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Borders Files for Bankruptcy
New York Times website ^
| February 16, 2011
| Michael J. de la Merced
Posted on 02/16/2011 5:31:48 AM PST by RayChuang88
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To: RayChuang88
I’m thinking Facebook and Twitter have something to do with this. Borders was a younger crowd, geek hangout, drink coffee and hope to score kind place. Social media offers other opportunities for hanging out and the initial ice breaking has already happened on the hoping to score crowd.
To: lacrew
"They hide the bestsellers, because they dont agree with them? And then theres the rolled eyes and other body language from the maggot infested hippie college kid (cashier) who cant believe youre buying a conservative book."So true. I hate the attitude oozing from the pores of some of these employees.
To: stayathomemom
"I remember when (mid-late 70s) they were just a smallish store in Ann Arbor just a half block from U of Ms Diag on State St. They expanded into the space next door, or upstairs, or both and I thought What a neat store! This was before they moved to their current location around the corner in the old Jacobsons department store."It was a nice store back then, wasn't it? I was in A2 from '74-79. Good times.
To: Lysandru
I bought a Nook, and wish I hadn’t. The price differential
is small with new books, sometimes only a dollar or two. And I DO like the feel of turning pages.
44
posted on
02/16/2011 8:02:37 AM PST
by
OregonRancher
(Some days, it's not even worth chewing through the restraints)
To: oh8eleven
Not everyone buys candy bars, but they stick them at the register because some people do.
Some people come in and sit and read magazines (although most now are covered in plastic) and leave. Others come in to browse, find something that they like, and then buy it.
You wanted to know the purpose behind the idea. The purpose is to drive traffic. You want people in your store. That’s the idea.
To: Lysandru
It's best to look at the devices themselves. I found the Sony Reader slow.
I have a friend who swears by his Kindle but then again he'd never consider a tablet device like an iPad since he's anti-Apple.
To: Publius Valerius
Interestingly, the Sacramento-area Borders stores have all been spared, according to the closure list provided by www.bordersreorganization.com. I think the Sacramento stores--because the current store locations don't compete against any Barnes & Noble stores nearby--will not only survive but become moneymakers in their own right.
Pity for the Bay Area, though. They're going to lose eleven Borders stores, including two in San Francisco.
47
posted on
02/16/2011 12:13:38 PM PST
by
RayChuang88
(FairTax: America's economic cure)
To: RayChuang88
Let me get the “BORDERS” so called business plan in their cafe areas:
1. Free mag & book reading
2. Club meetings
3. Knitting groups
4. Job interviews
5. Real estate transactions
I’ve seen ALL the above & you wonder why they filed for bankruptcy???
Mason Dixon
48
posted on
02/16/2011 2:13:30 PM PST
by
mason-dixon
(As Mason said to Dixon, you have to draw the line somewhere.)
To: RayChuang88
Sad thing is I much prefer Borders for the brick and mortar store
49
posted on
02/16/2011 6:24:16 PM PST
by
redgolum
("God is dead" -- Nietzsche. "Nietzsche is dead" -- God.)
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