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i.e. one where you brought in your old coffee jars, detergent bottles, egg boxes, washing powder boxes etc etc and had them filled up. It wouldn't sell everything, but most of what you need. If you had no container, it would be supplied in a paper bag, or in a container you could re-use next time. Products would be the same trusted brand names that are sold everywhere else, not cheaper, inferior versions.
Please answer honestly as I'm opening this shop next year, and this is my paper-free, environmentally friendly market research!

2007-02-24 07:21:09 · 6 answers · asked by amdby 2 in Food & Drink Other - Food & Drink

6 answers

frecking excellent!! where??? when?? now? here? today? go you!!!!!!! yay!!!!

but beware

habits of convenience are as hard to kick as smoking

you may have a VERY long uphill battle to convince people. Get the middle class hippies in first to give you some initial cash flow - you will need a very well chosen location for that.

and insurance and other administrative nonsense will cost more than it should, because what you're doing is new and odd, and insurers like old and boring.

buy low, sell high and keep good records.

hugely good luck to you

2007-02-24 07:26:15 · answer #1 · answered by wild_eep 6 · 0 0

Yes, I would definitely use is as long as they still sold the stuff as cheaply as in other supermarkets. I often pay more for the most environment-friendly items. It really winds me up that a lot of the cheaper stuff has so much packaging. If I couldn't get everything under one roof, I would still maybe do a monthly (or fortnightly) shop at the less-packaging outlet and stock up so that I didn't have to buy the unfriendly stuff when I ran out. I already do this anyway by using Morrisons and Tesco on an alternate basis.

2007-02-24 07:34:17 · answer #2 · answered by debbie t 3 · 0 0

I most certainly would! Perhaps if we were to use those re-seal plastic bags instead of all the packaging, and one could actually wash these out if necessary. Or those Tupperware type of containers, I would go for that, especially if the charges were lower because of the saving on packaging products!!! We could all be on a winner. From plastic top boxes, for hygiene sake of course.

2007-02-24 09:53:17 · answer #3 · answered by SUPER-GLITCH 6 · 0 0

This sounds similar to those shops that have the tubs/ boxes ful of things and you scoop what you choose and get it weighed on the tip. i think of a few are nonetheless around yet i'm undecided how nicely they do. Take care the place you open as nicely as you do no longer choose any hooligans gobbing interior the tubs...... there may well be a real hygiene subject that could positioned an excellent sort of folk off. additionally, I believe between the previous answerers concerning to the branded products. in case you're being eco then rather you may think of roughly basically stocking honest commerce products and those you be attentive to comprise eco for valuable. So my answer for 'could i exploit it' - i could could be truthful and say it relied on the fee, region and that i probably wouldnt purchase something suitable for eating basically in case of tampering. i could purchase detergents, eco nappies and non edibles i think of. good success on your project tho

2016-10-01 22:16:04 · answer #4 · answered by erly 4 · 0 0

Hope you have a good skill to fall back on. Sure, a few eco-idiots will frequent a place like that, but the bulk of your prospective customers will head to the more conventional and less costly stores. No one in their right mind wants to buy things like milk, flour, and bread in their own containers. Too much chance of contamination and loss of freshness.

2007-02-24 07:37:49 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Yes i would it's a brilliant idea where are you going to open it?

2007-02-24 07:34:23 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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