Technology Tales

Adventures in consumer and enterprise technology

Three gone...

Published on 11th January 2013 Estimated Reading Time: 4 minutes

As of today, Jessops no longer continues to trade. It is but a third specialist purveyor of photographic equipment to go this way. Jacobs, another Leicester headquartered competitor, met the same fate as did the Wildings chain in the northwest of England. These were smaller operations than Jessops who may have overreached itself during the boom years and certainly had their share of financial troubles in recent times, the latest of which putting an end from the operation.

Many are pondering what is happening, and the temptation is to blame the rise of the e-commerce and the economic situation for all of this. In addition, I have seen poor service blamed. However, where are we going to go now after this? Has photography become such a specialised market that you need a diversified business to stick with it? After all, independent retailers have been taking a hammering too and some have gone out of business, like the chains that I have mentioned here.

It does raise the question as to where folk engaging in a photographic purchase are going to go for advice now; is the web sufficiently beginner-friendly? There seemingly will be fewer bricks and mortar shops out there for anyone, so coming across one-to-one advice as once would have been the case is looking harder than it once was. Photographic magazines will help, and the web has a big role to play too. It certainly informed some of my previous purchases, but I have been that little bit more serious about my photography for a while now.

It might be that photography is becoming more specialist again after a period when the advent of digital cameras caused an explosion in interest. Cameras on mobile phones are becoming ever more capable and cannibalising the compact camera market for those only interested in point and shoot machinery. Maybe that is where things are going in that mass market photography doesn't offer the future that it once might have done given the speed of technological advance. The future and present undoubtedly are about as interesting as they have become utterly uncertain.

Thinking over the last ten years or so, there has been a lot of change and that seems set to continue, even if I am left wondering if photography has shot its bolt by now. My first SLR came from a Stockport branch of Jessops and was a film camera, a Canon EOS SLR. It certainly got me going and was exchanged for a Canon EOS 30 from Ffordes, an internet transaction during which the phone system around Manchester and Cheshire went on the blink. That outage may have exposed a frailty of our networked world, but there has been no fire to melt cables in a tunnel since then. Further items from Jessops came via the same channel, such as a Manfrotto 055 tripod and my Pentax K10D. A Canon-fit 28-135 mm Sigma came from Jessops' then Manchester Deansgate store and another Canon-fit Sigma lens, a 70-300 mm telephoto affair, came from another branch of the chain, although not the Macclesfield branch since that had yet to be established and there's no photographic store left in the town now after the Jessops and Wildings closures.

Those purchases have become history, just like the photographic retail chain from which they were sourced. These days, I am more than comfortable with making dealings over the web, but that concern about those starting out that I expressed earlier now remains. Seeing how that would work is set to become interesting. Might it limit the take-up of photography on a more serious basis? That is a question that could get a very interesting answer as we continue into ever more uncertain times.

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