Oh great.  Now we are becoming a true third world economy with haggling as a 
way of doing business.
 
arthur

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Michael Gurstein
Sent: Sun 3/23/2008 12:44 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Futurework] FW: [TriumphOfContent] At Megastores,Hagglers Find Prices 
Are Flexible



Worth knowing...

MG

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Steven Brant
Sent: March 23, 2008 8:26 AM
To: Triumph-Of Content
Subject: [TriumphOfContent] At Megastores, Hagglers Find Prices Are Flexible


http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/23/business/23haggle.html

The New York Times

March 23, 2008

At Megastores, Hagglers Find Prices Are Flexible

By MATT RICHTEL

SAN FRANCISCO - Shoppers are discovering an upside to the down 
economy. They are getting price breaks by reviving an age-old retail 
strategy: haggling.

A bargaining culture once confined largely to car showrooms and 
jewelry stores is taking root in major stores like Best Buy, Circuit 
City and Home Depot, as well as mom-and-pop operations.

Savvy consumers, empowered by the Internet and encouraged by a 
slowing economy, are finding that they can dicker on prices, not just 
on clearance items or big-ticket products like televisions but also 
on lower-cost goods like cameras, audio speakers, couches, rugs and 
even clothing.

The change is not particularly overt, and most store policies on 
bargaining are informal. Some major retailers, however, are quietly 
telling their salespeople that negotiating is acceptable.

"We want to work with the customer, and if that happens to mean 
negotiating a price, then we're willing to look at that," said 
Kathryn Gallagher, a spokeswoman for Home Depot.

In the last year, she said, the store has adopted an "entrepreneurial 
spirit" campaign to give salespeople and managers more latitude on 
prices in order to retain customers.

The sluggish economy is punctuating a cultural shift enabled by wired 
consumers accustomed to comparing prices and bargaining online, said 
Nancy F. Koehn, a retail historian at the Harvard Business School.

Haggling was once common before department stores began setting fixed 
prices in the 1850s. But the shift to bargaining in malls and on Main 
Street is a considerable change from even 10 years ago, Ms. Koehn 
said, when studies showed that consumers did not like to bargain and 
did not consider themselves good at it. "Call it the eBay 
phenomenon," Ms. Koehn said.

"The recession is helping to push these seedlings to the surface," 
she added. "It's a real turnabout on the part of the buyer and the 
seller."

John D. Morris, an apparel industry analyst for Wachovia, said that 
the ailing economy was not necessarily forcing all retailers to 
negotiate. But he says he believes that when there is an opportunity 
for negotiation, the shopper has the upper hand.

"This is one of the periods where the customer is empowered," Mr. 
Morris said. "The retailer knows that the customer is enduring tough 
times - and is more willing to be the one who blinks first in that 
stare-down match."

While tough times give people more incentive to change their 
behavior, it is the wealth of information about products made 
available on the Internet that gives consumers the know-how to try 
it. People now can quickly amass information on product availability 
and pricing, helping them develop strategies to get the best deal.

Michael Roskell, 33, a technology project manager from Jersey City, 
N.J., said he and a friend from high school periodically visit 
electronics stores. While Mr. Roskell expresses interest in buying an 
item, his friend acts as though he is dissatisfied with the price and 
threatens to leave.

"We play good cop, bad cop," Mr. Roskell said.

In February, he said, the friends got $20 off a pair of $250 speakers 
at 6th Avenue Electronics in the New York area. Earlier, he and the 
same friend negotiated to buy two 46-inch high-definition Sony 
televisions at P. C. Richard & Son, a New York-area electronics chain.

List price: $4,300. Price after negotiation: $3,305.50.

"My parents never did this," Mr. Roskell said. "But once you get it, 
you realize there's a whole economy built on this."

The strategy can even work when buying pants. At least it did for 
David Achee of Maplewood, N.J., who said he went to a Polo Ralph 
Lauren store in the SoHo neighborhood of Manhattan last month and 
became interested in a pair of pants on the clearance rack for $75. 
He told the salesperson that he had seen a similar pair on the 
Internet for $65, adding that he thought the pair on the rack looked 
worn (even though he did not really think so). He got the pants for 
around $50, he said.

Among his other tactics, he said, he sometimes threatens to walk out 
of a store and go to a competitor, as he did recently to get a price 
break on a drum set at a music store. But, mainly, he relies on 
researching prices and coming armed with information - prices he 
finds on the Internet and in ads from competitors.

"You can negotiate, but you have to do your research," said Mr. 
Achee, who works for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. 
"When I'm bargaining, I'm bargaining with information."

Information from the Internet helped Amber Kendall, 24, and her 
husband, Matt, when they shopped for a camera last October. The 
couple, who live in Boston, found the Canon camera they wanted online 
for $350, then used the Internet price to bargain with Ritz Camera, 
where the price was $400. Then they used the Ritz Camera offer to get 
the same price at Microcenter, where they preferred the warranty offer.

The technological influences are not just on the consumer side. 
Retail industry analysts said corporate retailers have begun using 
computer systems that let them do real-time pricing and profit 
analysis. Such systems tell a company what price it can set and still 
make money, and they illuminate the trade-off between lowering prices 
and raising sales volumes, said Andy Hargreaves, a retail industry 
analyst with Pacific Crest Securities.

Mr. Hargreaves did a little negotiating himself recently. At Best Buy 
last November, he bargained down the price of a 50-inch Samsung 
plasma television.

"They gave me a number. I gave them another number, and he gave me a 
final number," he said, noting that he got a $100 price break in 
addition to the $200 sale discount. "A lot of people don't realize 
you can go into Best Buy and ask them for a lower price."

Frederick Stinchfield, 23, was a Best Buy salesman in Minnetonka, 
Minn., until last January. He said about one-quarter of customers 
tried to bargain. Much of the time, he said, he was able to oblige 
them, particularly in circumstances where a customer buying 
electronics (like a camera) also bought an accessory (like a camera 
bag) with a higher markup. He said the cash registers at Best Buy 
were set up so that prices could be reset at checkout.

Salespeople and managers had the latitude to drop prices, though some 
were more likely to do so than others.

His advice for bargainer hunters? "If you get denied once, go looking 
for someone else who looks nice," said Mr. Stinchfield, who now works 
for the federal government in Washington. He added: "Come armed with 
information, and you will be rewarded."

Priya Raghubir, a marketing professor at the Haas School of Business 
at the University of California, Berkeley, said that retailers 
willing to haggle were making a calculated gamble that acceding to 
lower prices means establishing customer loyalty. The retail mantra 
is "customer lifetime value," meaning any single sale might not be 
that profitable, but an enduring relationship with a shopper would be.

There is just one problem with the theory, Ms. Raghubir said. It does 
not prove true over time.

Rather than retaining customers, the rise in haggling is making 
shoppers highly price-conscious and loyal ultimately to the least 
expensive offer, not to a brand or a retailer.

Home Depot, among others, begs to differ. Ms. Gallagher, the company 
spokeswoman, said that by allowing salespeople and store managers to 
make some pricing decisions, the company was creating a friendly 
environment that feels more like a local store than a monolithic 
corporate superstore. (She declined to say how much leeway individual 
salespeople or managers have.)

Ms. Raghubir says that retailers are realizing that customers are 
going to keep pressing them on price, because whatever reticence 
customers had about bargaining has evaporated.

"In the past, when you tried to get yourself a deal and it was an 
embarrassing thing - the kind of thing you did if you couldn't afford 
to pay," she said. "Now it's about being a smart shopper."


Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company



------------------------------------

Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/TriumphOfContent/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/TriumphOfContent/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/



!DSPAM:2676,47e6774e227561464520936!

_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
Futurework@fes.uwaterloo.ca
http://fes.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework


_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
Futurework@fes.uwaterloo.ca
http://fes.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

Reply via email to