Small-scale online-entrepreneurs face up to risks of a postal stoppage - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 06:49 AM | Calgary | -0.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Hamilton

Small-scale online-entrepreneurs face up to risks of a postal stoppage

Small-scale online shops are trying to prepare themselves for a potential mail strike this weekend, one that could have serious effects on their business.

Small online 'stores' are preparing for potential Canada Post strike Saturday

Canada Post's looming strike deadline worries Jentine Gootjes, who runs her store The Edit online and sends 80 per cent of her packages with the mail carrier. (Claire Dam Photography)

Jentine Gootjesis keeping close watch on the possible strike at Canada Post.

She is one of 140 members of Hamilton's Etsy.com online marketplace, the global community of crafters,artisans, collectors and resellers that has blossomedin the years since the last Canada Post strike. All of their businessesdepend onbeing able to mail products to theircustomers.

In business you have to adapt, things happen. That's part of the game.- JentineGootjes, owner, The Edit

If the Canadian Union of Postal Workers strikes on July 2, delivery disruptioncould be fatal for small-scale online entrepeneurs like her

"I'm just hoping it's short," saidGootjes, owner of Hamilton-based shop The Edit.

Specializing in vintage clothing, jewelry and accessories, Gootjes estimates that 80 per cent of her online sales get shipped out through Canada Post to national and international buyers. The other 20 per cent are local orders, which buy online and can be picked up from her directly.

While 20 per cent is better than nothing, it's still not enough, and with Canada's last postal strike lasting three weeks, it's a scary prospect for sellers.

A colossal onlinecommunity

The Edit had a storefront on Ottawa St. for two years, which Gootjes closed in favour of selling online through Etsy and a small studio space.She found the storefrontto be 'unsustainable', and has happily operated online since.

Gootjes sells vintage clothing, accessories and house wares online and out of a small studio in downtown Hamilton, after closing a storefront on Ottawa St. that was "unsustainable". (The Edit/Etsy)

Gootjes is one of a growing community of online sellersthat use the Internet to reach customers world wide without establishing a physical store or expanding their team.

"It's just frustrating," she said. "Because small business and retail is so difficult, and it just seems like more things [to worry about]."

Etsy is one of the most popular online marketplaces today, andboasts a 'Hamilton Team'of more than 140 'stores' in the city.Mostare run by a single ownerand ship the majority of their wares to customers.

Other communities in Southern Ontario are even larger, including Niagara withupwards of 300 sellers listed on a team.

Established in 2005, Etsyhosts 1.6 million sellers, 25 million active buyers, and more than 35 million items worldwideaccording to its website. During the last Canada Poststrike in 2011, this communitywas significantly smaller.

It's in the mail. Maybe for a while. (CBC News)

To them, a mail strike poses a problem not seen on this scale before.

"Do Ithink in the long run I will be fine? Yes.But will it affect the next fewweeks?," Gootjes said. "Very much so."

Negotiations between the Crown Corporation and Canadian Union of Postal Workers could lead to the fifth widespread disruption ofmail delivery service in Canada since the 1980s.

Eight thousand rural postal workers and 42,000 urban workers have been without a contract since December and January.

The union's membership has since voted over 90 per cent in favour of strike action, which would shut down nearly all postal service, with the exception of welfare and pension cheques.

Small businesses pay the price

For small online shops likeGootjes', success relies on sales and shipping. Unlikelarger e-commerce sites like Amazon which can afford to switch mail services, there isn't a lot of wiggle room.

The looming strike deadline is "is just frustrating," she said. "It really hits small business owners."

The Edit features items at affordable prices, something Gootjes prides herself on. If she had to use a courier or a different postal service, the price change would be too much to absorb and she would have to pass the cost onto customers.

"If you're selling a $28 skirt and the shipping goes from nine to 15 dollars, that's a big jump for a consumer to wrap their head around," she said.

As a result online shops in Hamiltonare preparing themselves and customers for the possible strike.

Another Etsyshop The Wild. stopped shipping ordersa week ago, meanwhile Gootjes put The Edit's Etsy page on Holiday for a week to see how the strike plays out. Most are taking a break to see where this weekend leaves them.

"I'm trying to be fair because I don't know a lot about the issues that they're fighting about," said Gootjes. "It might just be a frustrating time for a while."

Earlier this month Mike Palecek, national president of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers, told CBC that negotiations are breaking down over "major cuts to benefits and job security."

The Liberal government has publicly confirmed thatthey have no intention of tabling back-to-work legislation, something former prime ministers have exercised in previous postal strikes.

Let's turn this into lemonade,I guess.- JentineGootjes, owner, The Edit

"If it came to it, in business you have to adapt, things happen," said Gootjes. "That's part of the game."

Shop owners like her are trying to make the best of the potential time off, by preparing more listings and focusing on local sales and community.

"Let's turn this into lemonade, I guess, as Beyonc would say. If it's a couple weeks, we'll make it work," said Gootjes. "If it goes on for a couple of months, I don't know."