PerroneFord
Contributor
1fastcat:Interesting replies in some of the posts - where to begin:
Automobiles - ok genius, I was the general manager of a Porsche Audi store: Your statement about surviving on 8% margins, why can't the LDS. Well let's compare apples to apples - first of all the car manufacturers bear a large portion of the "flooring cost" for cars i.e. the dealer doesn't have to pay much to keep it in inventory for the first 30-45 days. I highly dounbt the local LDS has such generous credit terms. Secondly the manufacturers pay the dealers a "holdback" allowance that can be greater than 5% of the invoice cost. Thirdly, the 8% margin on a $30,000 purchase sure is alot more money in their pocket than an 8% on a $200 regulator. Finally, the largest portion of a dealer's profit comes from service and warranty repair. At many dealerships, this is the only profit they make. Kinda hard for the LDS to scratch out a living on service and warranty repair.
Ohhh.. Im a genius! Please quote where I said dive shops can survive on 8% margins. Do that and I'll shut up. Yes, dealer holdbacks and costs to get new product to dealers are subsidized. That's awesome. The dive shop enjoys no such advantage. However, I see VERY few people take out their visa, and buy a Porsche or Audi. And especially not Chevy's or Fords. That prodcut at the auto dealer will have a signifcantly longer sit time than a regulator, fins, snorkel, mask, or dive light. At least if the dive shop has a decent customer base and is doing well. As I stated, I would be HAPPY to find a dive shop working with a 50-75% margin. Is that unreasonable? You seem to know all about running a dive shop. So you tell me what kind of margin is reasonable.
1fastcat:Oh, let's not forget the grand-daddy of them all - GM/FORD getting their butts kicked. Last time I looked, you couldn't buy your new car from the factory direct. The domestics' problems are deep, but failing to sell direct on the internet is not one of them. Oh, by the way Mr. Rocket scientist, in a service-heavy business model i.e. local service centers are REQUIRED, you can't jsut be a virtual retailer. How would you like to have to ship that car back to tokyo for that warranty work?
As a matter of fact, I CAN order my car factory direct. But that's beside the point. Local service centers are required? Says who? How many Lexus dealers are there in the country? How many Land Rover dealers. Lexus will dispatch a flatbed to get your car, service it, and deliver it back as part of their warranty service. I never had it so good with my Range Rover. I had to flat-bed it 200+ miles for repair work, and it needed repairs often enough for me to outfit my own garage (specialty tools and all) and do it myself. In much the same fashion, someone can simply drop a regulator or some other item in a box, send it out for service, and have in back in a few days time. Works great. Some manufacturers even offer this service. I've owned products by two diving companies that I can think of that offer this. So while shipping costs make it prohibitive to do this with a car, it's standard fare with regulators, computers, and other dive gear. How many dry suits you think get sent out a year for service?
1fastcat:All this boils down to the fact that without numerous LDS's, diving is a dying sport. No one is going to be around to fill tanks, answer the questions of beginners or interested parties, provide training and certification (back to one of the other genius' comments that training will be provided on a "ad-hoc" market demand basis
No one is going to be around to fill tanks? Where do you dive? I've never been to a dive destination and had trouble finding someone nearby to fill tanks. Admittedly, I haven't done a lot of diving, but STILL. As for answering beginner's questions, by the sounds of things here on SB, LDS's aren't doing so hot on that as it is!