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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Online sales help gin distillery bounce back from lockdown losses

Tarquin’s Cornish Gin was a fast-growth star pre-pandemic and is now back on track with expansion plans

Tarquin's Gin's Blushing Sea Dog

A Cornish gin distillery is plotting expansion after bouncing back from a coronavirus crisis when it lost half its business.

Tarquin’s Cornish Gin is working on opening a new shop and gin school in the Cornish seaside port of Padstow. The Southwestern Distillery, based in the hamlet of St Ervan, three miles from Padstow, has also doubled credit times for its smallest customers to 60 days, scrapped minimum order quantities, and is providing 2,000, free, hand sanitiser stations for small retailers.

It is also diversifying into rum production, but the biggest change at the firm, named as one of Britain’s fastest growing before the coronavirus pandemic struck, is that it has received a huge boost from online sales. It had no online market before the pandemic lockdown forced founder Tarquin Leadbetter to reassess the business’ model.

He said the company lost half its business overnight when hospitality and leisure sector customers were forced to close from March 20. But he said the firm bounced back and said: “We had never had an online shop before, but set that up and it’s been driving a significant part of our business.

Tarquin Leadbetter, founder of Tarquin's Gin

“It has almost compensated for the loss of trade in the hospitality business. Gin has been one of the biggest online alcohol categories.”

He said one advantage of online selling was that sales did not have to be offered on credit. This payment certainty has allowed the business to be more flexible with its returning traditional customers.

When the lockdown was ordered by Prime Minister Boris Johnson, Tarquin’s furloughed about half of its 40-strong workforce under the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme.

Nearly all those staff have returned to work now, as the lockdown restrictions are eased and hospitality and tourism businesses are reopening.