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When we think about holidays on Main Street, there is a certain mental image we all flash to, nurtured by decades of singing Christmas carols. We all know the picture 鈥?city sidewalks, busy sidewalks, people dressed in holiday style. Child [url=https://www.stanley-cups.ro]stanley termos[/url] ren laughing, people passing, meeting smile after smile 鈥?otherwise known as the standard Silver Bells special.But like so many other things this year, that image might be on hold for 2020. The sidewalks and shops will likely be less crowded, and if consumers are wearing smiles, theyll likely be obscured by masks as it seems COVID-19 pandemic cases will be ringing in the year on the rise.The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is strongly recommending that consumers聽relocate their holiday shopping online, and forecasts call for physical retail to be way down this season. At first glance, that seems to portend quite poorly for Main Street merchants whod hoped to recoup some revenue from a year that left many battered and wondering nearly from the start if theyd be able to survive at all.But while the聽surveys PYMNTS has done with consumers and Main Stree [url=https://www.stanley-germany.de]stanley cup[/url] t merchants over the past eight months demonstrate that the worry is genuine and can be documented with data, so is Main Streets scrappiness. Small- and medium-sized businesses SMBs arent going down without a fight.Within the context of 2020, that has meant a rapid shift to digital and multi-channel sales methods. And that [url=https://www.stanley-germany.de]stanley de[/url] digital pivot has been aided by larger players like PayP Dedk PXP Financial Taps Mastercard and Payall on Cross-Border Payments
While for the majority of merchants the holiday season is winding down 鈥?for a certain select group, things are just getting warmed up. This is the case for retailers like Michael Ringelsten, the owner of Shorewood Liquidators. It is crazy how many returns come in during the two to three months after Christmas, he told The Wall Street Journal.聽The 38-year-old businessman collects truckloads of goods returned to Amazon Inc., Groupon Inc. and Home Depot Inc 鈥?wherever the goods are unwanted 鈥?[url=https://www.stanleycup.pl]kubki stanley[/url] and he like many eCommerce resellers, snaps them up and sells them off at bargain basement prices.And it is a lot of merchandise 鈥?nearly one-quar [url=https://www.stanleycups.cz]stanley quencher[/url] ter of eCommerce sales 鈥?are expected to be returned, according to Shorr Packaging. Though the rates of return can vary across categories 鈥?from 10-15 percent in some areas to as much as 30 percent in others apparel reverse logistics expert and eCommerce secondhand retailer Optoro聽notes.Total returns for 2015 are expected to be $260.5 billion, or around 8 percent of all retail sales, according to trade group National Retail Federation. And eCommerce retailers tend to suffer a higher rate of return than their real wor [url=https://www.stanleycup.pl]kubki stanley[/url] ld counterparts, which tend to see items come back at about an 8 percent rate.And when eCommerce goods are returned, they don ;t usually go back to the location that sold them, even if they have never been used or opened, as the inefficiency runs up the cost. Instead, goods are taken to bulk liquidation centers and sold off