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Our Price

Our Price was a chain of record stores in the United Kingdom and Ireland from 1971 until 2004.

Our Price
The Our Price in Bangor, Gwynedd in 1994
TypeEntertainment retailer
Founded1971; 52 years ago (1971)
DefunctApril 2004; 19 years ago (2004-04)
HeadquartersKensington High Street, United Kingdom
Key people
Gary Nesbitt (founder)
Edward Stollins (founder)
Mike Isaacs (founder)
Lee Skinner (last owner)
Websiteourprice.co.uk

History edit

Founded in 1971 by Gary Nesbitt, Edward Stollins and Mike Isaacs, their first store was located in London's Finchley Road. Until 1976, the first six stores were branded The Tape Revolution, by Bob Fowler of Fowler Coates Ltd and concentrated on selling the then-new compact cassette format and eight-track tapes.[1]

From 1976, the chain was rebranded as Our Price Records, in response to higher demand for vinyl records over eight tracks or cassettes. In 1988, it was rebranded once again as Our Price Music, as record labels began to distribute the new CD format. In 1993, the by then three-hundred-store chain was renamed for the final time simply as Our Price.[1]

The company's headquarters were in London, with an administrative office above the store on Kensington High Street and promotional offices in Wood Lane, White City. It initially focused on the rock album buyer, with regular imports of "cut-out" albums from the United States, a remainder and over-stock store on Charing Cross Road branded as Surplus Records, and a mail order business driven largely by advertising in the music press.

These markets fell away as the chain grew substantially from 1980 onwards, when the company purchased the existing chain Harlequin Records, which had numerous high street retail sites around the UK. Thereafter, rapid national expansion followed, with the 100th Our Price store opening in the Kings Road, Chelsea, the 200th at Stirling and the 300th in Brixton, South London.

Expansion edit

In the first half of the 1980s Our Price established itself as the United Kingdom's second largest retailer of records and tapes (with Woolworths the largest). Brand recognition was driven by pun-rich radio advertising built around the "Get Down To Our Price" slogan, which later transferred to television featuring an animated carrier bag called Billy.

A sister chain, Our Price Video, was established to capitalise on the growing success of the new VHS tape format, and some towns eventually had two or three Our Price branded stores. Our Price Video was later rebranded under the Playhouse fascia, but failed to establish a significant market share in VHS sales, and it was wound up by then owners WH Smith in 1997.

The expansion of HMV by owners Thorn EMI in the late 1980s established a chain of newer, larger stores, which threatened and eventually overtook Our Price in popularity.

Flotation and sale to WH Smith edit

In 1984, Our Price was the first specialist music store to float on the London Stock Exchange. Two years later, it was acquired by WH Smith for £43 million, with Smith's Sound FX immediately absorbed into Our Price. Several members of senior management left the company in 1989 to create the rival MVC, which itself would eventually be bought by Woolworths.

In March 1994, WH Smith also bought a majority interest in Richard Branson's Virgin Music retail chain, a move which (with both Our Price and Virgin brands combined) would push them back ahead of HMV in market share. The next year, Virgin/Our Price increased profits by 10%. However, sales dropped by 3% in the year to May 1997, a contraction experienced throughout the industry.[2]

Around this time, WH Smith opened 23 new Virgin Megastores, while closing nineteen Our Price branches. Even though Our Price had more outlets, over half the turnover then consisted of sales from stores trading under the Virgin brand with their larger footprints in locations with higher customer traffic.

In 1998, WH Smith sold Virgin/Our Price for £145 million to a division of the Virgin Group of companies in response to the stores losing £127 million in the year to date.[1][3][4][5][6][7]

Sale to Virgin edit

After this takeover in 1998, the Virgin Group attempted to sell Our Price to its own management team, in a failed management buy-out. In August 2000, it was announced that the Our Price name would be dropped from 102 stores, mainly in South East England, in favour of the Virgin name, or VShop.

During the announcement, Our Price's commercial director, Neil Boote, told Billboard: "There has been no real investment in the vast majority of (Our Price) stores for a long, long time. Environmentally, they're a long way away from where we'd like to be." He added, "I'm sure Virgin believes that, if the VShop concept works, it has to have international potential. Frankly, Our Price was just too parochial a brand with no (particularly unique selling points). It epitomised the High Street record store of the '80s." Virgin had no immediate plans for the remaining 127 Our Price branded stores, until they saw how well the VShop chain would be received.

Five VShops reopened on 4 September 2000, located in Kensington, Ealing, Notting Hill Gate, Hammersmith and Chatham. VShops continued to stock the most popular CDs, but would concentrate equally on selling an expanded range of VHS video cassettes, DVDs, and Virgin branded mobile phone products, with Virgin Mobile taking up 25% of floor space.

These reconfigured stores removed the bulk of back catalogue CDs from display with the hope that customers could order these instore for home delivery through dedicated computer terminals, which Virgin called Find & Buy kiosks. The so-called 'clicks and mortar' strategy aimed to combine high street shopping with emerging internet shopping trends.

Virgin lost out to music and mobile phone competitors such as The Link, The Carphone Warehouse, HMV and MVC, while the increasing popularity of online shopping rendered the in-store ordering terminals redundant. Despite this, the Virgin Group continued to rebrand Our Price stores to VShop, and by April 2001, 100 Our Price branches had been converted, with the remaining 110 intended to be completed within the year. In addition, Virgin closed another 30 Our Price outlets between 1999 and 2001.[1][8]

Later life and demise edit

Sale to Brazin edit

In the early 2000s Virgin Group started to scale down its entertainment retail division in the United Kingdom. In September 2007, it sold its domestic Virgin Megastores in a management buy-out, and they were subsequently renamed Zavvi.[9] The group sold their remaining 77 Our Price branded stores to Brazin Limited in October 2001.

Brazin was a major Australian entertainment retailer, which operated the 265 Sanity stores. It paid £2 for the Our Price stores and gained exclusive licence rights in Australia for Virgin Entertainment, which had last traded there nine years earlier, under the co-ownership of the Virgin Group and Blockbuster Inc. Virgin Megastores were opened in Melbourne and Sydney.

In addition to the nominal £2 paid, Brazin paid £900 million to the Virgin Group while getting that exact amount back from Virgin for tax efficiency purposes. Brazin's CEO Ian Duffell said that the music market in the United Kingdom was one of the strongest in the world that year, and he expected a "50 per cent increase in music revenues from day one." Further to the deal, Virgin would get 1% of all turnover in the stores, in conjunction with offering Brazin a £2 million loan facility. Brazin also made a commitment to restrict the size and proximity of its Sanity stores in the United Kingdom to ensure they did not pose a large competitive threat to Virgin's other music shops.[10][11][12]

Early in 2002, Brazin experienced multiple delays in rebranding the Our Price stores due to difficulties with landlords, heritage listings, and negotiations with Railtrack. The company also moved the group's headquarters from the former Our Price central London offices to Alperton. The first rebranded Our Price store with Sanity's darker, urban look opened in London's Waterloo station on 23 April 2002, and the second opened at Paddington station on 9 May 2002, to positive customer reactions and strong sales. The Sanity/Our Price outlets were already starting to return on investments, and overall company operating profit rose to 32% in the year to 30 June 2002.[13][14][15]

In July 2002, the Virgin Group announced that three VShops in Brixton, which had been Our Price's 300th shop, Hounslow and Notting Hill would be relaunched again as Virgin Megastore Xpress, with a move away from mobile phone retailing and return to a larger number of back catalogue products. Another two VShop outlets in Reading and Colchester were relaunched as Virgin Gamestores, selling both gaming software and hardware.[16] By November that year, a total of 18 former VShops were converted to the Virgin Megastore Xpress fascia, increasing sales by around 30% year on year.[17]

In November 2002, Brazin acquired the remaining 41 VShop music and mobile phone shops, all former Our Price outlets, from the Virgin Group for £2 million. These shops were added to the network already acquired, in addition to the new Sanity shops being established by Brazin. The first of these new outlets opened in October at Conswater, Northern Ireland, and in November at Southsea, followed by Waltham Cross. By January 2003, the Sanity/Our Price/VShop network had grown to approximately 130 stores across the country.[18][19]

Sale to Primemist edit

In September 2003, even after increasing profitability across their store network, Brazin Limited sold all 118 stores of Sanity in the United Kingdom to Lee Skinner's investment company, Primemist Limited, for an estimated £9 million, citing higher expectations not met. At this stage, some shops were yet to be rebranded from Our Price; however, all VShop outlets were gone.[20][21]

Primemist Limited immediately struggled to operate the chain due to major credit limit reductions from suppliers, and had no alternative but to enter into administration in December 2003. Buyers for the entire business, or individual parts of it, could not be found. By April 2004, administrators BDO Stoy Hayward had closed all the Our Price stores, resulting in the redundancy of 400 staff members.[22][23][24][25]

The final Our Price to close, in Chesterfield, hosted a closing day party. All the chain's remaining stock was sold to the shops of Oxfam.

Brand afterlife edit

An Our Price Records branded store was briefly seen in a Virgin Atlantic 1980s styled nostalgia advertisement, screened in the United Kingdom from January 2009. The advert was created to celebrate 25 years of Virgin Atlantic, and ceased airing in mid-2010.[26]

www.ourprice.co.uk edit

www.ourprice.co.uk was a comparison website owned by Our Price Records Limited, which was established in 2003, and featured products which extended further than the music and entertainment industry.[citation needed] As of September 2019 the company website was defunct. The website was subsequently relaunched using the Shopify platform, but has since shut down.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Finch, Julia (6 April 2001). "Our Price disappears in Virgin remix". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 June 2012.
  2. ^ "COMPANY NEWS; W. H. SMITH TO MERGE RECORD CHAIN WITH VIRGIN RETAIL". nytimes.comk. 3 March 1994. Retrieved 27 June 2017.
  3. ^ Connon, Heather (28 February 1994). "Our Price set to merge with Virgin Retail: Link-up will cost Woolworth its place as Britain's largest music retailer". The Independent. Archived from the original on 24 May 2022. Retrieved 29 June 2012.
  4. ^ Cope, Nigel (24 August 1995). "WH Smith to axe 1,000 jobs". The Independent. Archived from the original on 24 May 2022. Retrieved 2 July 2012.
  5. ^ Pain, Derek (23 March 1996). "WH Smith climbs on expectations of Our Price sale". The Independent. Archived from the original on 24 May 2022. Retrieved 29 June 2012.
  6. ^ "WH Smith Profits Up 32 Per Cent". PR Newswire. Retrieved 2 July 2012.
  7. ^ "Virgin Entertainment Group Limited Acquires Virgin/Our Price From WH Smith Group Plc". PR Newswire. Retrieved 29 June 2012.
  8. ^ Ferguson, Tom (26 August 2000). "VEG's New Concept For Our Price". Billboard. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  9. ^ Gibson, Owen (18 September 2007). "Never mind the high street: Branson sells his Virgin Megastores". The Guardian. Retrieved 28 June 2012.
  10. ^ "BBC News: Virgin sheds Our Price stores". BBC News. Retrieved 26 June 2012.
  11. ^ Bowers, Simon (4 October 2001). "Branson sheds Our Price rump in cashless deal". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 June 2012.
  12. ^ Cave, Andrew (4 October 2001). "Virgin sheds chain to enter Australia". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 26 June 2012.
  13. ^ "Sanity set to roll out stores from London". Music Week. 20 April 2002. Retrieved 26 June 2012.
  14. ^ "Sanity store launch reports strong sales". Music Week. 4 May 2002. Retrieved 1 July 2012.
  15. ^ Todd, Mark (23 August 2002). "Brazin lifts its profit in Virgin territory". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 26 June 2012.
  16. ^ "Virgin introduces Megastore Xpress brand". Music Week. 27 July 2002. Retrieved 7 July 2012.
  17. ^ Team, Online (1 November 2002). "Sanity deal kills off VShop format". Retail Week. Retrieved 15 April 2013.
  18. ^ "Music Retailer moves into Southsea Agency Partnership pays dividends". Garner Wood. Retrieved 9 July 2012.
  19. ^ "VShop to disappear after Sanity deal". Music Week. 28 October 2002. Retrieved 15 April 2013.
  20. ^ "Brazin sells Sanity to Primemist Ltd". Music Week. 24 September 2003. Retrieved 26 June 2012.
  21. ^ Riera, Jose (26 September 2003). "Sanity sale: £3 is turned into £5m in just two years". Retail Week. Retrieved 26 June 2012.
  22. ^ "Sanity goes into administration". Music Week. Retrieved 26 June 2012.
  23. ^ Team, Online (5 December 2003). "BDO hopes to save Our Price". Retail Week. Retrieved 28 June 2012.
  24. ^ "Administrators close 31 Sanity stores". Music Week. 13 January 2004. Retrieved 26 June 2012.
  25. ^ Team, Online (2 April 2004). "Final Sanity shops shut as buyers sought". Retail Week. Retrieved 26 June 2012.
  26. ^ "Virgin Atlantic: 25 Years, Still Red Hot". Retrieved 14 April 2013 – via YouTube.[dead YouTube link]

price, chain, record, stores, united, kingdom, ireland, from, 1971, until, 2004, bangor, gwynedd, 1994typeentertainment, retailerfounded1971, years, 1971, defunctapril, 2004, years, 2004, headquarterskensington, high, street, united, kingdomkey, peoplegary, ne. Our Price was a chain of record stores in the United Kingdom and Ireland from 1971 until 2004 Our PriceThe Our Price in Bangor Gwynedd in 1994TypeEntertainment retailerFounded1971 52 years ago 1971 DefunctApril 2004 19 years ago 2004 04 HeadquartersKensington High Street United KingdomKey peopleGary Nesbitt founder Edward Stollins founder Mike Isaacs founder Lee Skinner last owner Websiteourprice wbr co wbr uk Contents 1 History 1 1 Expansion 1 1 1 Flotation and sale to WH Smith 1 1 2 Sale to Virgin 1 2 Later life and demise 1 2 1 Sale to Brazin 1 2 2 Sale to Primemist 1 2 3 Brand afterlife 1 2 3 1 www ourprice co uk 2 ReferencesHistory editFounded in 1971 by Gary Nesbitt Edward Stollins and Mike Isaacs their first store was located in London s Finchley Road Until 1976 the first six stores were branded The Tape Revolution by Bob Fowler of Fowler Coates Ltd and concentrated on selling the then new compact cassette format and eight track tapes 1 From 1976 the chain was rebranded as Our Price Records in response to higher demand for vinyl records over eight tracks or cassettes In 1988 it was rebranded once again as Our Price Music as record labels began to distribute the new CD format In 1993 the by then three hundred store chain was renamed for the final time simply as Our Price 1 The company s headquarters were in London with an administrative office above the store on Kensington High Street and promotional offices in Wood Lane White City It initially focused on the rock album buyer with regular imports of cut out albums from the United States a remainder and over stock store on Charing Cross Road branded as Surplus Records and a mail order business driven largely by advertising in the music press These markets fell away as the chain grew substantially from 1980 onwards when the company purchased the existing chain Harlequin Records which had numerous high street retail sites around the UK Thereafter rapid national expansion followed with the 100th Our Price store opening in the Kings Road Chelsea the 200th at Stirling and the 300th in Brixton South London Expansion edit In the first half of the 1980s Our Price established itself as the United Kingdom s second largest retailer of records and tapes with Woolworths the largest Brand recognition was driven by pun rich radio advertising built around the Get Down To Our Price slogan which later transferred to television featuring an animated carrier bag called Billy A sister chain Our Price Video was established to capitalise on the growing success of the new VHS tape format and some towns eventually had two or three Our Price branded stores Our Price Video was later rebranded under the Playhouse fascia but failed to establish a significant market share in VHS sales and it was wound up by then owners WH Smith in 1997 The expansion of HMV by owners Thorn EMI in the late 1980s established a chain of newer larger stores which threatened and eventually overtook Our Price in popularity Flotation and sale to WH Smith edit In 1984 Our Price was the first specialist music store to float on the London Stock Exchange Two years later it was acquired by WH Smith for 43 million with Smith s Sound FX immediately absorbed into Our Price Several members of senior management left the company in 1989 to create the rival MVC which itself would eventually be bought by Woolworths In March 1994 WH Smith also bought a majority interest in Richard Branson s Virgin Music retail chain a move which with both Our Price and Virgin brands combined would push them back ahead of HMV in market share The next year Virgin Our Price increased profits by 10 However sales dropped by 3 in the year to May 1997 a contraction experienced throughout the industry 2 Around this time WH Smith opened 23 new Virgin Megastores while closing nineteen Our Price branches Even though Our Price had more outlets over half the turnover then consisted of sales from stores trading under the Virgin brand with their larger footprints in locations with higher customer traffic In 1998 WH Smith sold Virgin Our Price for 145 million to a division of the Virgin Group of companies in response to the stores losing 127 million in the year to date 1 3 4 5 6 7 Sale to Virgin edit After this takeover in 1998 the Virgin Group attempted to sell Our Price to its own management team in a failed management buy out In August 2000 it was announced that the Our Price name would be dropped from 102 stores mainly in South East England in favour of the Virgin name or VShop During the announcement Our Price s commercial director Neil Boote told Billboard There has been no real investment in the vast majority of Our Price stores for a long long time Environmentally they re a long way away from where we d like to be He added I m sure Virgin believes that if the VShop concept works it has to have international potential Frankly Our Price was just too parochial a brand with no particularly unique selling points It epitomised the High Street record store of the 80s Virgin had no immediate plans for the remaining 127 Our Price branded stores until they saw how well the VShop chain would be received Five VShops reopened on 4 September 2000 located in Kensington Ealing Notting Hill Gate Hammersmith and Chatham VShops continued to stock the most popular CDs but would concentrate equally on selling an expanded range of VHS video cassettes DVDs and Virgin branded mobile phone products with Virgin Mobile taking up 25 of floor space These reconfigured stores removed the bulk of back catalogue CDs from display with the hope that customers could order these instore for home delivery through dedicated computer terminals which Virgin called Find amp Buy kiosks The so called clicks and mortar strategy aimed to combine high street shopping with emerging internet shopping trends Virgin lost out to music and mobile phone competitors such as The Link The Carphone Warehouse HMV and MVC while the increasing popularity of online shopping rendered the in store ordering terminals redundant Despite this the Virgin Group continued to rebrand Our Price stores to VShop and by April 2001 100 Our Price branches had been converted with the remaining 110 intended to be completed within the year In addition Virgin closed another 30 Our Price outlets between 1999 and 2001 1 8 Later life and demise edit Sale to Brazin edit In the early 2000s Virgin Group started to scale down its entertainment retail division in the United Kingdom In September 2007 it sold its domestic Virgin Megastores in a management buy out and they were subsequently renamed Zavvi 9 The group sold their remaining 77 Our Price branded stores to Brazin Limited in October 2001 Brazin was a major Australian entertainment retailer which operated the 265 Sanity stores It paid 2 for the Our Price stores and gained exclusive licence rights in Australia for Virgin Entertainment which had last traded there nine years earlier under the co ownership of the Virgin Group and Blockbuster Inc Virgin Megastores were opened in Melbourne and Sydney In addition to the nominal 2 paid Brazin paid 900 million to the Virgin Group while getting that exact amount back from Virgin for tax efficiency purposes Brazin s CEO Ian Duffell said that the music market in the United Kingdom was one of the strongest in the world that year and he expected a 50 per cent increase in music revenues from day one Further to the deal Virgin would get 1 of all turnover in the stores in conjunction with offering Brazin a 2 million loan facility Brazin also made a commitment to restrict the size and proximity of its Sanity stores in the United Kingdom to ensure they did not pose a large competitive threat to Virgin s other music shops 10 11 12 Early in 2002 Brazin experienced multiple delays in rebranding the Our Price stores due to difficulties with landlords heritage listings and negotiations with Railtrack The company also moved the group s headquarters from the former Our Price central London offices to Alperton The first rebranded Our Price store with Sanity s darker urban look opened in London s Waterloo station on 23 April 2002 and the second opened at Paddington station on 9 May 2002 to positive customer reactions and strong sales The Sanity Our Price outlets were already starting to return on investments and overall company operating profit rose to 32 in the year to 30 June 2002 13 14 15 In July 2002 the Virgin Group announced that three VShops in Brixton which had been Our Price s 300th shop Hounslow and Notting Hill would be relaunched again as Virgin Megastore Xpress with a move away from mobile phone retailing and return to a larger number of back catalogue products Another two VShop outlets in Reading and Colchester were relaunched as Virgin Gamestores selling both gaming software and hardware 16 By November that year a total of 18 former VShops were converted to the Virgin Megastore Xpress fascia increasing sales by around 30 year on year 17 In November 2002 Brazin acquired the remaining 41 VShop music and mobile phone shops all former Our Price outlets from the Virgin Group for 2 million These shops were added to the network already acquired in addition to the new Sanity shops being established by Brazin The first of these new outlets opened in October at Conswater Northern Ireland and in November at Southsea followed by Waltham Cross By January 2003 the Sanity Our Price VShop network had grown to approximately 130 stores across the country 18 19 Sale to Primemist edit In September 2003 even after increasing profitability across their store network Brazin Limited sold all 118 stores of Sanity in the United Kingdom to Lee Skinner s investment company Primemist Limited for an estimated 9 million citing higher expectations not met At this stage some shops were yet to be rebranded from Our Price however all VShop outlets were gone 20 21 Primemist Limited immediately struggled to operate the chain due to major credit limit reductions from suppliers and had no alternative but to enter into administration in December 2003 Buyers for the entire business or individual parts of it could not be found By April 2004 administrators BDO Stoy Hayward had closed all the Our Price stores resulting in the redundancy of 400 staff members 22 23 24 25 The final Our Price to close in Chesterfield hosted a closing day party All the chain s remaining stock was sold to the shops of Oxfam Brand afterlife edit An Our Price Records branded store was briefly seen in a Virgin Atlantic 1980s styled nostalgia advertisement screened in the United Kingdom from January 2009 The advert was created to celebrate 25 years of Virgin Atlantic and ceased airing in mid 2010 26 www ourprice co uk edit www ourprice co uk was a comparison website owned by Our Price Records Limited which was established in 2003 and featured products which extended further than the music and entertainment industry citation needed As of September 2019 the company website was defunct The website was subsequently relaunched using the Shopify platform but has since shut down References edit a b c d Finch Julia 6 April 2001 Our Price disappears in Virgin remix The Guardian Retrieved 29 June 2012 COMPANY NEWS W H SMITH TO MERGE RECORD CHAIN WITH VIRGIN RETAIL nytimes comk 3 March 1994 Retrieved 27 June 2017 Connon Heather 28 February 1994 Our Price set to merge with Virgin Retail Link up will cost Woolworth its place as Britain s largest music retailer The Independent Archived from the original on 24 May 2022 Retrieved 29 June 2012 Cope Nigel 24 August 1995 WH Smith to axe 1 000 jobs The Independent Archived from the original on 24 May 2022 Retrieved 2 July 2012 Pain Derek 23 March 1996 WH Smith climbs on expectations of Our Price sale The Independent Archived from the original on 24 May 2022 Retrieved 29 June 2012 WH Smith Profits Up 32 Per Cent PR Newswire Retrieved 2 July 2012 Virgin Entertainment Group Limited Acquires Virgin Our Price From WH Smith Group Plc PR Newswire Retrieved 29 June 2012 Ferguson Tom 26 August 2000 VEG s New Concept For Our Price Billboard Retrieved 14 April 2013 Gibson Owen 18 September 2007 Never mind the high street Branson sells his Virgin Megastores The Guardian Retrieved 28 June 2012 BBC News Virgin sheds Our Price stores BBC News Retrieved 26 June 2012 Bowers Simon 4 October 2001 Branson sheds Our Price rump in cashless deal The Guardian Retrieved 26 June 2012 Cave Andrew 4 October 2001 Virgin sheds chain to enter Australia The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 26 June 2012 Sanity set to roll out stores from London Music Week 20 April 2002 Retrieved 26 June 2012 Sanity store launch reports strong sales Music Week 4 May 2002 Retrieved 1 July 2012 Todd Mark 23 August 2002 Brazin lifts its profit in Virgin territory The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 26 June 2012 Virgin introduces Megastore Xpress brand Music Week 27 July 2002 Retrieved 7 July 2012 Team Online 1 November 2002 Sanity deal kills off VShop format Retail Week Retrieved 15 April 2013 Music Retailer moves into Southsea Agency Partnership pays dividends Garner Wood Retrieved 9 July 2012 VShop to disappear after Sanity deal Music Week 28 October 2002 Retrieved 15 April 2013 Brazin sells Sanity to Primemist Ltd Music Week 24 September 2003 Retrieved 26 June 2012 Riera Jose 26 September 2003 Sanity sale 3 is turned into 5m in just two years Retail Week Retrieved 26 June 2012 Sanity goes into administration Music Week Retrieved 26 June 2012 Team Online 5 December 2003 BDO hopes to save Our Price Retail Week Retrieved 28 June 2012 Administrators close 31 Sanity stores Music Week 13 January 2004 Retrieved 26 June 2012 Team Online 2 April 2004 Final Sanity shops shut as buyers sought Retail Week Retrieved 26 June 2012 Virgin Atlantic 25 Years Still Red Hot Retrieved 14 April 2013 via YouTube dead YouTube link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Our Price amp oldid 1165022288, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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