sluggish, my advice? Go Internet exclusively- retail space is expensive, and if you're specializing in hard to find items most of your customers will already know what they're looking for and are less likely to browse.
Exactly. I think to a certain extent you're starting out with a business model that's already failing.
How many niche music stores are still around? I live in one of the largest cities in the United States, and I can count the number of independent music stores on 1 hand. It's the same thing that happened to gaming stores, paintball stores, small town mom & pops, etc. Large retailers and the internet kill you. You can not compete. You don't have the capital or buying power. The current climate to getting your hands on those funds isn't exactly friendly either.
Top all of that with the ongoing decline of CD sales.. and it's just bad. Digital formats are crushing it. I haven't bought a single CD in 5 years, yet I have a large collection of songs that supposedly can't be obtained anymore. Even songs that don't have their licensing rights signed over to an online company and aren't on anybody's download system (iTunes, Napster, etc) are easily available to anybody that's willing to spend 5 minutes figuring out how to find it.
afaik, the only brick & mortar stores that actually survive in houston fall into 3 relative categories...
1) Music exchanges. Turn in your old stuff, get new stuff. I don't know of any that are still open tbh.
2) Vinyl shops. Lots of imported eletronic crap, caters to DJs with turntables.. but even those are falling by the side to CDs...
3) "Screw Shops". Specialize in a homegrown type of rap music called "Screw". They're usually drug fronts... not kidding.