RRP pricing
Re: RRP pricing
What about asking for extras with the package. It may be the same model but the supplier may be able to throw in some papers, inks, substrates to print on.
Also are you a member on here as you may be able to make some savings by using the discount that some suppliers offer.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Also are you a member on here as you may be able to make some savings by using the discount that some suppliers offer.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Many thanks
Iain
Equipment used A4 Ricoh printer, HP3085 Heat Press Graphtec cutter, Jarin mug press, CJV 30-60 solvent printer and lots of help from DSF.
Iain
Equipment used A4 Ricoh printer, HP3085 Heat Press Graphtec cutter, Jarin mug press, CJV 30-60 solvent printer and lots of help from DSF.
Re: RRP pricing
I wasn't referring to any specific product.logobear;141427 wrote:I suspect you are referring to the Adkins beta maxi which is £1195 from all suppliers. (plus vat)
It's a great press, that's the price you pay.
Alternative is but one off ebay for £400 to £600ish (zero vat), then send it back to Adkins for a full refurb for £250 + vat + carriage. get one good as new, thou takes a few weeks to get done and save a bit.
I've noticed the same products being sold for the same price from different vendors.
So, it's not the price as such; it's knowing that the price I would have to pay for quality is artificially high.
It harms everyone.
The chap sitting in the manufacturer's office saying to the dealers, "sell X product at Y price, or else we won't let you sell them", thinks he is being smart because he's screwing the customer for £Z+ per sale, but in reality, he's losing sales, then one day a foreign import comes in which has the same quality as his products but costs 1/3 of the amount, and he loses his business.
Anyway......
Re: RRP pricing
I was thinking about doing that, but I was also thinking that if the selling price was being fixed and was therefore artificially high, then the price at which the manufacturer was selling the product to the dealer would also be artificially high, meaning that the freebies would come out of the dealer's margin without the manufacturer taking any kind of hit on the artificially high price he was selling to the dealer for...... if that makes sense.Quinsfan;141429 wrote:What about asking for extras with the package. It may be the same model but the supplier may be able to throw in some papers, inks, substrates to print on.
Also are you a member on here as you may be able to make some savings by using the discount that some suppliers offer.
Anyway, it's been an interesting phenomenon to witness.
Now I know why I see those very expensive SUVs parked outside B2B factories on industrial estates, and why those expensive cars won't be there 15 years from now.
Re: RRP pricing
No. What would then happen is that Amazon would ultimately be the only supplier, and that is in no ones interest.chonz;141418 wrote:
Can't the manufacturer just sell the product to the distributor, then the distributor can charge what they like? Or even do a drop-shipping arrangement?
Re: RRP pricing
Well, if the distributor wanted to put the products on Amazon as well as their own website, then fine.pw66;141436 wrote:No. What would then happen is that Amazon would ultimately be the only supplier, and that is in no ones interest.
What I'm talking about is price-fixing, not through which website they are sold.
Re: RRP pricing
Too much price competition is not good for any business - any clown can give it away, but that doesn't lead to a sustainable market place. My point about Amazon is that it is the natural end result of a race to the bottom, price wise, not a comment on the marketing strategy. The brand will loose much of its dealer network, and service network will follow. And then we all loose.
There are plenty of presses at all price points, so there is something to fit any budget. If a brand owner wants to possition their product at a particular place in the market then that is their prerogitive - they are allowing the dealer network a slice of their margin. There is more money for them to be made by cutting out the dealer and selling direct to the end user. Look at Dyson for example. They now sell direct to the consumer, with only a limited number of dealers.
Price 'fixing' on machinary isn't that significant. A press is an irregular purchase and by tomorrow you will have forgotten that you have paid £50 'too much'. There is plenty of competition on consumables and imprintables, which is where our profit lies.
There are plenty of presses at all price points, so there is something to fit any budget. If a brand owner wants to possition their product at a particular place in the market then that is their prerogitive - they are allowing the dealer network a slice of their margin. There is more money for them to be made by cutting out the dealer and selling direct to the end user. Look at Dyson for example. They now sell direct to the consumer, with only a limited number of dealers.
Price 'fixing' on machinary isn't that significant. A press is an irregular purchase and by tomorrow you will have forgotten that you have paid £50 'too much'. There is plenty of competition on consumables and imprintables, which is where our profit lies.
Re: RRP pricing
What I'm suggesting wouldn't involve Amazon.
What I'm saying is that when you are looking for something to buy, to see it at the same price everywhere makes you think, "We are getting shafted".
Imagine if you wanted to buy a pack of cornflakes and they were £10 in each supermarket you visited. You'd start to think that something was amiss.
I agree with you about the consumables. There, I see competition.
I'm hoping that blank mug manufacturers don't band together and insist that the suppliers start selling their mugs for £3 apiece, or else
What I'm saying is that when you are looking for something to buy, to see it at the same price everywhere makes you think, "We are getting shafted".
Imagine if you wanted to buy a pack of cornflakes and they were £10 in each supermarket you visited. You'd start to think that something was amiss.
I agree with you about the consumables. There, I see competition.
I'm hoping that blank mug manufacturers don't band together and insist that the suppliers start selling their mugs for £3 apiece, or else
Re: RRP pricing
Do understand your point and frustration and not having a pop as I think your just having a grumpy day (I have them most days too) but resale price maintenance doesn't (always) mean you are being shafted. The market will (to a degree) determine the price or value of something so if Cornflakes were £10 people can choose another breakfast cereal. Ironically then Waitrose Sainsburys and Tesco will all sell certain things for the same price but many of us choose to shop regularly in only one of them for a number of none price related reasons, so choice isn't always price based (though I'll admit I shop in Lidl for the bulk of our family consumables!). Imagine if the biggest players however were given the means to eliminate competitors by simply dropping price, then you really would get shafted and not only on price but choice, I think that is the amazon point made earlier.
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