02-11-2013, 05:28 PM | #76 | |
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Like an auto dealership. If you're in the market for a Ferrari then you probably don't mind paying for a test-drive, but most dealership survive by selling Fords (or equivalent). |
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02-11-2013, 05:32 PM | #77 | |
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There are legitimate reasons to object to "showrooming" for some retailers. In places like an electronics store, where people are shopping for expensive items they don't necessarily know much about, and are looking for help in choosing the right one, it's an expensive waste of time. The store pays the employees to spend time with people who have no intention of buying, and while helping those people, they can't help people who would buy if they could get some help. So there, I suspect, a lot of people would see it as somewhat unethical, and it is more common thant it used to be. However, this does not describe the typical book store. People don't go to a book store to talk to the employees about what to buy, they go to browse the books, and it costs the store nothing to have people wandering the aisles looking. At that point, charging a cover fee becomes unethical, IMO. When your book store is failing, it isn't because people are coming in and not buying, it's because people are not buying. Giving potential customers incentives to not come in at all won't help. Finding out why they're not buying might. Convincing them to not come in at all will prevent you from finding out why they're not buying. This whole idea is from someone who has clearly never worked in the trenches in retail. |
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02-11-2013, 05:38 PM | #78 | |
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Speaking from personal experience, working for a retailer that hasn't had a single layoff in the last ten years, yes, that is a very good way.
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What you said. I've seen B&M retail done right, and my employer isn't really afraid of anybody. |
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02-11-2013, 05:53 PM | #79 | |
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Fact is, if the shopper's decision to buy online was already set in stone, there would be no reason for them to visit the showroom at all. They would just order online. They may EXPECT that they will buy it online, but if they are showrooming, they are shopping, and if a merchant is lucky enough to have them shopping in HIS retail store, he has the chance to sell to them, which he'd not have had if the person had made up his mind and clicked Buy Now. A tangentially related anecdote: A few years ago, a local Mercedes dealer send out invites: Come in for a free test drive and get a fairly high-dollar-value Amazon gift card (I can't remember the amount, but it was generous). I brought the invite in and said "I'm here in response to this bribe." They laughed and said "Do you really want a test drive or can we just give you the gift card?" I took the gift card. That left me feeling pretty good about the place. As I was walking out, I looked at the cars. They were very nice. And some were really not as expensive as I thought they'd be. I'd never considered getting a Mercedes before, partially because of the perceived cost, and until then, I would never have stopped in when I was really car shopping. But now I was thinking about it. Because they got me in the door, treated me well, and showed me some value I wasn't expecting. Last edited by ApK; 02-11-2013 at 05:59 PM. |
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02-11-2013, 06:07 PM | #80 |
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This would be a suicidal suggestion.
At the moment, any time I'm in town I'll drop into the bookstore to see if anything new has come out that looks interesting. Every so often there will be something, and I'll buy it. If there is going to be a charge to walk through the door, I'm not going to go in on the off-chance. I'll go online to search to see if there is anything of interested first. And once I've done that, why not just order it online. |
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02-11-2013, 06:27 PM | #81 |
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Personally, I'd pay a small fee (like a dollar) if it were a book store with really specialized content (such as the used foreign bookstore, because I can't get those books online without paying extremely high shipping costs), or if it were a really huge bookstore. I'd be especially likely to pay a fee for a used bookstore because I'm more likely to make a purchase there.
However, I think bookstores that implement this policy might see two unintended consequences: 1) By "punishing" everyone for the "sins" of the showroomers, they also publicize the practice of showrooming. When the employees tell people "well, we have to have this policy because of the showroomers" they'll be informing people about this practice. 2) It may actually accelerate showrooming. Setting a fee for something makes people feel like they've been given permission to do it. There was once a daycare that had a problem with parents picking their kids up late. So, they decided to charge a fee, thinking it would discourage them. But, instead there was an increase in late pick-ups! The parents now felt that they were paying to do it, so they felt they were morally permitted to. I can see a fee meaning that people who previously didn't showroom because they felt it was wrong or rude now doing so openly. |
02-11-2013, 07:01 PM | #82 |
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Of course it's not just B&M vs online with bookstores. I may browse a bookstore and purchase online for myself. However, I'm still in the market when it comes to buying for someone else.
The fact is, I'll most likely look around in a bookstore and then try and get the same item in a department store for cheaper. The only advantage a bookstore has for me is the limited display (of all things). There's no customer service to speak of, no added value - just higher prices. But it can be convenient to look at the rather small displays to see if anything pops out as it's more likely to do in that situation. Once it has, nearly everywhere else on the planet is cheaper, not just online stores. |
02-11-2013, 07:43 PM | #83 |
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I think the idea for paying for browsing is insane. If a bookstore were more convenient (like in my village) I would browse, and I would buy, even though my preference is ebooks. I went to Costco by myself yesterday, and the only thing I did differently than when I go with my husband was to spend 30 minutes browsing the books. Ended up buying 3, as well. Complete Grimm Fairytales because I love the show Grimm, and even though I have it in ebook form, it was in a compact, cute form. Also bought a Cubs book, because I display those in the bedroom bookcase, and it is the Cubs. Finally, bought a mystery, it looked good, was only $7.99, and I have reached the age where I could never remember the name of the book one I got home, and it wasn't worth getting out my blackberry and emailing. So, browsing does have its benefits, even for someone who rarely buys a pbook.
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02-11-2013, 07:55 PM | #84 | ||||
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I knew full well when I pulled out the credit card that I could beat their price online, but I'm quite willing to pay for the expertise as well as the goods. Not everyone is. The trend lately is for people who do exactly what I did, then buy online, after wasting two hours of the salesman's time with no intention whatsoever of buying. Whether you agree or not, a lot of people do find that unethical. |
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02-11-2013, 07:57 PM | #85 | |
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02-11-2013, 08:11 PM | #86 |
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There are plenty of times I would love to be able to purchase in a store rather than have to shop online and wait for delivery, but more and more often I am forced to do just that.
I speak up about it too, to let the stores who discontinue stocking a product I buy regularly know that they will be losing that sale to an online vendor but they simply do not care. |
02-11-2013, 08:24 PM | #87 |
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If your problem is that no one buys stuff from your store or comes into your store, you cannot solve this by adding extra fees. There are too many cheaper options out there. Do they think carriage makers would have survived if they started adding a visitation fee?
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02-11-2013, 08:32 PM | #88 |
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I think the important question for everyone going into a bookstore to browse is whether you find it a valuable experience, and whether you think you'll be worse off it you can no longer do it. If you think you'll be worse off, then you should be supporting the store by making purchases there, simply out of self-interest. You don't need to see it as an ethical or moral problem to decide whether it's okay for you to browse in a store and buy online. If you think you can live without the store when it goes away, then put it to the test first. Spend time buying online without visiting physical stores to get a better perspective on how valuable showroom browsing really is to you. Better to find out before it goes away.
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02-11-2013, 08:33 PM | #89 | |
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(i) there are a lot of people (both religious and secular philosophers) who would disagree that morality is just a "matter of opinion"; (ii) even if it is just opinion, not all opinions are equally valid (this seems to be a common fallacy people ascribe to); and (iii) calling this behaviour "immoral" or "unethical" stretches those words to the point of meaninglessness. If we're going to go so crazy as to say that this is immoral, why not go all the way and describe it as "retail terrorism"? Would that opinion be equally valid? |
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02-11-2013, 08:40 PM | #90 | ||
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Reductio ad absurdum is a fallacy, and not worth dignifying with an answer. |
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