Cannabis report shows low sales in O'Leary and online - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 05:02 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PEI

Cannabis report shows low sales in O'Leary and online

The O'Leary store, which opened in January, sold$87,543 worth of product whileonline sales were $104,902.

'I think people enjoy coming in, interacting with our tremendous retail teams'

The corporation's Charlottetown location made the majority of the province's cannabis sales, with 60per cent of the total sales revenue. (Jane Robertson/CBC)

The P.E.I. Cannabis Management Corporationreleased its annual report for 2019 and found that sales at the O'Leary store and online were low compared to itsthree other stores.

The O'Leary store, which opened in January, sold$87,543 worth of product and online sales were $104,902.

The corporation's Charlottetown location made the majority of the province's cannabis sales, with 60per cent of the total sales revenue, amounting to just over $4.2 million.

Zach Currie, the director of operations forP.E.I. Cannabis,attributed the low salesin O'Leary to the location opening later than expected.

He said he thinks the low online salesare because people prefer to shop for cannabis in the store.

"I think people enjoy coming in, interacting with our tremendous retail teams, going through that consultative process, being able to see the product, being able to observe the product in one of our sensory pods and engage with a staff member," he said.

Retail stores increased nationally

Zach Currie, the director of operations forP.E.I. Cannabis Management Corporation, attributed the low salesin O'Leary to the location opening later than expected. (Steve Bruce/CBC)

Michael Armstrong, an associate professor at the Goodman School of Business at Brock University, follows the cannabis industry across Canada.

He said the report showed thatP.E.I. is doing well in comparisonto other provinces.

"P.E.I. was one of the province's that had the least problem with product shortages," he said.

"Theyhad enough inventory in the year to support nine months of sales, whereas other cannabis agencies the figure is closer to two months of sales."

Armstrong said P.E.I.'s success can be attributed to the number of stores in the province"that made it easy for customers."

"Provinces that had higher percentages of sales online like Quebec,19 per cent online that was because they didn't have enough stores. And so it actually hurt their sales per capita," he said.

Currie said he's happy with what the corporation has achieved so far in comparisonto other provinces.

More P.E.I. news