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Retailer Spotlight: The Lollipop Shop Franchise-Friendly Store Boasts Toys and More
DOT-COM FLOP PROMPTS ENLIGHTENING WALK ![]() Jeff had no desire to move and realized he might not get the same type of job again. But instead of searching, he walked the town. “It was a four- to six-month process,” he said, during which he considered “what it would be like to be walking around Jonesborough [Tenn.] as a child — what would I be attracted to. That’s basically the market research I did. … The one thing that was missing is the one thing in this country that will attract a wider audience than most retail businesses … candy and toys.” ![]() Jeff and his wife, Candy, now own The Lollipop Shop, with locations in Jonesborough and Kiawah Island, S.C. FROM KIOSK TO FRANCHISE ![]() “It was less expensive as opposed to malls and conventional shopping centers. But … there’s also a lack of people during a good portion of the year,” Jeff told TDmonthly. “The most important thing we learned was patience. We listened [to] and observed customers.” Small-town approval also required patience. ![]() In the end, the Gurleys proved that their store was, indeed, a good fit for Jonesborough. Two years later they moved to a 3,200-square-foot store in the next block, after Jeff met with the owner of the building four times, convincing him the venture would work. “During our seven years in this part of town, 30 businesses have come and gone,” he said. ![]() “As of January 2008, we can now offer the concept as a franchise,” Jeff told TDmonthly. “When you look at candy stores and toy stores [in the United States], I believe we’ve hit a niche in combining the two. The cost to enter a franchise with the Lollipop Shop would be one-third of the cost for a similar, much larger franchise.” KEEPING BUSINESS SWEET ![]() “I don’t want somebody to come into my store, go to the displays, pick something [up] … and bring it to the counter to pay,” he said. “I want them to touch it and feel it, play with it, interact with it. Then maybe they’ll buy two.” But before that happens, how do the Gurleys get customers into the store? ![]() “That has been a very good investment,” Jeff told TDmonthly. “I don’t have to take out a check every month and buy advertising. I just have to go someplace.” “The great thing about this country,” he continued, “is that somebody could sell dirty socks if they were packaged well. … I believe, ultimately, it’s [a matter of] finding your niche and knowing what you’re good at.” ![]() |
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