QUOTE: Originally posted by rolleiman Don't hold back now.. Tell us what you Really think.. The best one around here closed about 6 or 7 years ago (I'm not certain why, it wasn't for lack of My support) and I've been buying online since. Don't miss the brick shops one bit, largely for the same basic reasons you list. Inflation.. For stuff that's been on the shelves for months and even years. Bull.
QUOTE: Originally posted by RedGrey62 I cannot condone him "popping off" but there may be a lot more to the story. I've owned my own retail business, not a hobby shop, and every year the cost to operate went up. Whether it was rent, insurance, inventory, etc, its just more expensive to run a store and the cost has to cash has to come from somewhere. Our basic rent was almost 2000 and the average sale was about 20 dollars per person, thats 100 sales per months or about 3 per day just to meet rent. It can be very frustrating, to say the least, to run a small business like that. Again, I am not defending his attitude, but you may have caught him on a bad day too. Rick
QUOTE: Originally posted by Tracklayer No Rick. This guy does a good business, and probably takes in no less than $1,000.00 a day. He's just gotten real greedy and irritable lately. TL
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QUOTE: Originally posted by swdave Atlas just had a 10% increase in their prices, but they did announce it well ahead of time. But the kicker of it for me was our LHS increased the prices on all his Atlas that he already in stock, now this is down right dirty if you ask me! The guy who owned the store before him never did that.
QUOTE: Hobby Shops that charge MSRP
QUOTE: Originally posted by ouengr Is it just me or are the hobby shops failing to understand what made Wal-Mart such a success. Wal-Mart makes money by selling an individual item at a minimal profit and driving customers into the store. In turn the customer buys more items and visits more oftern.