Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

‘Buy local’ mantra adopted for annual observance

- By PASHTANA USUFZY

Shoppers across the country rushed stores Friday searching for steep discounts, but by the next morning, millions of them had something else on their minds: investing in local businesses.

Shoppers in the Las Vegas Valley this weekend joined the national Small Business Saturday celebratio­n, an effort establishe­d in 2010 by American Express to encourage spending at independen­t retailers and restaurant­s during the holiday shopping rush.

“It drives economic impact into local businesses and the local economy, but it also helps to shape the character and the vitality of the communitie­s,” said Nicole Reyhle, Small Business Saturday spokeswoma­n for American Express.

American shoppers aware of the celebratio­n spent $16.2 billion last year at independen­t retailers and restaurant­s, a jump from $14.3 billion in 2014.

In the fifth annual Small Business Saturday Consumer Insights Survey released this month by American Express and the National Federation of Independen­t Businesses, many shoppers said they wanted to participat­e Saturday to show they value how small businesses contribute to their communitie­s.

Stay-at-home mom Gretchen Adams said a combinatio­n of her love of the Writer’s Block bookstore and her desire to support small businesses encouraged her to get out early Saturday to browse the downtown Las Vegas store’s inventory.

Since it debuted on Small Business Saturday in 2014, the shop’s been a place where she can bring friends or ask one of the owners for a book suggestion.

“It builds the community in a way that’s much more sustainabl­e,” she said of spending money at small businesses. “Big businesses tend to take money out of the community.”

Scott Seeley, who co-owns the independen­t bookstore with his husband, Drew Cohen, said he thinks shops like his become gathering spots for people with similar interests. With its classes for young writers, the business also can foster creativity in the community, he said.

“We get to know people, and they know us,” he said.

Bradley Manchester, a chef who opened downtown restaurant Glutton more than a year ago, worked for years in the corporate food business before breaking out on his own. Independen­t businesses such as his can offer local customers a different experience — more fun and less standard than what might be found at a bigger chain or inside a resort, Manchester said.

They also can more easily become part of the community and cater to the needs of an area, he said.

Sherri Wignall, a Colorado resident passing through downtown on her way to California, said she always makes it a point to stop at small businesses to grab a bite to eat.

Dining at Glutton’s next-door neighbor, independen­t eatery VegeNation, she said it’s the feeling she gets from small businesses that sets them apart.

“They’re usually unique,” she said. “You get that extra touch, that personal warmth.”

 ?? PASHTANA USUFZY/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL ?? Independen­t bookstore owner Scott Seeley says small businesses like his downtown Las Vegas shop, The Writer’s Block, do a better job connecting with customers. “We get to know people, and they know us,” he said.
PASHTANA USUFZY/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL Independen­t bookstore owner Scott Seeley says small businesses like his downtown Las Vegas shop, The Writer’s Block, do a better job connecting with customers. “We get to know people, and they know us,” he said.

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