes they had earlier abandoned as a relic of their youth, like skateboard­ing.

Landyachtz is a Vancouver headquarte­red company specializi­ng in skateboard­s, long boards and bicycles, with retail outlets across North America.

The company’s sales dipped last spring when many stores shut down for government­mandated lockdowns, but the company invested in digital marketing and soon saw sharp increases in direct sales and online orders.

“I think it’s because in times of uncertaint­y, skateboard­s are a relatively affordable escape,” said Blake Startup, who manages the company’s retail outlets.

“And longboards are appealing because you can cruise around the neighbourh­ood — they’re an alternativ­e mode of transporta­tion to a crowded bus.”

After stores reopened, Startup often saw parents coming in to get skateboard­s for their kids for the first time.

“Usually one of the parents might have an old skateboard from the ’80s or the ’90s. They say they’re just getting something for their kids, but then I’d see the dad the next week coming back for a skateboard of his own.”

Nationally, sales at sporting goods, hobby, book and music stores saw two months of growth in the fall of 2020, but decreased by over one-fifth in December with the closing of brick-and-mortar retailers in multiple regions on Boxing Day, according to Statistics Canada.

Besides specializi­ng in goods that are ideal for use in small groups or individual­ly, the most successful companies are those with a strong online presence and ability to make online sales, says Diane Brisebois, CEO of the Retail Council of Canada.

And Canadians are not just shopping for themselves, but spent more than $5.7 billion on their pets in 2020, an increase of around $300 million from 2019, according to market data firm Statista.

Eighteen per cent of current pet owners obtained their pet during the pandemic, according to Narrative Research, a Canadian market intelligen­ce company.

Many of those new pet owners needed help training their canine companions.

Andre Yeu, founder and head trainer of When Hounds Fly dog-training school in Toronto, saw his business grow by 25 per cent year-on-year.

“In the summer of 2020, we had to turn people away and it was around an eight-week wait to see an instructor for in-person classes,” Yeu told the Star.

“We had begun doing virtual lessons during the first wave, and people also really liked the virtual option. Besides the safety reasons, dogs are less distracted at home and this lets the humans better absorb the learning,” Yeu said.

The demand has continued to be so high that Yeu hired five new trainers, with plans to hire more, and the company just signed a lease for a fourth location in Toronto.

 ??  ??
 ?? KRISTI LEARDO ?? Last summer, Kristi Leardo took a big leap and opened a crafts supply shop. Now, she is struggling to keep her shelves stocked.
KRISTI LEARDO Last summer, Kristi Leardo took a big leap and opened a crafts supply shop. Now, she is struggling to keep her shelves stocked.
 ?? JACOB LAMBERT FOR LANDYACHTZ ?? Landyachtz says it is seeing more adults and families purchasing skateboard­s and longboards during the pandemic.
JACOB LAMBERT FOR LANDYACHTZ Landyachtz says it is seeing more adults and families purchasing skateboard­s and longboards during the pandemic.
 ?? ANDRE YEU ?? Andre Yeu, founder of dog-training school When Hounds Fly, saw his business grow by 25 per cent in 2020.
ANDRE YEU Andre Yeu, founder of dog-training school When Hounds Fly, saw his business grow by 25 per cent in 2020.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada