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Local Hobby Shop Dilemma Locked

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Local Hobby Shop Dilemma
Posted by abbieleibowitz on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 4:38 AM

OK, here’s my question. We all know the problem local hobby shops face competing with the internet sellers. In my area, my favorite LHS recently closed and there are only 2 left within 20 miles of my home. But I was looking at the nearest shop’s website and an engine I am interested in is $100 more ($369 vs. $275) than it is available online from an out of town brick and mortar shop that also has a large web presence. In general, my LHS is always about 10% to 15% off MSP, while the other is closer to 25% to 35% off. I want to support my local shop, but that’s a big difference. I don’t mind as much when I want things like building kits, cars or track, but for larger purchases, it’s an issue. What would you do?

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Posted by mobilman44 on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 4:45 AM

Like many of the others, I've spent a lot of money on MR stuff over the years, but especially so in the last 10.  When it came to "big dollar" items, and there was a good savings from an online source, that is where I would shop.  Otherwise, everything else was bought from the two local hobby shops (Larrys & Spring Crossing).  Of course both of those are not history......... 

ENJOY  !

 

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Posted by richhotrain on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 5:18 AM

This is a tough call.

Back in 2007, I still had three LHS within a 20 minute drive of my house. I patronized all three of them, but one in particular was my favorite. I had a pretty good relationship with the owner and his right hand man. The two of them really guided me from the time when I first started into the HO scale side of the hobby back in January 2004.

By the time that LHS closed in 2007, I was buying everything from them, ignoring the Internet store discounts. By the end of 2007, all three LHS had closed. At that point, I had no choice but to shop on the Internet.

If I started into the hobby today and if that LHS were still open, I suppose that I would opt for the greater discounts from Internet stores. My LHS always gave me a 20 percent discount, but the Internet store discounts are typically higher.

My advice to you would be to reconcile the greater Internet discounts with your relationship with your LHS. In my case, I was regularly receiving invaluable advice from the LHS guys, so the trade off was obvious. If the only thing that your LHS provides is discounts on purchases, then if I were you, I would choose the greater Internet discounts. But if the LHS provides you with good advice, then you probably don't want to give that up.

Rich

 

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Posted by SeeYou190 on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 5:49 AM

I always shop my "local" hobby shop first.

.

I am in a different situation though. My preferred "local" shop is 70 miles away in Sarasota, Gulf Coast Model Railroading. There is a newer shop only about 15 miles away from my house, but I still prefer to shop with Kelly and Dave further away.

.

I never choose mail order discounts, but I do shop mail order when it is an item I cannot get in a local store.

.

-Kevin

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Posted by BRAKIE on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 6:01 AM

abbieleibowitz
I want to support my local shop, but that’s a big difference. I don’t mind as much when I want things like building kits, cars or track, but for larger purchases, it’s an issue. What would you do?

May I be blunt?  I would pocket that $100.00 and order the engine from the on line store. I owe no fealty to  a LHS.

OTOH if the savings isn't sufficient after shipping then the hobby shop will get my business.

Larry

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Posted by marksrailroad on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 6:21 AM

mobilman44

Like many of the others, I've spent a lot of money on MR stuff over the years, but especially so in the last 10.  When it came to "big dollar" items, and there was a good savings from an online source, that is where I would shop.  Otherwise, everything else was bought from the two local hobby shops (Larrys & Spring Crossing).  Of course both of those are now history......... 

 

I used to shop at these shops but once I realized that I could get things cheaper on-line I went with that instead...

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Posted by mbinsewi on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 8:28 AM

I think you should read through Rich's (Richhotrain) reply, and go by your relationship with the LHS your talking about.  His he there for you if something goes wrong with the loco? and the extra shipping from the internet store?

If you can't justify the cost difference in terms of value and support from the LHS, than by it on line, and take your chances.

Mike.

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Posted by tstage on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 8:34 AM

I try and support my LHS as much as possible.  I generally purchase general supplies (track, roadbed, adhesive, paint, etc.) and rolling stock (kits) from them because I can physically hold it or look inside the box for BLT dates and condition.  Bigger ticket items like locomotives though I usually purchase online at discount.  Since I spend more of my hobby budget (and support my LHS) on supplies over a longer period of time, I don't feel pangs of guilt for purchasing the occasional bigger item to save some money.

If an item I'm interested in - like a locomotive - is only a little more expensive (<$50) but readily available at my LHS, I consider the S&H costs of purchasing online and will get it from my LHS to help them out.  They are struggling to stay afloat like many other brick 'n mortar businesses so I'm glad to support them as often as I can.  I've also developed a relationship with the owners so that carries some weight, as well.  There's also the cost of gas for me as my LHS is 1/2 hour away.

I also feel a loyalty towards smaller businesses (e.g. hardware stores) because of the personal help and great service I receive from them vs. the larger home improvement stores (e.g. Lowe's & Home Depot).  However, the larger stores allow me to see a number of larger ticket items up close and personal so that I can make better informed choices.  I have also received good-quality service having work done on my house through places like Lowe's.

Tom

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Posted by Howard Zane on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 9:25 AM

Old but still interesting topic. Being due to my religious and ethnic background, I'd buy a dead water buffalo complete with maggots if the price was right. And I have found many such "dead water buffalos" on line, but the real picture is the future of the hobby. I have found that on-line purchasing, besides price is mainly for folks shopping for items they need and/or know about with the emphasis being on the latter.

Two major problems with this....#1, when the last LHS shuts down, do folks really think that staples such as paint, glue, strip wood, advice, service, etc. will be found on line. and #2, possible newbies? Other than atending train shows, clubs, and friends with trains, where will they come from? I come from a time as many of you do when a person could walk into a train shop, and become hooked...big time. Photos and listings on line???? Possibly I'm ignorant to today's trends as I am a confessed dinosaur and still live in the past.....but it works for me.

Getting back to the topic..............Personally, I shop for service and I am willing to pay more for this. Henceforth I will support and make my purchases from an LHS assuming it is an excellent shop. In my area we are all lucky to have several wonderful train stores within a small radius.

HZ

HZ

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Posted by IRONROOSTER on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 9:32 AM

The two hobby shops closest to me (over 25 miles away) have very small model railroad sections.  And of course don't carry S scale.

So online shoping and train shows are necessary for me.  Oddly enough, a number of things I buy online are list price (the big discounters only have American Flyer and compatibles) as there isn't as much discounting in S as in HO, N, and 3 rail O gauge.

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Posted by BroadwayLion on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 10:00 AM

Nearest LHS of LION is 200 miles away in a direction that we seldom travel and has rather limited stuff anyway. As an ex-New Yorker, I  am happy to call TRQAINWORLD my Local Hobby Shop. I did not stop there the last time I was in New York, but there was nothing that I kneaded to buy.

SEW: LION has no problem ordering on lion.

 

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Posted by rrinker on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 10:26 AM

BroadwayLion

 

SEW: LION has no problem ordering on lion.

 

 And when your order comes on a Lion, there's little chance anyone will mess with it while in transit.

 

 Nearest LHS is about an hour away from me. A great place if you want Blue Box kits, because they have them - same ones that have been in inventory for the past 15 years. Top row of boxes is all dusty. All marked at full MSRP. They are big enough with all the other hobbies they support, they could easily have an online store in addition to the physical store, but the owner is just way too stingy to spend money on anything - they needed more space so they just squeezed the aisle down to add more shelves, and the lighting no longer lines up with the aisles - some rows are extremely dark as a result. And he's not old or out of touch, I've been going there since he first opened up, he's maybe a few years older than I am (I used to live within an easy bike ride of the place - before I was old enough to drive).

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Posted by danno54 on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 10:40 AM
I am fortunate to have a great LHS that is happy to order anything i need from the big suppliers. He can usually match or better my online price. I have preordered many new Walthers stuff and model cars this way. I can then inspect before i pay.
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Posted by dknelson on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 11:11 AM

This is indeed an old topic and I can recall MR editor Linn Westcott mused more than once in the mid 1960s that a hobby shop could and would not survive selling bits of stripwood, grass mats and cement -- the low profit leftovers -- while the toy stores sold all the train sets dirt cheap at Christmas and the mail order shops could undercut them all year long on all the basic bigger ticket items from track and power supplies to cars, locomotives, and structures.  After all AHC America's Hobby Center had been running ads with tantalizing prices in MR since at least the 1950s, and they weren't the only ones.  And some of the price differentials mail order vs LHS were just as big then as they are now, maybe bigger on a % basis, since very few hobby shops discounted back then, and when they did it sometimes was for NMRA members only.

My nearest LHS is Walthers itself - really - and I go there pretty often, but not out of any sense of loyalty or duty.  If I can get it cheaper at a swap meet or train show I'll do so.  But I do like the "I want it now, I can have it now" sense of leaving with the item I want, same day.  Maybe Amazon and its drone deliveries will kill even that slight advantage.

I would say that I do make a deliberate effort, and perhaps pay a little more by doing so, to patronize my nearest local hardware store.  First because I do not enjoy the "big box" home goods type stores that are nearby, and second because I really benefit from their expertise and advice and services and do not want to lose them.  So far they are hanging on but I do admit that when I need something like a dehumidifier I do sometimes check out what Menards or Home Depot is selling them for.  

Loyalty has its limits.  Or, as Papa Boule says in the wonderful Burt Lancaster film The Train: "four francs is four francs."

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Posted by BRAKIE on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 11:15 AM

Howard Zane
Possibly I'm ignorant to today's trends as I am a confessed dinosaur and still live in the past.....but it works for me.

Howard,For us old folk that shopped in hobby shops we know the value but,my Grandson's generation of modelers are computer/ smart phone savvy and would rather order on line because of lower prices and convince.

Personally I grew wary of hearing either one of these excuses.I can't get it or my order  was short several pre-orders.

In one case all of his friends and top customers got theirs and I and several other didn't get ours and I spent a lot of money in his shop. I didn't shed any tears when he closed shop due to a divorce.

Larry

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Posted by Lonehawk on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 11:37 AM

There was an LHS in my area that I had been going to since I was a little kid.  They closed last year, so now there are only 2 LHS in my area.  One only handles R/C models and the occasional train set, the other's in a place where bars are frequent fixtures on windows, so most of the time I could go (after work), it's not the best idea.

I also shy away from that store for ethical reasons.  On their last day, the LHS had a 70% off event, and I got quite a few good items, but this other store sent a guy to hand out flyers to people waiting to attend the event, and leave additional papers on windshields.  I found that to be a bit of a "kicking them when they're down" move and it didn't endear their business to me.  I'll probably go at some point, but I do have some reservations about their business ethics now.  

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Posted by Lone Wolf and Santa Fe on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 12:45 PM

    If I see something I like while I’m at a store I buy it. I’m there, it’s there, no problem. I have the item in my hand right then and I can open it as soon as I go home. No waiting around for the mailman which might not have it for a week or two.
    My problem is that my local store doesn’t have much selection and they have most of it behind the counter where it is awkward to browse through it. So that kind of eliminates impulse buys. They charge MSRP also plus a rather high sales tax which internet stores in other states don’t charge. On top of that they are only open four days a week and close early. It seems like every time I want to go there they are already closed. You have to go there at lunch, you can't wait until after you get off of work. Most of their business is RC, airplace or car models or arts and crafts.
    The local stores which had large selections and discounted everything closed a long time ago. They were a half hour or longer drive away but when they were open I never bought anything mail order. I always bought from them.
    If a retailers is smart he should be able to offer discounts because the faster you move the inventory the more you can sell and you make your profit off of the cash flow. If you sell lots of items a smaller markup works fine.
    Maybe one day Michaels or Hobby Lobby will have more selection instead of just a partial aisle with just some average items.

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Posted by selector on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 1:18 PM

I treat hobby shops philosophically the same way I treat convenience stores.  Yes, they're there, they're open, they have stock, and they're friendly.....

.....but.....you're gonna pay for all that. I'm on a military pension and not quite flush for cash as a home owner who has repair costs and taxes to contend with.  

What is my time worth if I drive?  What about carbon footprint?  It costs each of us about $2 just to turn our engines over on startup.  Most of us never realize this expense, but starting your engine has a cost to you...and to the engine.  It adds up.

I find items on sale all the time on line, but I have to pay GST often when the items cross the border into Canada.  That GST is inflated because of the rate exchange between the two currencies.  Many don't figure THAT into the costs of purchasing on line.  It adds up.

I'm afraid that, when I pass by the only hobby shop within driving distance (trips up to Campbell River to see my daughter and son-in-law), I rarely drop in.  I did twice this past year for maybe $70 worth of stripwood, paints, some flocking...oh, and I purchased my only loco last year from them...a Christmas gift from SWMBO.  It was an Atlas Classic RS-3 with LokSound.

Would I be disappointed if the hobby shop closed?  Yup, surely.  It has been on the market ever since I first set foot in it.  No apparent interest, or not the right kind.

I get 95% of my hobby 'stuff' on line.  No muss, no fuss, decent prices comparatively, and in 13 years I have only ever had one decoder fail to turn up.  I got a replacement from the seller at their cost.

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Posted by hon30critter on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 1:27 PM

I usually buy on line but from brick and mortar hobby stores! I have two favourites: Action Hobbies in Kingsville, Ontario and Hobby Wholesale in Edmonton, Alberta. They both have great websites and great service. The one in Ontario has great prices and the one in Edmonton has a great selection, usually in stock. The closest hobby shop is  Credit Valley in Mississauga. Their pricing is too high for me and their shipping costs are twice what the other two stores charge.

I used to spend a lot of money on eBay, but, now that I have pretty much all the locomotives and freight cars I want, my money goes to the hobby shops.

IMHO the only way a hobby shop can stay in business these days is to get onto the web bigtime with a professional website.

Dave

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Posted by MisterBeasley on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 6:07 PM

abbieleibowitz
What would you do?

I'd talk with the owner and ask what kind of price he can give you.  Don't insist that he beat the other price, but if he can come down a bit you'll both be happy.

My LHS closed about two years ago.  It was a popular shop in a strip mall.  The strip mall changed ownership and increased his rent beyond what he could pay.  So, he retired (he was thinking of it anyway) and closed the shop.  That store is vacant to this day, so by being greedy the strip mall owner ended up with nothing.

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Posted by selector on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 6:37 PM

Mr. B, I couldn't agree more with your practical approach.  If the buyer fixes a compromise price in his mind, and asks the seller if he can do it...cash...and the seller agrees, both should come away pleased.

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Posted by BigDaddy on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 6:41 PM

Howard Zane
Being due to my religious and ethnic background, I'd buy a dead water buffalo complete with maggots if the price was right.

Howard, red wine coming out my nose burns, man. 

When I was in Zimbabwee, they made Biltong, strips of buffalo drying in the sun on barbed wire.  No maggots,...yet, but more flies than you see on the average dog doo in the summer time.  I did not eat biltong.

.#1, when the last LHS shuts down, do folks really think that staples such as paint, glue, strip wood, advice, service, etc. will be found on line

As I look for little stuff on ebay, grab irons, a specific color of paint or whatever, shipping is $8 plus or minus.  That's far more than tax and no one seller sells the 4 things you want to buy.

Maybe the next generation of model railroader will come from youtube railfans.  Some are quite knowledgeable about the current engine types and have favorite horns and engine numbers.  A fair number of them talk about their model trains.

Like much of the new "social media"  some of these people live online.  If you have insomnia and tune it at 3 am, you see some of the same people who are there at 10 am, 3 pm and 8 pm all chatting with the usual suspects, who are also there day and night.  A bit sad in my opinion, but I guess it's better than sending hate tweets on twitter.

 

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Tuesday, January 23, 2018 7:28 PM

MisterBeasley

 

 
abbieleibowitz
What would you do?

 

I'd talk with the owner and ask what kind of price he can give you.  Don't insist that he beat the other price, but if he can come down a bit you'll both be happy.

My LHS closed about two years ago.  It was a popular shop in a strip mall.  The strip mall changed ownership and increased his rent beyond what he could pay.  So, he retired (he was thinking of it anyway) and closed the shop.  That store is vacant to this day, so by being greedy the strip mall owner ended up with nothing.

 

No, the shop owner will not be happy........

ANY business has a "cost of doing business per dollar sold", If I run a shop, and I buy an item for $100 "wholesale" and my overhead is 20% and I sell the item for $120, I wasted my time and my investment in that inventory - I will go out of business if I keep giving the profits away to compete with other sellers who only have to pay $50 for that item.

I have explained the math of this problem so many times.......not this time.

But just understand, in many cases, that low internet price is roughly the same price your small local hobby shop has to pay for that item.

THIS IS THE BASIC PROBLEM - YOUR LOCAL HOBBY SHOP CAN NOT BUY 3 OF THAT LOCO AS CHEAP AS ED'S INTERNET STORE CAN BUY 30 OF THEM. So how is he supposed to sell it to you for the same low price and make a profit? Your local shop only has customers for three of them.........and only has shelf space for three of them...... 

Better to put $100 wholesale worth of paint and Kadee couplers in the store and make 40% than to put a $100 wholesale cost loco in the store and sell it at 15% profit.

The problem them becomes dollar volume. But dolllar volume at too small a profit does not help.

Until and unless small or at least medium sized brick and mortar stores can by at "the best price" from the manufacturers, the LHS is pretty much doomed.

As someone who once ran the train department of a hobby shop, this "negotiation" idea bugs me. We are not talking cars or houses here.

Would you walk into Home Depot to buy a $600 DeWalt chop saw and try to negotiate the price? Good luck with that. But they can be bought cheaper elsewhere?

So what makes the $600 model locomotive different that you should feel it is right to negotiate the price?

Again, the solution to this problem is simple. The manufacturers need to step up (I considered several other phrases here) and level the playing field in terms of wholesale prices.

They could easily do it several ways.

Athearn has already done it some degree, check around, Athearn prices to do not vary as much as many other brands, and not nearly as much as they did several decades ago.

Why? Single point distribution.

I would love to see local hobby shops once again, BUT, the other problem is selection. To have a reasonable selection, stores today would need to be bigger. That means they need more customers, even if they could sell at lower prices. 

So that means they need to be in major population centers - and that means they are not so "local" for many people......catch 22.

OR, they need to also be online retailers.........then their storefront could be anywhere......but how many of those will the hobby support?

Now we are talking about making the hobby grow......the chicken and egg question?

Sheldon

 

 

    

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Posted by BRAKIE on Wednesday, January 24, 2018 5:24 AM

Sheldon,Those big B&M on line hobby shops can afford to buy by the pallet  lot because these shops learn the Internet is their friend not their enemy.

If a shop would give a 10% discount at checkout they would see more of my hobby cash but,not to budge on the amount spent at check out is not the way to get my cash and in the end every business needs a constant flow of cash from happy customers to stay in business.

Larry

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Posted by Water Level Route on Wednesday, January 24, 2018 5:57 AM

ATLANTIC CENTRAL
THIS IS THE BASIC PROBLEM - YOUR LOCAL HOBBY SHOP CAN NOT BUY 3 OF THAT LOCO AS CHEAP AS ED'S INTERNET STORE CAN BUY 30 OF THEM.

So much truth in that.  In a slightly different example, I worked for a grocery store in my town back in the day.  After leaving for college, 20 some years ago, our local Walmart expanded to include groceries.  Shortly after that happened I stopped in to see my old boss and see how the store was faring with the new competition in town.  He was concerned as most of Walmart's RETAIL prices were less than what my old store had to pay for stock.  Things didn't look good indeed.  Fast forward to today.  The old store is still here, and with the higher prices to boot.  They are doing it primarily by offering better service.

Mike

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Posted by riogrande5761 on Wednesday, January 24, 2018 6:34 AM

Here is what I can't do, or can't afford to do.  I can't afford to treat a LHS as a charity and spend an extra $50 or $100 on a loco.

I realize many of you do and feel strongly about supporting your LHS and see many people state that.

All I can say is I don't believe it is a "moral" right or wrong choice.  Rather it is a personal one which often involves more than just yourself.  Many of us have wives and families and if we spent that extra $50 or $100 on a loco to try to keep that LHS open a few more months, then that is $50 or $100 less available in the pot for other things which may be needed by the wife, kids, household etc.

My wife probably would not support me spending the extra money.  Not while she is going onto Facebook garage sale sites to look for bargains on furnature and other house hold needs.  Not when we are trying to find other ways to stetch our budget.  I think most people look for the best deal they can get on food, gas, a car, house hold things etc.   Me too.  So I look for the best deals I can find on my hobby items too while balancing using vendors which are reliable and have good service - basically 99% of the purchases I have done for the past 10 years have been online except for train shows.

So it is an individual choice.  If you have the disposable income to "support" the LHS then it's perfectly fine as long as your wife and family don't mind you spending the extra money vs. saving money.  My guess is in some cases, if they knew you could save money, money they could use, they might not approve of buying from a shop  with significantly higher prices. 

In a few cases where, as many couples do these days, have separate finances, they might be ok with the extra expendature, as long as you have enough to meet the common needs of the house hold. 

As they say, it's your money.

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Wednesday, January 24, 2018 6:51 AM

BRAKIE

Sheldon,Those big B&M on line hobby shops can afford to buy by the pallet  lot because these shops learn the Internet is their friend not their enemy.

If a shop would give a 10% discount at checkout they would see more of my hobby cash but,not to budge on the amount spent at check out is not the way to get my cash and in the end every business needs a constant flow of cash from happy customers to stay in business.

 

Happy customers and cash flow mean nothing if you can't cover expenses.

That 10% can easily be the difference been profit and loss, and while it will get some of the business lost to discount outlets, it will not get all of it. 25% - 30% off is very tempting to most people.

Walmart only makes a 5% net profit........

Sheldon

    

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Posted by Doughless on Wednesday, January 24, 2018 7:01 AM

OP has a rather extreme example, IMO.  $100 difference in the online prive and LHS price seems like a lot.  It must be a pretty expensive locomotive.

With internet access, local shops don't just cater to local customers.  That's the difference between today and yesterday.  

How big of a footprint is "Local"?

If any LHS is simply catering to customers within 45 minutes driving distance, then I think that is a bad strategy.  They won't even get many customers from other closed LHSs if those shops were located on the other side of the city.

Its really about geography and how many customers there are in a given footprint.  The internet makes that footprint really big compared to the traditional LHS.

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Posted by ATLANTIC CENTRAL on Wednesday, January 24, 2018 7:03 AM

riogrande5761

Here is what I can't do, or can't afford to do.  I can't afford to treat a LHS as a charity and spend an extra $50 or $100 on a loco.

I realize many of you do and feel strongly about supporting your LHS and see many people state that.

All I can say is I don't believe it is a "moral" right or wrong choice.  Rather it is a personal one which often involves more than just yourself.  Many of us have wives and families and if we spent that extra $50 or $100 on a loco to try to keep that LHS open a few more months, then that is $50 or $100 less available in the pot for other things which may be needed by the wife, kids, household etc.

My wife probably would not support me spending the extra money.  Not while she is going onto Facebook garage sale sites to look for bargains on furnature and other house hold needs.  Not when we are trying to find other ways to stetch our budget.  I think most people look for the best deal they can get on food, gas, a car, house hold things etc.   Me too.  So I look for the best deals I can find on my hobby items too while balancing using vendors which are reliable and have good service - basically 99% of the purchases I have done for the past 10 years have been online except for train shows.

So it is an individual choice.  If you have the disposable income to "support" the LHS then it's perfectly fine as long as your wife and family don't mind you spending the extra money vs. saving money.  My guess is in some cases, if they knew you could save money, money they could use, they might not approve of buying from a shop  with significantly higher prices. 

In a few cases where, as many couples do these days, have separate finances, they might be ok with the extra expendature, as long as you have enough to meet the common needs of the house hold. 

As they say, it's your money.

 

Completely agreed.

The solution here is not higher prices, the solution is for manufacturers to self distribute (a great many already do) and for them to lessen the gap between the lowest wholesale price and the highest wholesale price. 

No one will convince me they would sell less product, in fact they might sell a lot more, and at a slightly higher overall margin. They might have to be willing to inventory a little more product, but the ones already selling direct to consumers at full retail are already doing that.

Sheldon

 

    

  • Member since
    October 2001
  • From: OH
  • 17,574 posts
Posted by BRAKIE on Wednesday, January 24, 2018 8:09 AM

ATLANTIC CENTRAL
 
BRAKIE

Sheldon,Those big B&M on line hobby shops can afford to buy by the pallet  lot because these shops learn the Internet is their friend not their enemy.

If a shop would give a 10% discount at checkout they would see more of my hobby cash but,not to budge on the amount spent at check out is not the way to get my cash and in the end every business needs a constant flow of cash from happy customers to stay in business.

 

 

 

Happy customers and cash flow mean nothing if you can't cover expenses.

That 10% can easily be the difference been profit and loss, and while it will get some of the business lost to discount outlets, it will not get all of it. 25% - 30% off is very tempting to most people.

Walmart only makes a 5% net profit........

Sheldon

 

Sheldon,10% of a (say) $25.00 fright car sale is a whopping $2.50 and the shop still made money in the process and that's far better then that freight car collecting dust at full price for months or years.

A hobby shop thast doesn't move stock in a timely manner is doom to fail.

Larry

Conductor.

Summerset Ry.


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