bradshsi
Guest
lamont:As industries mature they tend to split into low-margin, high-volume business and high-margin, low-volume niches. This is exactly what we are seeing occur with diving equipment. Dive shops that have been following the model of making their air fills and training loss-leaders and selling high-margin equipment are going out of business to low margin internet resellers of gear. Getting on scubaboard isn't going to change the economic realities of this. As dive shops go under, there should be more pricing power available to the remaining dive shops so that they can adjust their training and fills to more reasonable prices and adjust their gear prices lower to compete with the internet shops.
Lamont summed up the reality rather well. (You didn't by chance train as an economist in a former life ?)
You are going to see the online high volume LDS model and the local high service model evolve. This is just the same model that travel agents are heading down, except with a 5+ year head start. Most LDS wil likely go for the high service model or close down as most will not have the inclination or expertise to setup a workable online retail presence.
I'll leave you with a quote from an Economist www.economist.com article on travel agents from some time back. It is a foretaste of what the LDS must endure.
TRAVEL agents are having a hard time. Traditionally they have made their money by taking a cut of what airlines, hotels and car-hire firms charge for their products. But that source of revenue is drying up fast. American airlines have already cut back the commission they pay to travel agents twice in the past two years, from 10% to 8%. The most recent cut, in November 1997, elicited squeals from agents, who claimed they were being driven to the wall. The number of travel agents in America is already on a distinct downward trend. Quite right too, says Addison Schonland of CIC, a consultancy in San Diego: if they want to call themselves a profession, travel agents should start acting like one by providing clients with expert service and charging fees for it.
Too many agents today, by collecting a toll on transactions that may soon be conducted electronically, leave themselves vulnerable to the fate of high-street bank tellers whose jobs have been taken over by cash machines and telephonists. The on-line competition is up and running.
Source: Economist Jan 8th 1998