Department stores need to relearn "the art of seducing the customer" if they are to survive, an expert has said.

Data revealed this week has showed that 83pc of department stores in the UK have closed in the past five years.

In Norfolk alone this has included Debenhams in Norwich, Beales in Diss, Great Yarmouth, Lowestoft and Beccles to name a few.

And even companies which have survived are struggling, for example House of Fraser which collapsed into administration in 2019 and John Lewis which posted a £517m loss for the year to March 2021.

The reason that they are struggling where counterparts like Jarrold and Selfridges are thriving is because the latter are truly unique, experts say.

Professor Joshua Bamfield of the Centre for Retail Research explained: "When the first ever department store was launched in Paris the concept was to seduce the customers. Whether it was fabrics they had never seen before or items they could not get anywhere else, it was the idea that they had to come in.

"When you look at how the people who run Jarrold have handled it, you can tell they never got out of bed and said: 'We need to be more like Debenhams'. They stayed absolutely true to serving who they knew their customer was - even though it may not appeal to everyone."

Robert Jones, professor of brand leadership at the University of East Anglia, said the collapse of department stores was partly down to a "failure of branding".

"Department store chains have failed to invest in their brand in any way at all really," he said. "The exception is John Lewis which takes branding very seriously and invested in a big redesign a couple of years. And, of course, spends a lot of money on those very expensive Christmas adverts."

Professor Jones said John Lewis's ownership structure created a shopping culture that other department store chains did not have.

"I think the challenge for John Lewis now is that you can sense the shopping culture face to face in a shop. But that's only 30pc of their business now, 70pc is online.

"And it's much harder to try and establish that sense that you're not going to be ripped off and that you can get good advice when all online retailers look the same."