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#441
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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On 1/14/2017 2:58 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
On 1/14/17 8:48 AM, Jack wrote: On 1/13/2017 2:48 PM, Mike Marlow wrote: Is it really that hard for posters here to delete the irrelevant text that they are responding to? It's a very common problem from many of the regulars here and that has long been an annoying thing in usenet. Really guys - you can't snip everything except the relevant point you are responding to? Sheese... One of my main peeves, although I gave up complaining about it during Fidonet days. When you see me not snip a long post, you can be sure it's to get back at the poster(s) that didn't snip to begin with. It's FAR more annoying than punctuation issues. If they are too freaking lazy/dumb to snip, I'm happy to add to the mix. Complaining about it never works, so might as well try to annoy them back. I'm not so irritated by it anymore for a couple reasons. 1. Snipping long posts was necessary when people were paying for data downloaded and using 14k modems that took quite a while to download even text. It was a minor issue with 9600k modems, ended with 14K, and non existent with 56K. The bitch is not about paying for the data, it is annoying to page though meaningless gibberish to see a reply related to one sentence in a message. It was bad form in Fidonet days, and bad form today, for the same reason. Neither of those things are a concern anymore, since newsgroups are never going to put anyone over a data limit and nobody's of dial-up anymore. (If you are, that's your problem!) :-) Like I said, that has not been an issue since 14k modems, and is not the issue today. 2. The fact that we're even debating this in a newsgroup is like complaining about the 8-track cassette fading out and switching tracks in the middle of the guitar solo. Nobody but you mentioned data cost/speed issue, that was stupid even in 14k days. It is poor form and annoying to post 50 lines of text and say "agreed" at the end. It is NOT a cost or thru-put issue. You brought up the speed/cost issue, then argued against it. Classic Strawman. -- Jack Add Life to your Days not Days to your Life. http://jbstein.com |
#443
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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On 1/14/2017 3:29 PM, wrote:
On Sat, 14 Jan 2017 09:36:10 -0500, Jack wrote: On 1/13/2017 12:37 PM, Leon wrote: It just seemed that Jack was comparing different prices on Amazon for the same thing and apparently not noticing that a low price, that does not include shipping, was more expensive than the Prime item which included shipping. No, that's not what I was doing, and in fact bitched about item prices being higher when bought thru prime. If an item cost $5 plus $5 shipping and $9 with free shipping under prime, then, how much free shipping are you getting? Someone is lying, both can't be right. I'm absolutely certain Amazon used to do that, not sure if they still do, but they did, and I bet they still do. Granted again prices are all over the board on Amazon. While Prime is expensive up front each year, $99, that gets whittled away quickly if you need items quickly and actually pay extra for 2nd day delivery. Prime is good for some and so much for others. My kids have Prime, I sometimes buy through them if the item warrants it. Mostly I just add stuff to my wish list and when it gets high enough for free shipping, I buy it. Everything they sell doesn't qualify for free shipping, and everything doesn't qualify for prime, so due diligence is required. I've been screwed more than once when I paid stupid prices for shipping that I thought was included with the free stuff. Another nasty habit I noticed is sometimes an online search will find the item on Amazon at a low price. If you go off the page and do a search directly on Amazon for the exact same item, it comes up with a different price and you can't get back to the original price. They obviously have a number of pricing schemes to get into your pocket. Another reason Amazon loses trust from me. They are a shaky out fit and if you are price conscious (cheap, like me) due diligence is a must. You finally caught on. It's up to YOU - not Amazon, or anyone else, what you pay. Either you do your homework and find a price you can live with - and then live with it - or you keep looking and don't buy. I always knew this. About time you caught on that it is up the the retailer to make me happy and gain my trust if they want to continue doing business with me. If a retailer gets over on me one to many times, I will no longer go to him for my needs. I've lost a ton of trust in Amazon over the years, I still go there, but ALWAYS look around to other places before buying from them. "free shipping" is a PLOY. It is not crooked. There is no such thing as a "free lunch". Prime pricing is "shipping included" pricing. It is "convenience" pricing and "convenience" shopping.. It does not implement "combined shipping" and the economies that go with that. You say that, but, $28 for a set of Sony headphones plus shipping at Amazon vs $14 and free shipping from Walmart is not a ploy, it was a fact. Amazon added to their "BAD SIDE" ledger on that one, and there seem to be more and more as time goes on. If you followed the post here on Forever wood glides, the price difference was pretty silly, $56 vs $19 for 20 at the tool shop. Unless the tool shop charges $38 for shipping, Amazon is out to lunch again. The only "free shipping" that really does appear to be free is buying stuff from China or other far east countries on Ebay where you buy something for less than it would cost you to send an empty envelope. In those cases, the chinese government is subsidizing the foreign trade by ssubsidizing the shipping.. Pretty much nothing is manufactured in the US any more, so the above applies to most everything, right? I still can't figure out how I can buy something like an arduino micro, fully assembled, for less than the price of the processor chip - and have it shipped from China (for something like $3, believe it or not - try sending a letter to China for under $3 postage from the USA or Canada - - -) While Chinese government subsidies may be a factor, the big factor is labor and taxes. Trump wants to fix the tax thing by lowering business tax from 35% to 15% which is more like China. What's he going to do about wages? Nothing, can't be done, so it will have to be tariffs, which means my $14 Sony headphone will cost $100 which means minimum wage will need to go to $35/hr, which means... well, looks grim to me. At least it's a lot easier adding zero's to a computer screen than wheeling around paper in a wheelbarrow to buy something. -- Jack Add Life to your Days not Days to your Life. http://jbstein.com |
#444
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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On Mon, 16 Jan 2017 09:50:23 -0500, "J. Clarke"
wrote: In article , says... Jack writes: On 1/13/2017 3:05 PM, wrote: There is a REASON there is a difference between wholesale (warehouse) and retail (store) pricing - and it has nothing to do with the retailer going after your gonads. The reason a retailer is going after my gonads is not important to me. If an item cost 3-10 times as much at a retail store, I'm not likely going to buy it, nor will their price gouging ways send a chill up my leg. I hate buying machine screws at Borgs, they come in sealed package of 3 for .99. I need 4, and the price is stupid. Most of their customers only need two screws, and are not interested in storing 98 others ad infinitum. Can't make everyone happy (although my local Orchard Supply Hardware will sell the two/four packs and also will sell an entire box of 25/50/100). Home Depot, Lowes aren't generally selling to the trade. Hardware stores used to sell them by the pound and they were cheap. Lowes sells threaded inserts individually for 10x's more than I can buy them at Granger. Why Sears, Lowes, Home Depot won't give a decent price on small items is not important to me. Again, your lack of retailing experience shows. It costs the retailer money to stock small items (e.g. those bags of three screws) for packaging, shipping, stocking, tracking. I guess enough people don't mind getting screwed, or even know they are getting screwed. Life must really suck for you. You don't seem to understand sales--you seem to be one of those back room accountants who says "we have to charge x for this item and never mind that the guy across the street sells it for x/10". And after a while you decide to remove the item because you never sell any of them. And so it goes until the guy across the street has put you out of business. You would rather he sell everything below cost, and drive HIMSELF out of business? Either way the result is the same. "I'm only loosing a little bit on each sale - I'll make it up on volume" |
#445
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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On 1/16/17 10:15 AM, Jack wrote:
On 1/14/2017 2:58 PM, -MIKE- wrote: On 1/14/17 8:48 AM, Jack wrote: On 1/13/2017 2:48 PM, Mike Marlow wrote: Is it really that hard for posters here to delete the irrelevant text that they are responding to? It's a very common problem from many of the regulars here and that has long been an annoying thing in usenet. Really guys - you can't snip everything except the relevant point you are responding to? Sheese... One of my main peeves, although I gave up complaining about it during Fidonet days. When you see me not snip a long post, you can be sure it's to get back at the poster(s) that didn't snip to begin with. It's FAR more annoying than punctuation issues. If they are too freaking lazy/dumb to snip, I'm happy to add to the mix. Complaining about it never works, so might as well try to annoy them back. I'm not so irritated by it anymore for a couple reasons. 1. Snipping long posts was necessary when people were paying for data downloaded and using 14k modems that took quite a while to download even text. It was a minor issue with 9600k modems, ended with 14K, and non existent with 56K. The bitch is not about paying for the data, it is annoying to page though meaningless gibberish to see a reply related to one sentence in a message. It was bad form in Fidonet days, and bad form today, for the same reason. Neither of those things are a concern anymore, since newsgroups are never going to put anyone over a data limit and nobody's of dial-up anymore. (If you are, that's your problem!) :-) Like I said, that has not been an issue since 14k modems, and is not the issue today. 2. The fact that we're even debating this in a newsgroup is like complaining about the 8-track cassette fading out and switching tracks in the middle of the guitar solo. Nobody but you mentioned data cost/speed issue, that was stupid even in 14k days. It is poor form and annoying to post 50 lines of text and say "agreed" at the end. It is NOT a cost or thru-put issue. You brought up the speed/cost issue, then argued against it. Classic Strawman. I still do it because it gives you an opportunity to bitch about something, which you obviously love doing. Glad I can help. -- -MIKE- "Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life" --Elvin Jones (1927-2004) -- http://mikedrums.com ---remove "DOT" ^^^^ to reply |
#446
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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On Mon, 16 Jan 2017 11:37:55 -0500, Jack wrote:
On 1/14/2017 3:20 PM, wrote: On Sat, 14 Jan 2017 09:12:54 -0500, Jack wrote: Since neither of you seem to have any experience with online retailing, perhaps you're both tilting at windmills. How would you know how much experience we have with on line retailing? Besides, we certainly have plenty of experience with on-line retailing from the customers point of view, and that's about all that counts. If the customer doesn't like what you're doing, you're doing it wrong. Well that's certainly a novel idea --- If the customer is always right, perhaps he should go into buainess while he knows it all? Perhaps the "customer" can change the laws of economics - - - - All retailers live by the basic law of economics, which is no customers no business. It is directly where the saying "the customer is always right" comes from. If Sears or Amazon can't make me happy in a competitive market, they will fall. Sears is about toast, as are most local retail outlets. Online will kill off most of them, either today, or tomorrow, but die they will. Sears makes me unhappy charging 79 cents for a nickle item (shelf bracket) and making me look for a half hour for a salesman. Amazon makes me unhappy charging $26 for a $14 product (Sony earphones). I just noticed Amazon is charging $56 for an $18 chair slide. Do it enough and you will be toast, that's a basic law of economics in a competitive market. And how do YOU determine it is a nocle item, or a $14 product?, or an $18 chair slide? Just because someone had them on either clearance or as a loss leader does NOT make them only worth that amount. If the replacement cost to the retailer is more than a nickel he can't sell them for a nickel. Depending on the volume he buys at a time, his price may vary from $0.05 to $0.17 each - then the shipping costs getr devided by yhe number bought, and added to that cost - so if shipping is $10.00 for a minimum order of 100, and the same for up to 500, his shipping cost per unit ranges from 2 cents to 10 cents each for shipping. If he buys 1000 at a time, it's only 1 cent each -- The more he buys, the more his warehousing costs and carrying costs (including opportunity costs) are per unit, which can easily offset the ammortized shipping savings. By the time that nickel part is sold, if he has an average turnover cycle of 90 days, his total cost will be somewhere between $0.08 and $0.20 cents per unit - and that's not counting retail costs (keeping the lights on, paying the cashier, cleaning staff, heat and AC, etc - nor is it accounting for the "five finger discount" shrinkage due to the "customer" who figures it's fair play becaude he's being "ripped off" for $0.20 for a nickel item. In many cases, with parts such as those shelf brackets, the "five finger discount" can exceed 30%.. You really need to have some experience on the reseller side, or an education in basic business accounting, to understand that YOUR understanding is WAY off. So how do the online retailers sell for the price they sell for?? I'll give you an example. Say ou can buy a brake rotor for your 1004 Taurus, for anywhere from $9 to $30 on a given day from Rock Auto, pluis $7 shipping. That same part is $39 shop price at Napa, with a $54 MSRP, or as a mechanic your shop price from the Ford Dealer is $57 with a MSRP of, say, $85. Just pulling numbers out of a hat here, based on past experience. How does Rock Auto sell for such low prices??? They buy the dead stock off the shelves of bankrupt resellers, and overstock from large warehousing companies who are optimizing their shelf space and minimizing their "opportunity cost" by freeing up cash to buy higher profit and higher turnover parts. They buy the stock for pennies on the dollar. So just because Rock Auto can sell you a Centric brand rotor for $9 does NOT mean that ba Centric brand rotor is only worth $9. Nor does the fact they can sell you a motorcraft rotor for $27 mean the Motorcraft rotor is only worth $27, or that it is worth 3 times as much as a Centric branded rotor. The actual wholesale value of both may be close to $20, and the "fair retail" may be closer to $55. Your NAPA store may well be paying $35 each quantity 10, and $40 for a single order shipped to their store for a NAPA branded rotor that came off the Centric asswembly line. |
#447
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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#448
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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On 2017-01-09, notbob wrote:
You see a lotta Dan Electro's in use, these days. The "lipstick" pick-up is held in high esteem by many of today's hipsters. The guitar, itself, is still essentially junk. ![]() I stand by what I sed, above. I jes played a Danelectro/Silvertone, a guitar I gave my friend new high-end strings to re-string it with. He re-strung it, I played it. The strings were worth more than the guitar! I also read that wiki link of "Danelectro" guitar players. provided. Note that most of the players listed owned Sivertone/Danelectro gear early in their career, much like myself (cheap!). After they started making some $$$$, they rarely touched one, again. (Except fer the "hipsters" that think that "lipstick" pup is all that) My buddy keeps his cuz it has "sentimental value". That's the only value it has. Again, it's basically junk! ![]() nb |
#449
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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On 1/16/2017 10:37 AM, Jack wrote:
On 1/14/2017 3:20 PM, wrote: On Sat, 14 Jan 2017 09:12:54 -0500, Jack wrote: Since neither of you seem to have any experience with online retailing, perhaps you're both tilting at windmills. How would you know how much experience we have with on line retailing? Besides, we certainly have plenty of experience with on-line retailing from the customers point of view, and that's about all that counts. If the customer doesn't like what you're doing, you're doing it wrong. Well that's certainly a novel idea --- If the customer is always right, perhaps he should go into buainess while he knows it all? Perhaps the "customer" can change the laws of economics - - - - All retailers live by the basic law of economics, which is no customers no business. It is directly where the saying "the customer is always right" comes from. If Sears or Amazon can't make me happy in a competitive market, they will fall. I seriously doubt that your feelings of happiness will affect Sears or Amazon. It will be what the people are looking for that determines failure or not. Some of the most hated corporations are doing OK. You can enter most any TV content provider, Comcast and most any cellular service. Sears is about toast, as are most local retail outlets. Online will kill off most of them, either today, or tomorrow, but die they will. Some will fail but there is always going to be a great demand for getting the product in your hands right now. Sears makes me unhappy charging 79 cents for a nickle item (shelf bracket) and making me look for a half hour for a salesman. Amazon makes me unhappy charging $26 for a $14 product (Sony earphones). I just noticed Amazon is charging $56 for an $18 chair slide. Do it enough and you will be toast, that's a basic law of economics in a competitive market. This is nothing new and has been going on for decades. |
#450
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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On 1/16/2017 11:31 AM, wrote:
On Mon, 16 Jan 2017 09:50:23 -0500, "J. Clarke" wrote: In article , says... Jack writes: On 1/13/2017 3:05 PM, wrote: There is a REASON there is a difference between wholesale (warehouse) and retail (store) pricing - and it has nothing to do with the retailer going after your gonads. The reason a retailer is going after my gonads is not important to me. If an item cost 3-10 times as much at a retail store, I'm not likely going to buy it, nor will their price gouging ways send a chill up my leg. I hate buying machine screws at Borgs, they come in sealed package of 3 for .99. I need 4, and the price is stupid. Most of their customers only need two screws, and are not interested in storing 98 others ad infinitum. Can't make everyone happy (although my local Orchard Supply Hardware will sell the two/four packs and also will sell an entire box of 25/50/100). Home Depot, Lowes aren't generally selling to the trade. Hardware stores used to sell them by the pound and they were cheap. Lowes sells threaded inserts individually for 10x's more than I can buy them at Granger. Why Sears, Lowes, Home Depot won't give a decent price on small items is not important to me. Again, your lack of retailing experience shows. It costs the retailer money to stock small items (e.g. those bags of three screws) for packaging, shipping, stocking, tracking. I guess enough people don't mind getting screwed, or even know they are getting screwed. Life must really suck for you. You don't seem to understand sales--you seem to be one of those back room accountants who says "we have to charge x for this item and never mind that the guy across the street sells it for x/10". And after a while you decide to remove the item because you never sell any of them. And so it goes until the guy across the street has put you out of business. You would rather he sell everything below cost, and drive HIMSELF out of business? Either way the result is the same. "I'm only loosing a little bit on each sale - I'll make it up on volume" Any retailer that has a fixed percentage of mark up on his entire inventory is an idiot. Every item must be considered when it come to mark up. You must consider turn over, cost of handling and floor space used. If an item is not selling, you mark it down, and if you have to mark it down too much you don't replace it, unless it is a relative inexpensive item and is a loss leader. |
#451
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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On 1/16/2017 10:06 AM, Brewster wrote:
On 1/15/17 11:28 AM, Leon wrote: On 1/15/2017 11:23 AM, J. Clarke wrote: Snip Also, I noticed a lot of stuff you buy at the Borgs have unique model numbers for stuff, and looking up those numbers turn up nothing. I would imagine this tactic would put a crimp in price matching if the store didn't want to match prices. $1 difference, no problem, $100 difference, big problem.... It can. At the other end, Walmart sometimes has products with the same SKU as the ones you buy elsewhere but the product has been cheapened in some way, which is something I really wish the FTC would start stepping on. Same product/model number and one is built with cheaper parts. I ask, how does one prove that. And is that maybe not just a case of the manufacturer improving the product with out changing the model number? Case in point. When the fresh roasted green chile runs out and we are Jonesing for a fix, we have occasionally picked up a tub from either the local supermarket or Wal mart. Consistently, the Wal Mart tubs have lots more peels and other undesireables where as the supermarket version is fine. Tubs look the same (same SKU), but our guess is that undoubtedly Wal Mart demands the manufacturer supply at a lower price, so the manufacturer provides a product that falls down a notch on their QC. Easy enough to do (for a manufacturer) with foods, a bit more difficult to do with electronics, etc. Given the volume that Wal Mart generates for them, I'd bet that they find a way to modify production to satisfy the Wal Mart contracts and help keep their bottom line. FWIW -BR One time use consumables are way different than a product designed to be used for years. |
#452
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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-MIKE- wrote:
On 1/16/17 10:15 AM, Jack wrote: On 1/14/2017 2:58 PM, -MIKE- wrote: On 1/14/17 8:48 AM, Jack wrote: On 1/13/2017 2:48 PM, Mike Marlow wrote: Is it really that hard for posters here to delete the irrelevant text that they are responding to? It's a very common problem from many of the regulars here and that has long been an annoying thing in usenet. Really guys - you can't snip everything except the relevant point you are responding to? Sheese... One of my main peeves, although I gave up complaining about it during Fidonet days. When you see me not snip a long post, you can be sure it's to get back at the poster(s) that didn't snip to begin with. It's FAR more annoying than punctuation issues. If they are too freaking lazy/dumb to snip, I'm happy to add to the mix. Complaining about it never works, so might as well try to annoy them back. I'm not so irritated by it anymore for a couple reasons. 1. Snipping long posts was necessary when people were paying for data downloaded and using 14k modems that took quite a while to download even text. It was a minor issue with 9600k modems, ended with 14K, and non existent with 56K. The bitch is not about paying for the data, it is annoying to page though meaningless gibberish to see a reply related to one sentence in a message. It was bad form in Fidonet days, and bad form today, for the same reason. Neither of those things are a concern anymore, since newsgroups are never going to put anyone over a data limit and nobody's of dial-up anymore. (If you are, that's your problem!) :-) Like I said, that has not been an issue since 14k modems, and is not the issue today. 2. The fact that we're even debating this in a newsgroup is like complaining about the 8-track cassette fading out and switching tracks in the middle of the guitar solo. Nobody but you mentioned data cost/speed issue, that was stupid even in 14k days. It is poor form and annoying to post 50 lines of text and say "agreed" at the end. It is NOT a cost or thru-put issue. You brought up the speed/cost issue, then argued against it. Classic Strawman. I still do it because it gives you an opportunity to bitch about something, which you obviously love doing. Glad I can help. I just think that all of you guys that cannot snip irrelevant text are just assholes - or something like that, -- -Mike- --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
#453
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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On 1/16/17 11:41 PM, Mike Marlow wrote:
-MIKE- wrote: On 1/16/17 10:15 AM, Jack wrote: On 1/14/2017 2:58 PM, -MIKE- wrote: On 1/14/17 8:48 AM, Jack wrote: On 1/13/2017 2:48 PM, Mike Marlow wrote: Is it really that hard for posters here to delete the irrelevant text that they are responding to? It's a very common problem from many of the regulars here and that has long been an annoying thing in usenet. Really guys - you can't snip everything except the relevant point you are responding to? Sheese... One of my main peeves, although I gave up complaining about it during Fidonet days. When you see me not snip a long post, you can be sure it's to get back at the poster(s) that didn't snip to begin with. It's FAR more annoying than punctuation issues. If they are too freaking lazy/dumb to snip, I'm happy to add to the mix. Complaining about it never works, so might as well try to annoy them back. I'm not so irritated by it anymore for a couple reasons. 1. Snipping long posts was necessary when people were paying for data downloaded and using 14k modems that took quite a while to download even text. It was a minor issue with 9600k modems, ended with 14K, and non existent with 56K. The bitch is not about paying for the data, it is annoying to page though meaningless gibberish to see a reply related to one sentence in a message. It was bad form in Fidonet days, and bad form today, for the same reason. Neither of those things are a concern anymore, since newsgroups are never going to put anyone over a data limit and nobody's of dial-up anymore. (If you are, that's your problem!) :-) Like I said, that has not been an issue since 14k modems, and is not the issue today. 2. The fact that we're even debating this in a newsgroup is like complaining about the 8-track cassette fading out and switching tracks in the middle of the guitar solo. Nobody but you mentioned data cost/speed issue, that was stupid even in 14k days. It is poor form and annoying to post 50 lines of text and say "agreed" at the end. It is NOT a cost or thru-put issue. You brought up the speed/cost issue, then argued against it. Classic Strawman. I still do it because it gives you an opportunity to bitch about something, which you obviously love doing. Glad I can help. I just think that all of you guys that cannot snip irrelevant text are just assholes - or something like that, That's probably the best assessment of the situation, by far. :-D -- -MIKE- "Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life" --Elvin Jones (1927-2004) -- http://mikedrums.com ---remove "DOT" ^^^^ to reply |
#454
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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On 1/15/2017 11:00 PM, Leon wrote:
On 1/15/2017 9:35 PM, wrote: On Sun, 15 Jan 2017 12:37:05 -0600, Leon lcb11211@swbelldotnet wrote: On 1/15/2017 11:17 AM, J. Clarke wrote: In article 5bb738e7-7ee8-4c16-bd7e-e2a188f30248 @googlegroups.com, says... On Thursday, January 12, 2017 at 9:37:06 AM UTC-6, Jack wrote: It's not hindsight, it is now. Sears could have easily shifted to online sales at any time, but my guess is management had their collective heads where the sun don't shine. Amazon started from scratch, Sears had a long history of catalog sales. They blew it big time by ignoring the CURRENT trends. How on earth could a retail store with a history of catalog sales IGNORE Amazon? Brain dead is what I think. -- Jack You seem to believe everything is so easy. Back in August Wal-Mart paid $3 BILLION for Jet.com online sales company. After spending years trying to increase online sales at Wal-Mart. Did all the fools at Wal-Mart have their head up their behinds? Why couldn't they just make online sales magically? Why? Wal-Mart is the largest retailer in the world. How could they not know how to sell online? As for comparing catalog sales to online sales. Maybe they are similar, maybe not. Catalog sales for Sears started dying out in the 50s, 60s. They had physical stores so no need for catalog sales. And the US became far more urban, not rural, in the second half of the century. Today everyone almost lives in a city or near a city. So today almost everyone is close to a physical Sears store. Why would they use a catalog? Online sales you have 50 choices and prices. Catalog you have 5. Are they the same? I have a tool catalog from Acme Tools on the shelf. I doubt I would order anything from it. I'd go to the store in town or use the internet. Is a catalog the same as online ordering, even in philosophy? You really are looking at this from the wrong perspective. A "catalog" is not a paper book, it is a list of items offered for sale. When you order from Amazon you are ordering from a catalog. May not seem that way but when you make something available for sale on Amazon you have to provide the information about what you are selling and how much you want to charge for it and so on and it goes into Amazon's database where it becomes visible to potential buyers. That database is no different in concept from the Sears Big Book--the only difference is that it's electronic and dynamic rather than paper and static. One importance difference is that some paper catalogs have codes that will give you the same price as what is stated in the catalog. Expiration dates,a change of season, usually put an end to that pricing, ie. Spring Catalog or Winter catalog. Many web sites ask for that code to give you the catalog price which may or may not be the price stated on line.. IIRC LeeValley does this. If you go to the internet the pricing can, as you stated, change "when ever". E-mails often have a discount code to lower the on-line pricing. It goes a lot further than this. The price can change based on your zip code, your purchasing history, your browsing histroy, or even what browser you're using. They're watching. Yes but if you have a catalog reference code to lock in the catalog price it does not matter where you are, you get that price. What if the "locked in price" is from 1999 Email catalog? (Posted at end of 100 lines of extraneous text to conform to ignorance level of previous poster[s]) -- Jack Add Life to your Days not Days to your Life. http://jbstein.com |
#455
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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On 1/16/2017 9:32 AM, Scott Lurndal wrote:
Jack writes: Since neither of you seem to have any experience with online retailing, perhaps you're both tilting at windmills. How would you know how much experience we have with on line retailing? Besides, we certainly have plenty of experience with on-line retailing from the customers point of view, and that's about all that counts. If the customer doesn't like what you're doing, you're doing it wrong. The customer doesn't necessarily know _how_ to run an on-line retailing business, so I stand by the statement that you don't seem to have any experience with online retailing. Inventory, Shipping, Taxes, Dispute resolution, Returns, Sales Taxes, Legal, Finance et cetera et alia. Customer doesn't care about _how_ to run an on-line retailing business. On-line and off line retailer must be able to make customers happy, or they are done. As far as "Inventory, Shipping, Taxes, Dispute resolution, Returns, Sales Taxes, Legal, Finance et cetera et alia." is concerned, it is not much different than off-line retailing. You need to know how to present it to the customer on-line, and I'm more familiar with that than you think. -- Jack Add Life to your Days not Days to your Life. http://jbstein.com |
#456
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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On 1/17/2017 9:27 AM, Jack wrote:
Snip It goes a lot further than this. The price can change based on your zip code, your purchasing history, your browsing histroy, or even what browser you're using. They're watching. Yes but if you have a catalog reference code to lock in the catalog price it does not matter where you are, you get that price. What if the "locked in price" is from 1999 Email catalog? (Posted at end of 100 lines of extraneous text to conform to ignorance level of previous poster[s]) In another post I indicated that the catalog must be one of the current ones, Winter 2016 or Spring 2017. Prices often change during a season and or a period that the catalog is still valid. The changed pricing shows up "on-line" as different than the catalog but if you enter the key catalog number at check out it changes the price back to the catalog price. |
#457
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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On 1/16/2017 9:43 AM, Scott Lurndal wrote:
Jack writes: On 1/13/2017 3:05 PM, wrote: There is a REASON there is a difference between wholesale (warehouse) and retail (store) pricing - and it has nothing to do with the retailer going after your gonads. The reason a retailer is going after my gonads is not important to me. If an item cost 3-10 times as much at a retail store, I'm not likely going to buy it, nor will their price gouging ways send a chill up my leg. I hate buying machine screws at Borgs, they come in sealed package of 3 for .99. I need 4, and the price is stupid. Most of their customers only need two screws, and are not interested in storing 98 others ad infinitum. Can't make everyone happy (although my local Orchard Supply Hardware will sell the two/four packs and also will sell an entire box of 25/50/100). I reckon your local orchard supply hardware knows Jack about retail sales. Perhaps your should advise them to drop the boxes as "It costs the retailer money to stock small items (e.g. those bags of three screws) for packaging, shipping, stocking, tracking." Myself, I'd like it if HD carried both, just like your local hardware does. Home Depot, Lowes aren't generally selling to the trade. Well they sell a lot to the trades, but, one does not need to be in the "trade" to get ****ed about paying 10x more for a product than it's worth. They could offer boxes or 3 packs, and let the customer decide what they need. They have options just like your Orchard has. Hardware stores used to sell them by the pound and they were cheap. Lowes sells threaded inserts individually for 10x's more than I can buy them at Granger. Why Sears, Lowes, Home Depot won't give a decent price on small items is not important to me. Again, your lack of retailing experience shows. It costs the retailer money to stock small items (e.g. those bags of three screws) for packaging, shipping, stocking, tracking. Again, your lack of customer experience shows. Customers generally don't like price gouging. I guess enough people don't mind getting screwed, or even know they are getting screwed. Life must really suck for you. One doesn't need to stick his head in the sand to be happy, well, I don't anyway. Thanks for caring though... -- Jack Add Life to your Days not Days to your Life. http://jbstein.com |
#458
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On 1/16/2017 10:56 AM, Leon wrote:
On 1/16/2017 9:51 AM, Jack wrote: On 1/14/2017 11:26 AM, Leon wrote: On 1/14/2017 8:36 AM, Jack wrote: On 1/13/2017 12:37 PM, Leon wrote: Prime is not always the least expensive way to order an item but often it is, as seen with the shelf hanger clips/brackets. And yet it was still 3 times cheaper than buying the same item at Sears. Apples, Oranges. To be fair you need to figure 50 cents per mile going to and coming from Sears. That is your personal shipping cost. Nope, I was already going past Sears to HD to get screwed buying 6 tiny machine screws I needed NOW, so the shelf brackets were 79 cents and free shipping at Sears, 5 cents and 20 cents shipping at Amazon. And it's not apples and oranges, it is just apples, exact same item, massive price variance. -- Jack Add Life to your Days not Days to your Life. http://jbstein.com |
#459
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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On 1/16/2017 12:47 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
On 1/16/17 10:15 AM, Jack wrote: On 1/14/2017 2:58 PM, -MIKE- wrote: On 1/14/17 8:48 AM, Jack wrote: On 1/13/2017 2:48 PM, Mike Marlow wrote: Is it really that hard for posters here to delete the irrelevant text that they are responding to? It's a very common problem from many of the regulars here and that has long been an annoying thing in usenet. Really guys - you can't snip everything except the relevant point you are responding to? Sheese... One of my main peeves, although I gave up complaining about it during Fidonet days. When you see me not snip a long post, you can be sure it's to get back at the poster(s) that didn't snip to begin with. It's FAR more annoying than punctuation issues. If they are too freaking lazy/dumb to snip, I'm happy to add to the mix. Complaining about it never works, so might as well try to annoy them back. I'm not so irritated by it anymore for a couple reasons. 1. Snipping long posts was necessary when people were paying for data downloaded and using 14k modems that took quite a while to download even text. It was a minor issue with 9600k modems, ended with 14K, and non existent with 56K. The bitch is not about paying for the data, it is annoying to page though meaningless gibberish to see a reply related to one sentence in a message. It was bad form in Fidonet days, and bad form today, for the same reason. Neither of those things are a concern anymore, since newsgroups are never going to put anyone over a data limit and nobody's of dial-up anymore. (If you are, that's your problem!) :-) Like I said, that has not been an issue since 14k modems, and is not the issue today. 2. The fact that we're even debating this in a newsgroup is like complaining about the 8-track cassette fading out and switching tracks in the middle of the guitar solo. Nobody but you mentioned data cost/speed issue, that was stupid even in 14k days. It is poor form and annoying to post 50 lines of text and say "agreed" at the end. It is NOT a cost or thru-put issue. You brought up the speed/cost issue, then argued against it. Classic Strawman. I still do it because it gives you an opportunity to bitch about something, which you obviously love doing. Glad I can help. Thanks, but it was Mike Marlow that bitched about it, I pointed out bitching about it to the lame doesn't work. You of course brought up your own issue, and then argued against your own issue (Classic Strawman). I was willing to play, so Right back at ya. -- Jack Hope I got all my Caps and Punctuation right!!! http://jbstein.com |
#460
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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Jack writes:
On 1/16/2017 9:32 AM, Scott Lurndal wrote: Jack writes: Since neither of you seem to have any experience with online retailing, perhaps you're both tilting at windmills. How would you know how much experience we have with on line retailing? Besides, we certainly have plenty of experience with on-line retailing from the customers point of view, and that's about all that counts. If the customer doesn't like what you're doing, you're doing it wrong. The customer doesn't necessarily know _how_ to run an on-line retailing business, so I stand by the statement that you don't seem to have any experience with online retailing. Inventory, Shipping, Taxes, Dispute resolution, Returns, Sales Taxes, Legal, Finance et cetera et alia. Customer doesn't care about _how_ to run an on-line retailing business. On-line and off line retailer must be able to make customers happy, or they are done. They have to make enough customers happy to keep in business. They don't have to make _you_ happy. |
#461
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On 1/16/2017 1:00 PM, wrote:
On Mon, 16 Jan 2017 11:37:55 -0500, Jack wrote: Sears makes me unhappy charging 79 cents for a nickle item (shelf bracket) and making me look for a half hour for a salesman. Amazon makes me unhappy charging $26 for a $14 product (Sony earphones). I just noticed Amazon is charging $56 for an $18 chair slide. Do it enough and you will be toast, that's a basic law of economics in a competitive market. And how do YOU determine it is a nocle item, or a $14 product?, or an $18 chair slide? Just because someone had them on either clearance or as a loss leader does NOT make them only worth that amount. Well, if Amazon says it is for sale for a nickle, plus 20 cents shipping, who am I to argue? If Amazon increased the price in a couple of years from $12 to $28 dollars and Walmart sells the same item for $14 today, then I get a feel for what something is worth. Otherwise, I can look at an item, like a 5 cent shelf bracket and say, yeah, looks like about a 5 - 10 cent item, and should be sold for under 79 cents allowing for large profits and ridiculous shipping and handling fees. You may not mind paying $28 for something you can readily buy elsewhere for $14 but I don't enjoy getting gouged, and exercise due diligence. If the replacement cost to the retailer is more than a nickel he can't sell them for a nickel. Depending on the volume he buys at a time, his price may vary from $0.05 to $0.17 each - then the shipping costs getr devided by yhe number bought, and added to that cost - so if shipping is $10.00 for a minimum order of 100, and the same for up to 500, his shipping cost per unit ranges from 2 cents to 10 cents each for shipping. If he buys 1000 at a time, it's only 1 cent each -- The more he buys, the more his warehousing costs and carrying costs (including opportunity costs) are per unit, which can easily offset the ammortized shipping savings. By the time that nickel part is sold, if he has an average turnover cycle of 90 days, his total cost will be somewhere between $0.08 and $0.20 cents per unit - and that's not counting retail costs (keeping the lights on, paying the cashier, cleaning staff, heat and AC, etc - nor is it accounting for the "five finger discount" shrinkage due to the "customer" who figures it's fair play becaude he's being "ripped off" for $0.20 for a nickel item. In many cases, with parts such as those shelf brackets, the "five finger discount" can exceed 30%.. You really need to have some experience on the reseller side, or an education in basic business accounting, to understand that YOUR understanding is WAY off. So how do the online retailers sell for the price they sell for?? I'll give you an example. Say ou can buy a brake rotor for your 1004 Taurus, for anywhere from $9 to $30 on a given day from Rock Auto, pluis $7 shipping. That same part is $39 shop price at Napa, with a $54 MSRP, or as a mechanic your shop price from the Ford Dealer is $57 with a MSRP of, say, $85. Just pulling numbers out of a hat here, based on past experience. How does Rock Auto sell for such low prices??? They buy the dead stock off the shelves of bankrupt resellers, and overstock from large warehousing companies who are optimizing their shelf space and minimizing their "opportunity cost" by freeing up cash to buy higher profit and higher turnover parts. They buy the stock for pennies on the dollar. So just because Rock Auto can sell you a Centric brand rotor for $9 does NOT mean that ba Centric brand rotor is only worth $9. Nor does the fact they can sell you a motorcraft rotor for $27 mean the Motorcraft rotor is only worth $27, or that it is worth 3 times as much as a Centric branded rotor. The actual wholesale value of both may be close to $20, and the "fair retail" may be closer to $55. Your NAPA store may well be paying $35 each quantity 10, and $40 for a single order shipped to their store for a NAPA branded rotor that came off the Centric asswembly line. -- Jack Add Life to your Days not Days to your Life. http://jbstein.com |
#462
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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On 1/16/2017 1:02 PM, wrote:
On Mon, 16 Jan 2017 12:06:58 -0500, Jack wrote: On 1/14/2017 3:29 PM, wrote: On Sat, 14 Jan 2017 09:36:10 -0500, Jack wrote: On 1/13/2017 12:37 PM, Leon wrote: It just seemed that Jack was comparing different prices on Amazon for the same thing and apparently not noticing that a low price, that does not include shipping, was more expensive than the Prime item which included shipping. No, that's not what I was doing, and in fact bitched about item prices being higher when bought thru prime. If an item cost $5 plus $5 shipping and $9 with free shipping under prime, then, how much free shipping are you getting? Someone is lying, both can't be right. I'm absolutely certain Amazon used to do that, not sure if they still do, but they did, and I bet they still do. Granted again prices are all over the board on Amazon. While Prime is expensive up front each year, $99, that gets whittled away quickly if you need items quickly and actually pay extra for 2nd day delivery. Prime is good for some and so much for others. My kids have Prime, I sometimes buy through them if the item warrants it. Mostly I just add stuff to my wish list and when it gets high enough for free shipping, I buy it. Everything they sell doesn't qualify for free shipping, and everything doesn't qualify for prime, so due diligence is required. I've been screwed more than once when I paid stupid prices for shipping that I thought was included with the free stuff. Another nasty habit I noticed is sometimes an online search will find the item on Amazon at a low price. If you go off the page and do a search directly on Amazon for the exact same item, it comes up with a different price and you can't get back to the original price. They obviously have a number of pricing schemes to get into your pocket. Another reason Amazon loses trust from me. They are a shaky out fit and if you are price conscious (cheap, like me) due diligence is a must. You finally caught on. It's up to YOU - not Amazon, or anyone else, what you pay. Either you do your homework and find a price you can live with - and then live with it - or you keep looking and don't buy. I always knew this. About time you caught on that it is up the the retailer to make me happy and gain my trust if they want to continue doing business with me. If a retailer gets over on me one to many times, I will no longer go to him for my needs. I've lost a ton of trust in Amazon over the years, I still go there, but ALWAYS look around to other places before buying from them. "free shipping" is a PLOY. It is not crooked. There is no such thing as a "free lunch". Prime pricing is "shipping included" pricing. It is "convenience" pricing and "convenience" shopping.. It does not implement "combined shipping" and the economies that go with that. You say that, but, $28 for a set of Sony headphones plus shipping at Amazon vs $14 and free shipping from Walmart is not a ploy, it was a fact. Amazon added to their "BAD SIDE" ledger on that one, and there seem to be more and more as time goes on. If you followed the post here on Forever wood glides, the price difference was pretty silly, $56 vs $19 for 20 at the tool shop. Unless the tool shop charges $38 for shipping, Amazon is out to lunch again. The only "free shipping" that really does appear to be free is buying stuff from China or other far east countries on Ebay where you buy something for less than it would cost you to send an empty envelope. In those cases, the chinese government is subsidizing the foreign trade by ssubsidizing the shipping.. Pretty much nothing is manufactured in the US any more, so the above applies to most everything, right? I still can't figure out how I can buy something like an arduino micro, fully assembled, for less than the price of the processor chip - and have it shipped from China (for something like $3, believe it or not - try sending a letter to China for under $3 postage from the USA or Canada - - -) While Chinese government subsidies may be a factor, the big factor is labor and taxes. Trump wants to fix the tax thing by lowering business tax from 35% to 15% which is more like China. What's he going to do about wages? Nothing, can't be done, so it will have to be tariffs, which means my $14 Sony headphone will cost $100 which means minimum wage will need to go to $35/hr, which means... well, looks grim to me. At least it's a lot easier adding zero's to a computer screen than wheeling around paper in a wheelbarrow to buy something. Please see my last posting.\ And as far as Walmart pricing, you should really try being a supplier to Walmart sometime - you'll find out what being SCREWED really feals like!!! No one is forced to supply Walmart and I am not forced to buy from Walmart. Walmart MUST pay what the suppler demands and the supplier must charge what Walmart is willing to pay. Otherwise, no deal is made. I buy mostly at Sams club, it's generally cheaper than Walmart. The cheapest I could find my Sony earphones was thru Walmart on line, so, that's where I bought them. I was a happy camper, and bought 2 of them. I don't know if Walmart, their supplier, or the manufacturer was happy, I know I was OK with it. I'll let you lose sleep over the rest of it. (Posted at end of a zillion lines of extraneous un-snipped text to conform to ignorance level of previous poster[s]) -- Jack No matter how much you push the envelope, it'll still be stationery. http://jbstein.com |
#463
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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On 1/17/2017 12:41 AM, Mike Marlow wrote:
I just think that all of you guys that cannot snip irrelevant text are just assholes - or something like that, i think you would be right (irrelevant text snipped but caps and punctuation messed up to give mike the drummer who loves to bitch something to bitch about ) -- Jack Add Life to your Days not Days to your Life. http://jbstein.com |
#464
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On 1/17/2017 1:45 AM, -MIKE- wrote:
On 1/16/17 11:41 PM, Mike Marlow wrote: -MIKE- wrote: On 1/16/17 10:15 AM, Jack wrote: On 1/14/2017 2:58 PM, -MIKE- wrote: On 1/14/17 8:48 AM, Jack wrote: On 1/13/2017 2:48 PM, Mike Marlow wrote: Is it really that hard for posters here to delete the irrelevant text that they are responding to? It's a very common problem from many of the regulars here and that has long been an annoying thing in usenet. Really guys - you can't snip everything except the relevant point you are responding to? Sheese... One of my main peeves, although I gave up complaining about it during Fidonet days. When you see me not snip a long post, you can be sure it's to get back at the poster(s) that didn't snip to begin with. It's FAR more annoying than punctuation issues. If they are too freaking lazy/dumb to snip, I'm happy to add to the mix. Complaining about it never works, so might as well try to annoy them back. I'm not so irritated by it anymore for a couple reasons. 1. Snipping long posts was necessary when people were paying for data downloaded and using 14k modems that took quite a while to download even text. It was a minor issue with 9600k modems, ended with 14K, and non existent with 56K. The bitch is not about paying for the data, it is annoying to page though meaningless gibberish to see a reply related to one sentence in a message. It was bad form in Fidonet days, and bad form today, for the same reason. Neither of those things are a concern anymore, since newsgroups are never going to put anyone over a data limit and nobody's of dial-up anymore. (If you are, that's your problem!) :-) Like I said, that has not been an issue since 14k modems, and is not the issue today. 2. The fact that we're even debating this in a newsgroup is like complaining about the 8-track cassette fading out and switching tracks in the middle of the guitar solo. Nobody but you mentioned data cost/speed issue, that was stupid even in 14k days. It is poor form and annoying to post 50 lines of text and say "agreed" at the end. It is NOT a cost or thru-put issue. You brought up the speed/cost issue, then argued against it. Classic Strawman. I still do it because it gives you an opportunity to bitch about something, which you obviously love doing. Glad I can help. I just think that all of you guys that cannot snip irrelevant text are just assholes - or something like that, That's probably the best assessment of the situation, by far. :-D true enough but how easy was the call really -- Jack Add Life to your Days not Days to your Life. http://jbstein.com |
#465
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On 1/17/2017 10:13 AM, Jack wrote:
On 1/16/2017 10:56 AM, Leon wrote: On 1/16/2017 9:51 AM, Jack wrote: On 1/14/2017 11:26 AM, Leon wrote: On 1/14/2017 8:36 AM, Jack wrote: On 1/13/2017 12:37 PM, Leon wrote: Prime is not always the least expensive way to order an item but often it is, as seen with the shelf hanger clips/brackets. And yet it was still 3 times cheaper than buying the same item at Sears. Apples, Oranges. To be fair you need to figure 50 cents per mile going to and coming from Sears. That is your personal shipping cost. Nope, I was already going past Sears to HD to get screwed buying 6 tiny machine screws I needed NOW, so the shelf brackets were 79 cents and free shipping at Sears, 5 cents and 20 cents shipping at Amazon. And it's not apples and oranges, it is just apples, exact same item, massive price variance. We can all make up a story to contradict the expected results. |
#466
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#467
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On Tue, 17 Jan 2017 10:40:16 -0500, Jack wrote:
On 1/16/2017 9:32 AM, Scott Lurndal wrote: Jack writes: Since neither of you seem to have any experience with online retailing, perhaps you're both tilting at windmills. How would you know how much experience we have with on line retailing? Besides, we certainly have plenty of experience with on-line retailing from the customers point of view, and that's about all that counts. If the customer doesn't like what you're doing, you're doing it wrong. The customer doesn't necessarily know _how_ to run an on-line retailing business, so I stand by the statement that you don't seem to have any experience with online retailing. Inventory, Shipping, Taxes, Dispute resolution, Returns, Sales Taxes, Legal, Finance et cetera et alia. Customer doesn't care about _how_ to run an on-line retailing business. On-line and off line retailer must be able to make customers happy, or they are done. Yeah, since you've been ranting, Amazon stock has been really tanking. As far as "Inventory, Shipping, Taxes, Dispute resolution, Returns, Sales Taxes, Legal, Finance et cetera et alia." is concerned, it is not much different than off-line retailing. You need to know how to present it to the customer on-line, and I'm more familiar with that than you think. |
#468
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On Tue, 17 Jan 2017 12:14:59 -0500, Jack wrote:
No one is forced to supply Walmart and I am not forced to buy from Walmart. Walmart MUST pay what the suppler demands and the supplier must charge what Walmart is willing to pay. Otherwise, no deal is made. I buy mostly at Sams club, it's generally cheaper than Walmart. The cheapest I could find my Sony earphones was thru Walmart on line, so, that's where I bought them. I was a happy camper, and bought 2 of them. I don't know if Walmart, their supplier, or the manufacturer was happy, I know I was OK with it. I'll let you lose sleep over the rest of it. (Posted at end of a zillion lines of extraneous un-snipped text to conform to ignorance level of previous poster[s]) Not true. A supplier works hard to get on WalMart's supplier list because it means VOLUME - so after they get on, Walmart whores there product out at cost or below as a loss leader (think Vladic Pickles) and they only want the large size - so the supplier switches their production over to the big bottles and produces at full capacity to supply WalMart - and is unable to keep up with some of their smaller accounts who traditionally sold the smaller bottles. After a year or two, Walmart decides they need a lower price and tells the supplier, drop the price to $x or no deal. By this point, the supplier needs walmart more than walmart needs the supplier, because they have lost their other sales - partly through lack of capacity, but moreso from people seeing the brand as a "discouint " brand and being unwilling to buy from the other dealers at the price they need to get to stay alive - so the supplier drops the price - and eventually almost goes bankrupt. see: https://www.fastcompany.com/47593/wa...-you-dont-know They almost took down a major shoe company as well - strikes me it was RedWing, but I'm not sure. |
#469
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On 1/17/17 11:30 AM, Jack wrote:
On 1/17/2017 12:41 AM, Mike Marlow wrote: I just think that all of you guys that cannot snip irrelevant text are just assholes - or something like that, i think you would be right (irrelevant text snipped but caps and punctuation messed up to give mike the drummer who loves to bitch something to bitch about ) :-D Nice. -- -MIKE- "Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life" --Elvin Jones (1927-2004) -- http://mikedrums.com ---remove "DOT" ^^^^ to reply |
#470
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On 1/5/2017 12:40 PM, Leon wrote:
It appears that StanelyBD will have to honor the warranty Craftsman products sold by Sears unless Sears holdings goes belly up. If Sears Holdings goes under, SB&D is not contractually obligated to support warranty claims for Craftsman tools that were sold at Sears. Based on comments made during the conference call, it seems possible SB&D might choose to honor those claims to protect the reputation of the brand and because the obligation is expected to be €śonly€ť $5M per year€”which to a company the size of SB&D is probably not much. More details. http://www.toolsofthetrade.net/power...c05c6eecb92632 |
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