On Monday 9th March, our Brand Director Ian sent this to the 120-strong KERB trader membership pool. It was received warmly with lots of positivity and support from the traders.

Hello KERB,

Unless you’ve been living under a rock/street food van/pile of brioche buns these past few weeks, you’ll have all seen the commentary on Coronavirus and its potential impact on our industry. Much of this has been pessimistic, worst-case scenarios, spelling doomsday-esque outcomes for independent businesses in London, with far too many negative soundbites appearing across social media and expert commentary. We are fully aware of the risks but are today coming out on the front foot and declaring KERB open for business.

I had a great email come in on Friday from a guy much older than all of us (for once, not Simon Mitchell…), who’d been active across the London food scene in 2003 at the time of the SARS outbreak. He now works as a chef and in restaurant marketing:

“How are sales this week? I was out last night and everything seems really quiet.

I’ve been talking to a few people this morning who don’t remember the SARS pandemic in 2003. I was working in Smithfield’s for a city catering company that ran restaurants and catering in city venues. I was also working alongside Madame Tussauds and overseas visitor numbers dropped off a cliff.

The restaurants got very quiet and events started cancelling (and postponing) but this only lasted 12 weeks and then everything bounced back. It was the businesses who made the most marketing noise during the quiet time that recovered fastest.

But also life continued. People did still go out it was just a bit of a fight to get them to come to us.”

We think this is a great tone to set.

With that, we’re writing to you today to say that until we hear otherwise – that is that until the government enforce curfews, containment or anything else of that ilk – KERB will remain open for business and actively pushing for more and better opportunities across all that we do. We encourage you to do the same, and set a bold, positive tone across your comms and staff to retain customer confidence.

We will continue to champion you and your interests and will push harder than ever to convince Londoners to come to our markets and book our catering for events. Practically speaking, this may require us all to be more agile and flexible. We may need to hustle more than ever before to keep events in the calendar, or ensure you receive some payment for those already booked.

But we think there is at present no reason for the level of fearmongering across the industry and much of the negativity on show is only going to further talk down prospects of a solid recovery and stable businesses. Londoners will still need to eat, want to socialise and go out, even if international inbound flights drop off a little.

For KERB to remain open we need your support.

On markets, we ask you all to:

On catering, we ask you all to: