Subject | Re: Calumet files Chapter 7 |
From | George Kerby |
Date | 03/14/2014 23:31 (03/14/2014 17:31) |
Message-ID | <CF48ED6D.A8DDB%ghost_topper@hotmail.com> |
Client | |
Newsgroups | rec.photo.digital |
Follows | nospam |
Followups | nospam (33m) Scott Schuckert (2h & 50m) RichA (13d, 9h & 22m) |
nospamTHAT is EXACTLY what people would do to me when I was a store manager for a local mom n pop store here. Even though, Nikon, Olympus and Canon would give us deals and quantity breaks in wholesale to us, folks would come in and waste hours of my and my staff's time and then leave and buy from B&H or some other mail order outfit back in the late 70's.
In article <lfv8c5$b3l$1@speranza.aioe.org>, PAS <ntotrr@optonline.net> wrote:nospamPASnospamthey might close their store and be just an online seller.PAS
They certainly can. If the store closed down, Bill Cameta will still do very, very well with his eBay business. He does a lot of business in used gear also. If it ever closes, I'll miss the place.
that's the point. many stores are no longer needed when it's easier to get products online.
for a store to survive, it needs to offer something you *can't* get online.
That would be personalized expert service and the ability to handle the goods before buying. That's something the brick & mortar store still offers.
but not necessarily at a competitive price. stores have an overhead that an online seller does not have and almost always have higher prices, sometimes by quite a bit.
what ends up happening is people might go to a store to check out the camera or other product and then go order it online for much less. the store not only doesn't get the sale but they spent time helping someone buy elsewhere.