I was a plumber in a previous life and this reminds me of the service that was 
extended at the plumbing supply companies.  I didn't mind back then because I 
got preferential treatment.  But if you weren't known to the guys in the supply 
house they would treat customers terribly.  Leave people standing there without 
even acknowledging them for 30 minutes or more.  Charging a 30% markup and just 
being rude if they ever did get around to serving them. Then came Home Depot 
with low prices for all and customer service for all.  Go into a local plumbing 
supply now and see a very different attitude.  I'm just a homeowner to them 
now.  I still have my plumbing license but I very rarely install any pipe or 
replace a water heater.  I like the service I get walking into a supply house 
now.   It's all supply and demand, you may have the supply to meet a demand 
but, so does the Inter-webs with free shipping and no attitudes.  You have to 
make people want to come into your establishment if you aren't the only place 
to get the product you're trying to sell. Usually, things find and even keel.  
Local prices start to compete with the online guys because they would rather 
sell more product and keep their standing with their supplier.  Lets say you 
sell one widget with $10 profit but you neighbor sells 10 widgets with a $1 
profit.  who is their supplier going to like more, the guy that sold one or the 
guy that sold ten?

---------- Original Message ----------
From: Stevan Plavsa via CnC-List <cnc-list@cnc-list.com>
To: "cnc-list@cnc-list.com" <cnc-list@cnc-list.com>
Cc: Stevan Plavsa <stevanpla...@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Stus-List Got a New 135% Head Sail
Date: Thu, 25 Feb 2016 12:20:47 -0500


"I will admit that sometimes it does feel a little bit like I'm just a small 
fry and that I'm wasting their time.  A little part of me gets it though, 
lookie loos and shoppers take time and don't make money.  So, in a way the guy 
that has already opened his wallet has paid to be top priority." And I think 
this is the problem and why offshore companies are taking the business. You 
don't know who will open their wallet. The best approach is to show your good 
face to everyone that comes in the door. It's reasonable for a customer to shop 
around for sails. If they aren't prepared to entertain "looky loos" who are 
just trying to get the best value for their hard earned money, then the 
business goes elsewhere. It's simple customer service.  There's a generational 
gap here too. I find the older, established businesses with sales people that 
have "been around a long time" are the worst to deal with on a customer service 
level. The best companies I've dealt with are the younger companies, with 
younger sales reps, that 'get it'. Lastly, I'm a pretty young guy myself, I've 
probably got several more sale purchases in my lifetime, guess who won't be 
getting the next call? That's right, the local guys that didn't give me the 
time of day the first time around. The smart sellers see a customer for life. 
The lazy ones see a young guy "with no money". See my challenges getting 
pricing on a chartplotter at a local store here. Fred sent me most of the info 
and pricing I needed in about a matter of hours. I initiated my discourse with 
the local brick and mortar place over two weeks ago!!! And I went in there for 
new life lines and a chartplotter with accessories. Maybe not the biggest 
purchase they'll see this year but likely MY biggest purchase this year.  As a 
customer I'm fed up BECAUSE I WANT THE LOCAL SUPPORT. But the local support has 
to beef up the "support" part of the deal and act like they care about my 
business.  SteveSuhana, C&C 32Toronto  
_______________________________________________

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