Fishing with Rod Discussion Forum
Fishing in British Columbia => General Discussion => Topic started by: GENERAL-SHERMAN on July 24, 2010, 02:44:21 PM
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just found a 2 weight echo carbon at berries for 169... same rod 220 at another shop. anyone else see outrageous prices at a local tackle shop lately? customer service isn't worth that much money to me!
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I see that all the time when comparing US pricing to Canadian pricing. As far as I am concerned it is price gouging on the part of the manufacturer. On a couple of big ticket items I have purchased over the last couple of years, the Canadian distributors were paying the manufacturer what I was paying retail in the US. The Canadian distributors are making the same profits that the US distributors are, however the manufacturers are making more money selling to Canadian distributors. Check the pricing on the website for any major Canadian car manufacturer and compare that to their US pricing....
I think the only solution is to buy from the US until the manufacturers realize that they are killing their Canadian distributors. In the meantime the Canadian distributors will suffer....
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I would rather spend my money at a small shop that has everything I need than go to the US.... nobody ever thinks what it costs for brokerage, shipping, and if you feel like driving to the states, sitting in line for an hour... running your truck... plus the hours spend traveling... I ll bet if you asked the guys at M&Y for a deal you would have gotten it.... just remember the next time you stop at a big store to save a buck... ask how the fishing is... I ll bet you will be shopping at the small stores after that....I would rather keep my economy going by spending my dollars in my town ... because I know when I have an issue they will look after me right away....I ll bet if ou are a regular customer to most shops they will give you a deal on most items.... sound like a bunch of whiners to me.....
Dont forget that without these small shops there would be no FWR as they are the ones that spend the money to keep these sites running.....
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I ll bet if ou are a regular customer to most shops they will give you a deal on most items....
I don't really understand that, why not have one price for all customers. In the end I would think that would be the best way to build a steady customer base. When I find out that someone else gets a better price then me that is the last time I shop there.
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so what you are saying is when you come in and spend a big amount of money I shouldnt look after you whenever I can with a better price? sounds good to me....
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just found a 2 weight echo carbon at berries for 169... same rod 220 at MnY. anyone else see outrageous prices at a local tackle shop lately? customer service isn't worth that much money to me!
Correct me if I am wrong, but General Sherman telling us that he is comparing one local CDN tackle shop (Berry's Bait and Tackle) to another local CND shop (Michael and Young). That is comparing apples to apples not local to USA (apples to oranges). I get excellent service at Berry's and they are MY local tackle shop. Glad to hear their prices are competitive (if I understand your first post).
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there shouldnt be a price on customer service period.
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I would rather spend my money at a small shop that has everything I need than go to the US.... nobody ever thinks what it costs for brokerage, shipping, and if you feel like driving to the states, sitting in line for an hour... running your truck... plus the hours spend traveling... I ll bet if you asked the guys at M&Y for a deal you would have gotten it.... just remember the next time you stop at a big store to save a buck... ask how the fishing is... I ll bet you will be shopping at the small stores after that....I would rather keep my economy going by spending my dollars in my town ... because I know when I have an issue they will look after me right away....I ll bet if ou are a regular customer to most shops they will give you a deal on most items.... sound like a bunch of whiners to me.....
Dont forget that without these small shops there would be no FWR as they are the ones that spend the money to keep these sites running.....
your only saying this because you want to motor boat adrienne's beer holders thomas :D
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unfortunatly now owning my third car bought in the usa it was well worth the 25%, 37% and 50% I saved on purchasing acros the line all three cars no more than a couple of years old with all the paper work vehicle inspection I still managed to save close to $59000.00 on the three vehicles ..........sure buys a lot of fishing gear plus ended up buying a gradywhite from florida and still managed to save $12000.00 on the three vehicles plus get a boat out of the deal so go figure I will always buy my cars south of border period :-\
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best deal is gas at half price us suckers are forced to pay !!! $2.73 a gallon today cost me $60 to fill there were it cost me $110 here :'(
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nice livin by the border eh! hell ya for deals
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supporting the local business is supporting the sport at home as long as price differences are not dramatic and unreasonable.
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Where do you get your value? Support your local shop, when at all reasonable. If the price difference is massive, I wouldn't blame you to go elsewhere, but don't underestimate the value of advice and support that your local shop can provide that the American shops and big box stores won't. I know I spend a lot of time and money at Pacific Angler, and they've always treated me VERY well.
I don't really understand that, why not have one price for all customers. In the end I would think that would be the best way to build a steady customer base. When I find out that someone else gets a better price then me that is the last time I shop there.
Then you must not shop anywhere interesting, because in my experience nearly EVERY non-bigbox store has flexibility on price. Might want to rethink your stance.
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--different price...sometimes a guy just has to pay the rent or has a rod that's been in the shop for a year... why not offer the rod to someone that is a steady customer rather than whomever next walks in.
--the problem for small shops is when one store sells one rod for cost or below suggested min... that is the new expected price.
--the shop down the road that just picked up 5 of those rods now can't sell them without being accused of gouging.
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I think the only solution is to buy from the US until the manufacturers realize that they are killing their Canadian distributors. In the meantime the Canadian distributors will suffer....
IMO the distributors are very slow adjusting to the new US-Canadian exchange rate (look at the printed price tag on certain books and it is still over 1.3 to 1!). Support your local shop with small ticket items... and let them know how much you are paying for stuff in the US. They will soon start putting the pressure on their distributors.
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IMO the distributors are very slow adjusting to the new US-Canadian exchange rate (look at the printed price tag on certain books and it is still over 1.3 to 1!). Support your local shop with small ticket items... and let them know how much you are paying for stuff in the US. They will soon start putting the pressure on their distributors.
Unfortunately the price difference has been going on for years. The manufacturers know that they can get away with it, so they keep gouging Canadians. I'm not convinced that the Canadian distributors have any influence on the pricing. Maybe the "support your local business" philosophy is the problem...... ???
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i hate to burst all your bubbles, but that's what they call free trade...and poor business management by the canadian government...it goes beyond sporting goods.
just look at things like alcohol, cigarettes, and lumber from canada...you can buy them cheaper in the states than here at home.
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--distributors typically buy once or twice a year... just like a blended mortgage rate they have to account for what they paid for stock on hand vs what they bring in... it's risky business, plus believe it or not sometimes retail stores don't take what they pre-ordered or don't pay for stock sent.
--many foreign manufacturers do not recognize the Canadian border.. they have one or more large volume distributors in USA for north america, many will not even deal with Canada direct.
--Canadian red tape or protectionism... example... cost to certify a life jacket in canada.. about 100K... assuming similar cost to certify for USA as same underwriters company does USA testing.. so if I manufacture life jacket and have 100k to spend would I get it certified for sale in USA or Canada.
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I would have asked if they would match the price and why the difference to begin with if it was my regular shop i go to.
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IMO the distributors are very slow adjusting to the new US-Canadian exchange rate (look at the printed price tag on certain books and it is still over 1.3 to 1!). Support your local shop with small ticket items... and let them know how much you are paying for stuff in the US. They will soon start putting the pressure on their distributors.
agreed