I dont see the issue with this? Were they not to do so they would have to include a labor component in the price of the part, which means customers who choose to cash and carry are paying for labour they dont use....goneriding wrote:To further clarify, in addition to the parts charge they wanted to charge labour separately.
And they wonder why we buy online!
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby im_no_pro » Thu Dec 06, 2012 11:01 am
master6 wrote: Moderators are like Club Handicappers; I often think they are wrong, but I dont want the job.
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby Nobody » Thu Dec 06, 2012 11:01 am
Cell claim they buy directly from the manufacturer.goneriding wrote:What seems to be missed in all of this is that Cell, who I suspect are bound to buy from the same distributor as my LBS, can charge $30 less online and still maintain a decent shop front. I understand that they have buying power on their side but that is a massive difference.
http://site.this link is broken/help-centre-article?id=7" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby goneriding » Thu Dec 06, 2012 11:34 am
Typically, neither do I and in the scenario you outline it is entirely fair. The comment was meant as clarification to an earlier comment regarding overheads.im_no_pro wrote:I dont see the issue with this? Were they not to do so they would have to include a labor component in the price of the part, which means customers who choose to cash and carry are paying for labour they dont use....goneriding wrote:To further clarify, in addition to the parts charge they wanted to charge labour separately.
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby greyhoundtom » Thu Dec 06, 2012 11:50 am
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby MarkG » Thu Dec 06, 2012 12:20 pm
They still won't have the purchasing power that someone like c r c have tho, for the simple fact that c r c etc have a global market unlike the Aussie stores.
A mate of mine who works in a bike store here, in Vic, don't even stock Shimano anymore cos their prices are rediculous
Shimano etc wouldn't care less cos the a) the Aussie stores make up such a tiny % of their sales, and b) Shimano will sell their product to the customer either thru local sales of off the net.
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby DoogleDave » Thu Dec 06, 2012 12:27 pm
YES, love it!greyhoundtom wrote:Isn’t time the local bike shops got together and combined their purchasing power?
ILBSA* (Independant Local Bike Shops of Australia)
*a subsidiary of IGA
And LBS's charging to install parts is perfectly fine. Even if they decide to charge a little extra if you BYO parts for them to install (or discounting installation costs for parts purchased ins-store).
But I still think that many people don't buy parts from bricks & mortar stores because it can be alot cheaper to buy online and then install themselves (or pay for their LBS to install - and still save money).
Customer service is great in theory - but money talks and the rest walks....
And the manufacturers don't care because they know if there product sales have dropped from selling from retail stores, they have increased from places like Wiggle, c r c etc (and again supply & demand takes over). Wiggle & c r c sell so much stock that you can guarantee the price they pay for the products are well below what any Aus wholesaler is paying - who still needs to add a profit margin to the product before selling to the LBS.
And because Australia is such a small percentage of the global market, no-one really cares if we're buying or not as we're not their target audience - except for Australians.
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby human909 » Thu Dec 06, 2012 12:56 pm
No they still are stuck in the same distributor wholesaler chain as everyone else.MarkG wrote:The franchises do that already I assume, hence the reason for buying a franchise.
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby goneriding » Thu Dec 06, 2012 1:10 pm
Surely you don't mean "Adapt or die"?greyhoundtom wrote:Isn’t time the local bike shops got together and combined their purchasing power?
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby Ross » Thu Dec 06, 2012 1:21 pm
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby MarkG » Thu Dec 06, 2012 1:25 pm
Yes, to a point, but surely being part of a franchise would allow some degree of savings for buying stock, or else there's no real benefit in buying in to one.human909 wrote:No they still are stuck in the same distributor wholesaler chain as everyone else.MarkG wrote:The franchises do that already I assume, hence the reason for buying a franchise.
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby im_no_pro » Thu Dec 06, 2012 1:29 pm
Whether its franchise, a buying group or just a large business doesnt make a difference - the volume is where the discounts come in. Buying into a franchise has a number of other benefits (and disadvantages) other than buying price.MarkG wrote:Yes, to a point, but surely being part of a franchise would allow some degree of savings for buying stock, or else there's no real benefit in buying in to one.human909 wrote:No they still are stuck in the same distributor wholesaler chain as everyone else.MarkG wrote:The franchises do that already I assume, hence the reason for buying a franchise.
Yep, gotcha now.goneriding wrote: Typically, neither do I and in the scenario you outline it is entirely fair. The comment was meant as clarification to an earlier comment regarding overheads.
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby human909 » Thu Dec 06, 2012 1:39 pm
Generally not. The reason for buying into a franchise is assistance in learning systems and methods of running the store along with the obvious brand reputation and marketing benefits. Most franchises don't operate as a buying group, comparisons with the grocery business such as IGA are not valid.MarkG wrote:Yes, to a point, but surely being part of a franchise would allow some degree of savings for buying stock, or else there's no real benefit in buying in to one.
Most retail in Australia is held to ransom by an oligopoly of distributors. It works well for the sellers as it allows everyone in the oligopoly chain to gain bigger profits, that is except the LBS as they are open to competition. The way consumers can fight it is by buying overseas. LBS need to fight it by doing the same thing.
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby TDC » Thu Dec 06, 2012 2:18 pm
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby greyhoundtom » Thu Dec 06, 2012 2:37 pm
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I was under the impression that price fixing as apparently practised by the wholesalers supplying bikes and bike parts to Australian bike shops was illegal.Most retail in Australia is held to ransom by an oligopoly of distributors
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby human909 » Thu Dec 06, 2012 2:54 pm
I don't know the exact laws but generally collusion between companies to reduce competition is generally illegal. However the freedom to choose a high price when you are the a only supplier of item XXXX is certainly not illegal!greyhoundtom wrote:Correct me if I'm wrong, but I was under the impression that price fixing as apparently practised by the wholesalers supplying bikes and bike parts to Australian bike shops was illegal.Most retail in Australia is held to ransom by an oligopoly of distributors
There is nothing to stop LBSs from doing this. However they probably won't get warranty support and they likely will not get any business from local distributors. Yes this is unfair and yes this is anti-competitive. Is it illegal? I don't know. But until the LBS throw off the yoke of the distributor model en-mass then things are not going to change.TDC wrote:ha..Maybe the LBS should be buying from wiggle, c r c etc., and on-selling.
This same excessive pricing regime occurs in MOST Australian retail except for electronics and computers (Software and Apple get away with higher prices). I did work for an Australian retailer that direct imported. However that retailer chose to charge the higher Australian prices and take the extra profit! Until retailers fight back then there will be no change.
Customers are fighting back already by buying online.
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby biker jk » Thu Dec 06, 2012 2:56 pm
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby Riggsbie » Thu Dec 06, 2012 3:53 pm
With any luck Shimano Australia will go bust !
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby sb944 » Thu Dec 06, 2012 4:18 pm
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby human909 » Thu Dec 06, 2012 5:02 pm
Most people here recognise that the prices are not the fault of the LBS. However it is up to the LBSs to fight the distributors for lower prices. Currently few are doing this. Until they do they will slowly continue to lose sales.sb944 wrote:Many here might be turned off a bike service if they think they'll pay through the nose for parts, but I doubt a large enough percentage of the biking population feel the same way, and would bother to purchase the parts from overseas seperately. I think the LBS would be stupid not to charge RRP for all service parts, this is their bread and butter.
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby Byke » Thu Dec 06, 2012 11:29 pm
The big internet retailers buy direct from the manufacturers in quantities that even a buying group in Australia isn't going to come close to, thus securing the lowest prices. They house the goods in a single giant warehouse in an industrial area, with low rental costs. They operate in the biggest high-end cycling market in the world and ship in huge quantities (c r c is the Northern Irish postal service's biggest individual customer) so enjoy the lowest delivery rates available. Their sales are all highly automated, with a bare minimum of human labour required, so their marginal cost per sale is really low.
Their customers are conditioned to have no expectation of being able to ask for advice on what to buy, or how to fit it, or for the purchases to be quickly mounted to a bike, or to borrow a pump for a couple of minutes, or to try on a jersey first, or to get something ordered in which isn't currently in stock. Imagine the outcry on this forum if any LBS provided such terrible 'service'.
The big boys are single-mendedly focussed on just the one part of bicycle retailing that is the most profitable - selling bike gear. They're exploiting the tools of the modern age to make selling stuff much more efficient than was possible under the old paradigm of shopfront on the local main street, and that isn't going to change.
Most LBSs are probably still doing okay because the Australian economy is doing substantially better than almost anywhere in the world, and cycling is enjoying a renaissance at the moment.
Thankfully for the LBSs, at least for the moment, the pie is still getting bigger. But it's the LBS's most profitable customers who are deserting them for the internet, and over the longer term their take of the pie is going to continue to get smaller.
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby Big_Red » Fri Dec 07, 2012 1:32 am
Because most of the stuff are just consumables which need to be replaced on a semi-regular basis, i honestly couldn't be stuffed paying someone to do a job that i know i can do/easily learn to do, nor pay the exorbitant prices here in Australia. Recently replaced an ultegra RD & 105 cassette & chain which cost just under $125 from c r c - couldn't get it for < $230 getting quotes from about 4 LBS's.
I wouldn't say i'm mechanically adept, but a lot of this stuff ain't that hard to do, if you have the right tools.
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby Ross » Fri Dec 07, 2012 7:41 am
This has been discussed before. Large online UK retailers have costs that far exceed any LBS. Wiggle have a 45,000 sq foot warehouse, do you really think that is cheaper to rent (maybe they own it?) than a normal retail shop? Wiggle carry approximately 250,000 product lines and have several hundred employees. Other online UK retailers would be similar. So many times the costs of LBSs.Byke wrote:
The big internet retailers buy direct from the manufacturers in quantities that even a buying group in Australia isn't going to come close to, thus securing the lowest prices. They house the goods in a single giant warehouse in an industrial area, with low rental costs. They operate in the biggest high-end cycling market in the world and ship in huge quantities (c r c is the Northern Irish postal service's biggest individual customer) so enjoy the lowest delivery rates available. Their sales are all highly automated, with a bare minimum of human labour required, so their marginal cost per sale is really low.
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby LM324 » Fri Dec 07, 2012 9:10 am
But compared to the amount of stuff they sell...Ross wrote:This has been discussed before. Large online UK retailers have costs that far exceed any LBS. Wiggle have a 45,000 sq foot warehouse, do you really think that is cheaper to rent (maybe they own it?) than a normal retail shop? Wiggle carry approximately 250,000 product lines and have several hundred employees. Other online UK retailers would be similar. So many times the costs of LBSs.Byke wrote:
The big internet retailers buy direct from the manufacturers in quantities that even a buying group in Australia isn't going to come close to, thus securing the lowest prices. They house the goods in a single giant warehouse in an industrial area, with low rental costs. They operate in the biggest high-end cycling market in the world and ship in huge quantities (c r c is the Northern Irish postal service's biggest individual customer) so enjoy the lowest delivery rates available. Their sales are all highly automated, with a bare minimum of human labour required, so their marginal cost per sale is really low.
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby sb944 » Fri Dec 07, 2012 9:41 am
Apart from the fact your LBS has 50k people reach if it's lucky and Wiggle has billions, and Wiggle probably grosses about 10000x than what a LBS does, that's a perfectly valid argument.Ross wrote:This has been discussed before. Large online UK retailers have costs that far exceed any LBS. Wiggle have a 45,000 sq foot warehouse, do you really think that is cheaper to rent (maybe they own it?) than a normal retail shop? Wiggle carry approximately 250,000 product lines and have several hundred employees. Other online UK retailers would be similar. So many times the costs of LBSs.Byke wrote:
The big internet retailers buy direct from the manufacturers in quantities that even a buying group in Australia isn't going to come close to, thus securing the lowest prices. They house the goods in a single giant warehouse in an industrial area, with low rental costs. They operate in the biggest high-end cycling market in the world and ship in huge quantities (c r c is the Northern Irish postal service's biggest individual customer) so enjoy the lowest delivery rates available. Their sales are all highly automated, with a bare minimum of human labour required, so their marginal cost per sale is really low.
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Re: And they wonder why we buy online!
Postby Ross » Fri Dec 07, 2012 9:50 am
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