From a tourism perspective and many other sectors, it is almost impossible to comprehend how so many businesses seem to think they can trade to an optimal degree without maintaining a fully functioning and up-to-date website and/or Facebook page. Also surprising is the number of local companies who take to the air via radio or in print with ‘ads’ promoting new products, but have simply not thought through any potential consumer response, especially in terms of disseminating details like price, sizes, varieties and availability. Do they realistically think that potential buyers are going waste time trying to extract the details in a protracted phone call and that’s assuming that the person on the other end actually knows anything about the item(s). Of course there are notable exceptions, but certainly in my experience emails are not answered or days go by without a timely response.

In case some have not noticed our world has become increasingly more competitive and many ‘buyers’ simply will not wait for prolonged periods, when often they have responsive alternatives a simple click away. What also continues to amaze me is that if I had a particular commodity, I would want everybody that may have even a vague interest in that product to know and that it was currently in stock and obviously the cost.

It also makes sense to actively seek smart partnerships to maximise any marketing or promotional efforts. As an example, the 60 plus restaurants who participate in the re-DISCOVER initiative provide an incredible opportunity to build brand awareness and volume. Yet, I can only think of two or three hospitality suppliers who have even made an approach to us to explore if there are synergies that would benefit both the distributor and the target group of involved businesses. Clearly many of these restaurants use similar consumables and if by offering some saving by concentrating purchases through one wholesaler, even at a slightly reduced mark-up it has to be a win-win situation. Hopefully, anyone reading this column will be galvanised into positive action and by next week they will be beating our doors down.

Another area where perhaps one of the banks or other financial institutions might play a more proactive role is to facilitate more online payment options. Despite all the various restructuring our banks have done in the recent past, it is still far too commonplace to stand in a queue for up to an hour to deposit cheques, cash and other forms of payment. This seems ludicrous in this day and age and no lessons seem to have been learnt over the years, that the customer’s time is just as valuable as their own employees/managers and time wasted in a line-up has a cost.

Surely any reluctance could not be driven by the desire to perpetuate service fees and other revenue generated through cheque printing and processing? Perhaps those cashiers could be better employed performing more profitable functions within the bank.

42 responses to “Local Businesses Must Up Their Game!”

  1. islandgal246 Avatar

    What irks me is when a local business advertises a special or product and only put a phone number in their printed ads. No physical address nor website. They think they can force the customer’s hand to call them. NOT ME!

    And those with websites some of them are soo crappy, no prices and still expect you to call for more info. SMH dem so damn backwards.

    If I have to force information out of a business I move along to the next one that has the info I want with less work.


  2. A bit off topic; but

    This Globe and Mail story is not the type the tourism industry would hope to be circulating in its major markets.

    Severe seaweed invasion fouling Barbados beaches

    http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/severe-seaweed-invasion-fouling-barbados-beaches/article24243713/


  3. One would think given the importance of tourism to the Barbados economy the government should have a national program to clean the seaweed. Volunteerism will not cut it.


  4. Aerial Trek

    April 30 at 3:44pm · Bridgetown ·

    We regret to inform you that after careful consideration the decision has been made to close Zipline Adventures (Barbados) Ltd. (Aerial Trek) as of April 30th, 2015. We have thoroughly enjoyed providing this exciting experience for so many of our loyal customers over the past 8 years.

    We would also like to thank our industry partners and our amazing staff for their support.

    We apologize of any inconvenience that our closure may cause.

    https://www.facebook.com/aerial.trek?fref=ts


  5. Trinidad’s economic prospects are dimming. Moody’s recently downgraded Trinidad’s credit rating. What does this portend for Barbados?


  6. @ Ping Pong
    Trinidad’s economy is built on OIL……full stop….without oil, Trinidad = Guyana or present day Barbados.
    The price of oil has fallen by nearly 50% and future prospects are dim due to technology, environmental imperatives, and production costs.

    LOL
    When our owners find themselves broke like us …you can expect that our donkeys will be in deep doo doo….

    There is nothing worse that being a slave’s slave…..

    ….but then there is that CLICO curse to be considered….


  7. @ Bush Tea as you succinctly wrote ” When our owners find themselves broke like us…”, all I would add is to ask – do our “leaders” see the gathering storm?


  8. @ Ping Pong
    “do our ‘leaders’ see the gathering storm…?”
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    See shiite!!!
    Our damned leaders can’t even see the shiite under their very noses…
    ….Not even the folly of levying a dumping fee that now requires coconut vendors to PAY to take the shells to the dump ….when they can dump freely in gullies.
    …Not the wickedness of protecting high level criminals who rob thousands of Bajans out of millions of dollars …..or who attempted to rob a senior citizen out of his property.

    Our leaders are jack asses….. THAT is our curse… even if they SAW the gathering storm, what would they do…?

    When the shit hits the fan in T&T, if Kamla is still there, they will sell themselves to India or Indian interests, (just like we sold out to them) thereby largely selling Barbados to such interests…..
    It will be divali and Eid-ul-Fitr for us….


  9. Who listened to the loquacious minister Donville in the news today about seeking out and dealing with drug lords harshly. We all agree with his call but he should make sure his message is heard by some of his colleagues as well. We have drug pushers ans middlemen then the drug lords. We must be clear when separating the ‘wheat from the chaff’.

    On 6 May 2015 at 11:25, Barbados Underground wrote:

    >

  10. PLANTATION DEEDS FROM 1926TO 2015 MASSIVE FRAUD LANDTAX BILLS AND NO DEEDS, BARBADOS DLP/BLP MASSIVE PONZI FRAUD Avatar
    PLANTATION DEEDS FROM 1926TO 2015 MASSIVE FRAUD LANDTAX BILLS AND NO DEEDS, BARBADOS DLP/BLP MASSIVE PONZI FRAUD

    Keeping thinking our postings are jokes, Who is the joke on now? The people or the PM and His Ministers of Massive Fraud, when the BANKS come Marching out, and you now kissing Haiti ass-sets,.
    To invest We must have Clean Leaders and Clean Banking .. Fraud ran so long and so wrong like slavery , Most think its the way business is done, ..
    Keep watching not having Clear title land is a Bitch ,,,,,


  11. Transport board workers strike.BWU helps get them back to work.


  12. Slightly off topic:

    “Cuba gears up for tourist influx as US relations improve”.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-32485823

  13. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    @ Exclaimer

    Your comment about Cuba and its soon to be burgeoning tourism market is assuredly lost on our Tourism Experts and certainly on Richard “I can See Spirits above your head” Sealy Minister of Tourism.

    The distance between Cuba and Miami is 228 miles commensurately that between Miami and Barbados is 1599 miles as the crow flies, dont take the word of the ole man see ww.freemaptools.com/how-far-is-it-between.htm.

    The costs of a ticket from Miami to Cuba is US $221 and that to Barbados is US $656 dont believe the ole man, he spiteful see http://www.google.com/flights

    What I see in Old Havana Cuba (with its UNESCO Heritage City designation) is

    http://www.tuchmantravelguide.com/images/cuba-old-havana.jpg

    What I see in Bridgetown with its UNESCO Heritage designation is

    http://www.nationnews.com/IMG/688/52688/garbagefairdhildstreet1103141031-450×303.jpg?1415443853

    According to George W. Bush singularly the most stupid president that the United States has had “Do the Maths!!”

    Sugar has died, Tourism is going to die.

    I would suggest that you invest in Vaseline, KY Petroleum Jelly and in the worst case scenario old Engine Grease recovered from Bizzy Williams’ WTE complex in St Thomas, because we are going to have to grease and sell our botsies fairly soon, a thing that certain peeple might be able to give us advice on.

    Notice that I did not say Jer**** or WeJon****** because I dont want Adriel Nitwit to send the CoP for you or me.


  14. The US is working with Cuba to approve a ferry service.

    The horse has bolted PUDRYR

    http://www.sun-sentinel.com/business/tourism/fl-havana-ferry-approval-20150505-story.html

  15. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    David[BU]

    You know something, we as a people are very, very simple minded.

    England, an island which nearly starved to death during World War II blockaded by German U-Boats sinking vessels bringing it food, once “ruled the world” with a strangle hold on sugar and tea, NEITHER OF WHICH could on the most sunny day in Englant, grow on their rock.

    The point that we have never learnt from is how “islands” Japan, Tiawan, Madagscar, Malta with finite land masses, are able to manage their limited resources and diversify into lucrative areas and endeavours, sometimes, OUTSIDE THEIR LAND MASSES!!

    The British Empire translated 100,000 of its citizens to subjugate an Indian population of 400 million indians and rape that country into caste systems until their independence.

    Time does not allow us to elaborate on the rape issue but what I would wish to speak to is the ability to extract the wealth and resources of a country from 4174 miles away.

    So what am I saying?

    You posted that link to 4 US ferry companies, one of which had applied 5 years ago to get a ferry license going to Cuba.

    VISION.

    Even before the embargo has come into being someone has the vision to put the gears in place before the wheels start to turn.

    How many of our bright-but-not-shining businessmen have thought of strategic partnerships with Bajans “in the Miami diaspora”, US citizens/residents who have access to US grants and resources?

    Ho many pursue, or think of pursuing, “strategic partnerships” that ensure that our businesses do not continue to stiffle, AND DIE, while “feeding” impossibly on a Bajan Market of 40,000 people (the 260K remaining are children, unemployed, or retired) retired as opposed to developing a market of 250M?

    “Where there is no VISION the people perish!!”


  16. @PUDRYR

    The success of Singapore we love to harp about owes its success to players of vision driving the process.

  17. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    Sorry, that should have read “even before the embargo has come to an end…”


  18. @Hants

    Did you read the report carefully?

    Improvement in the economy is attributed to improved tourism arrivals which is a regional event and low oil price that stabilized the forex reserves, a global event. Should we be comfortable?


  19. David we are a long way from being “comfortable”.

    However there is hope.

  20. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    The IMF remarked ““The team welcomes measures to strengthen the monitoring and control of public enterprises, BUT PROGRESS IS SLOW and deeper restructuring should be launched as soon as possible.

    Public enterprises pose a major fiscal risk in Barbados, and MANY ARE PROVIDING SERVICES WITHOUT ANY LINK TO OVERALL COSTS OR OBJECTIVES”

    These are the same top heavy corporations that the IDB had issue witn back in the lat 1990’s

    Why should the TB for example have 1,000 staff when 500 can do the job? THe same goes for NHC, CBC, and all the C’s that abound across the cvntry including AC

    Why should there be 4 directors at a PS corporation when one is all that is needed?

    Why should the PS who was compulsorily retired be rehired on an exorbitant contract for services that is to last for 5 years?

    Why should that same retired PS be able to bid on a government contract, as a sole bidder, utilizing the elements of a proposal that a private sector company submitted while he was PS, and win it?

    Why should the cvntry have a Fear Trading Commission, a Financial Services Commission, an Office for Public Affairs Commission and a host of duplicated commissions that only support pork beef politics and political patronage and institutional yardfowlism?


  21. The answer is simple Piece; it is how governments support irrelevant systems of governance to satisfy the yardfowls and minions. It addresses our lack of vision/leadership to establish systems which are competitive/relevant.


  22. @ pieceuhderockyeahright,

    Cuba will always outshine Barbados in the tourism stakes. Barbados offers the tourist a lot of sand, a lot of beaches and a lot of partying. Outside of these attractions it offers very little to those inquisitive tourists who crave for cultural and educational stimulation; unlike Cuba which can offer the tourist a comprehensive and rich experience.

    You stated that “……we as a people are very, very simple minded.” How right you are!

    A Zimbabwean friend of mine has just introduced to me to a South African man called Credo Mutwa.

    If you have the time please watch the two videos in the order that they appear. I know that you are a scholar/intellectual and will be able to appreciate them.


  23. here we go round the tree again, . the island has been worried about thawed relations with cuba before I ever came to the island 36 years ago, so there has been vision you knew when it happened you were Fu<ked. So what to do Do we unpin the dollar and try to work on volume, do we target the rich and just cater to there every need, Or do we go to blakeys bar and lime. Most choose option 3 In the rag today they say other islands are copying oistins fish fry. what does that mean they have stuck a toilet that seldom works and is too small for the amount of people in the middle of their fish market? If it is the number one tourist attraction fix the damn place up , and get rid of the little pricks running around thinking they are gang bangers.
    I think temple grandin has been advising the govt how to make the sheeple think everything is good on the island and that things are getting much better???for who … not the regular guy Maybe the ones the IMF say should be cut LOL


  24. So The IMF ” fesses up” to their mess up on the barbados economy. anyone with a brain would never have agreed to their punishing “first report ” on the barbados economy. especially with barbados economy dependance on a tourism industyry which is performing well enough to give the island economy the forward “drive ” necessary in helping to relive the dormancy and stagnation which has held the economy down in the past years,. also as the new and improved revised IMF report stated a lowering of oil prices,


  25. The tourist economy doing well compared to who??? AC are they upping the drug doses at black rock. You should peer through the bars more often and see if you see any tourists going by rather than listen to the govt and their questionable arithmetic on numbers. I go down to the island often enough to see a drop in milky white faces like my own.


  26. @ pieceuhderockyeahright who wrote,

    “Why should the TB for example have 1,000 staff when 500 can do the job?

    Barbados has always had armies of occupation in order to employ people.

    Barbados failed to develop enough NEW businesses to absorb the masses of young school leavers.


  27. I see it has started already. Yesterday the IMF was to be discredited and ignored and didn’t know what they were talking about. Today, they are the Messiah.

  28. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    @ Mitchlans

    You are very right.

    Six months ago my neighbour was reported to have said “I, Methuselah, always sleep in church AND ADDITIONALLY I snore loudly”.

    When I heard the spurious misrepresentations de ole man let go a few curse words in his direction.

    Two weeks ago he is reported to have modified that statement and said that “Methuselah only sleeps during a specific pastor’s sermons” and “Methuselah only snores, in church, when he returns from the feed my sheep campaigns”

    And suddenly, since he is kindlier to me in his “observations” now, instead of cussing he past he muddah grave (or the same anatomical part William Duguid tell Donville bout) I too revised my remarks about the young fellow and tell the madam that “he is an observant fellow and we should invite him and he missus over for lunch every now and again”. Causing we is now friends and ting, whu after all de boy compliment me..

    The point that I am making is that the particular clown whom my Brother in Arms calls Ass Crack, DOES NOT REALIZE that by saying that “the IMF’s favourable report card saying that there is growth of x percent and that by 2015 we will be at say 12 percent”, WHEN YOUR IDIOT SELF agrees that you will be at 12 as the IMF says, IT IT REASONABLE TO BELIEVE THAT YOU ARE CONFIRMING THAT you were at 12% minus “x” at some time.

    Your ACQUIESCENCE WITH THE LATTER STATE IS YOUR CONFIRMED ACCEPTANCE OF THE FORMER STATE of doom and gloom.

    But you have to forgive “the crevice of the donkey”, they are neither speaker or representative of the parties in question nor are they too bright and their remarks are not to be relied on with any sort of seriousness.


  29. The truth is that the imf is not infallible and is subject or praise or crticism when necessary. The fact being that imf presented a negative report previously is mindblowing without relevant “uptodate facts and figures that bears on an economy performance should not be overlooked since the fall out with such negative reports have on an economy can be damaging. This new report may not be of the liking to the blp paling cocks however it was one worthy of reporting as it set out to correct the inertia driven imf in its haste to judge before fully aware of all the “up to date”data


  30. OMG AC, you really can’t see it, can you? The IMF have been dismissed, discredited and rubbished for the last year or so, but suddenly, when they say something, anything even remotely positive, y’all are shouting it from the rooftops. Have you any idea how utterly pathetic and desperate that makes you appear?


  31. @ mitchlans
    NOTHING ….. can succeed in making AC and the DLP look more pathetic that they already do…..
    N O T H I N G !!!

  32. Fractured BLP Avatar

    Like the Conservative party in the UK under PM Cameron that took the tough decisions to bring back growth to the economy and pulverised the opposition parties in the recent election.

    So the picture is emerging with the DEMS and PM Stuart at the helm.

    We took the tough decisions to repositon the economy…..the IMF now admits we are doing the right things.


  33. @Bush Tea, “@ NOTHING ….. can succeed in making AC and the DLP look more pathetic that they already do….. N O T H I N G !!!”

    What? AC of the DEMS calling the IMF “inertia driven”!?!?!?! And Fractured now comparing the DEMS and Stuart with UK Conservative party and Cameron!?!?

    Oh shoot! Vacate a couple beds at Jenkins! Quick!


  34. And rightfully so the imf was rubbished ..as the minister of finance was opined that these small nation economies can not be measured with the same one size fits all approach..barbados dependance on tourism is and has been a major factor in drivjng the economy ..take that away and barbados has to fend for itself .the imf past reports were indeed punishable and presribed that govt use harsh methods to jumpstart the economy ..well govt listened and implemented ..policies and the results are favourable. Nowbody here is suggesting that criticism of govt is not warranted but one would be hypocritical in not giving the govt just “dues” in turning around the economy
    ps..if professor brass bowl bush shite thinks he can do better 2018 he can throw his silly a.ss in the political arena but we all know that will neva happen he does not have the kind of teflon balll ..shit head

  35. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    Oh lawsie!

    here de ole man go…!!

    @ AC

    “barbados depend(e)nce on tourism is and has been a major factor in driving the economy ..take that away and barbados has to fend for itself”

    Today’s lesson will emanate from “Solanum tuberosum” or the potato a starchy, tuberous crop from the edible tuber.

    No it has often been said that de ole man does talk “voluminously and circuitously” but, given dat I have been counting the remaining “sand in the hourglass” or the Days Left in My Life” I gine be short which, at five foot two is pretty easy to do.

    The Dangers of MonoCrops are well documented in the Great Hunger that the Irish experienced in Cromwellian times when they almost starved to death when a water mold called Phytophthora infestans, a pathogen passed across the Atlantic from Mexico and decimated the potato crops that the Irish depended on.

    This is reading like 9/11 and the tourism Industry doesn’t it.

    But then let us continue to the second part of your fallacy AC.

    “well govt listened and implemented ..policies and the results are favourable…”

    Ahem….excuse me we are still a mono-economy with an unhealthy dependence (not ance) on tourism, bloated at the seams of the Public Service, with an number of useless corporations, and selective cvntsultancies for DLP neophytes.

    One “pathogen” like Cuba opening its doors to Tourism to the USA or the UK while we continue to dither about with other sustainable alternative initiatives and irrespective of all the taxation and BRAs that we are using to collect taxes like blood from a stone, we will wait and see what subsequent IMF visits will find.

    @ Fractured BLP

    It does not really matter how many clitorises that ** bite out “wunna donkeys is grass”

  36. Colonel Buggy Avatar
    Colonel Buggy

    Sargassum Seaweed,Seasonal. Bajan dirtiness ,eternal.
    http://i.imgur.com/na7NGqy.jpg?2


  37. @Colonel Buggy

    And to think ‘Miami Beach’ is one of our most popular beaches which is frequented by visitors and locals.


  38. wuh happen to the blp paling cocks all of a sudden they have flew off the bu fence, things got rather quiet of recent,,

  39. Colonel Buggy Avatar

    Some interesting headlines in today’s newspapers.

    Sunday Advocate
    Front Page
    TOURISM VITAL.

    Sunday Sun
    Back page
    ACCRA CLEARED OF GARBAGE PILE UP ,(with photos)
    and
    $1/4 Million earmark for national cleanup.

    Certainly the Minster of the Environment and the Minister of Health cannot in any way take any credit for the recent upsurge in tourist arrivals. However they may have been instrumental in the reduction of repeat visitors,judging from the tone of the many letters which we read daily in the local press, from frequent visitors ,who are appalled over the Kiberia like transformation of Bridgetown and the rest of the island.

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

Trending

Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading