Partner Article
All change at Specsavers Macclesfield
A Macclesfield opticians is relocating to bigger premises after outgrowing its old site.
Specsavers has been a staple of the Grosvenor Centre since 1990 and employs over 30 team members. Its move to a new suite within the same centre will see the retailer more than double its size and offer more appointments to local customers, with twice as many audiology clinics.
Specsavers Macclesfield offers both eye care and audiology services. The store, which will be on one level, will be easily accessible to those with limited mobility, with a spacious, open floor plan and wheelchair friendly test rooms.
A large waiting area will offer customers a bright, comfortable place to sit ahead of appointments, and the store will have the very latest Specsavers shop fit.
The store will re-open in its new location in the Grosvenor Centre on Friday 19 July, having been closed for five days.
Retail director Donna Nisbet says: ‘We’re very excited for visitors to see our brand-new store. We’ve listened to feedback from customers and our bigger and better new premises will help us to accommodate people more quickly and comfortably while retaining the high quality of customer service that we pride ourselves on.
‘It’s a bonus for us that our expansion has allowed us to take on more staff. We’ve been employing and training local people in the town for nearly 30 years with a number of our team members joining us without optical or audiological experience going on to become qualified professionals.’
This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by Beth Jones .
Zero per cent - but maximum brand exposure
We don’t talk about money stress enough
A year of resilience, growth and collaboration
Apprenticeships: Lower standards risk safety
Keeping it reel: Creating video in an authenticity era
Budget: Creating a more vibrant market economy
Celebrating excellence and community support
The value of nurturing homegrown innovation
A dynamic, fair and innovative economy
Navigating the property investment market
Have stock markets peaked? Tune out the noise
Will the Employment Rights Bill cost too much?