Very similar to a thread I started asking a simple question about why bike shops opening hours are different than other retailers. It was the most fustrating but most enlightening thread I have ever started.
To summarise that whole thread:
Bike Industry: yes they could open longer hours but that just spreads the same amount of sales across a longer period and the longer period equates to higher running costs.
Customer: the extended opening hours would result in more sales - due to a large majority of potential customers unable to make it to bike shops in the present opening hours.
Outcome: neither side agreed but it was educational. The bike brand distributor rules mean that the market is oversaturated in terms of seperate shops. NZ popoulation not big enough to support so many individual shops.
Quite a few customers cited a new breed of shops that weren't linked to bike brands that were adopting new business models in Auckland (Cycletreads/ deus ex). However, the population size differential in auckland meant that their business models might not be appropriate outside of the main centres.
At the end of the thread there was quite a good bit of brainstorming around what would constitute a good shop (from a customers point of view).
Unfortuantely, probably due to feeling a bit villified - industry posters generally challenge any post from a non bike industry poster as to the lack of realism for implementation purposes. Sometimes these arguments get really silly: I lost count of how many people kept saying "bikes shops can't open 24/7 that's just crazy" to the original question of "why aren't they open for longer at the weekends?".
This seems to be happening in this thread as well. As far as I could tell th OP was asking for a customers point of view on what the perfect bike shop is. He is not trying to piss off the bike industry posters. I know he can't stop bike industry people posting, but he did politely ask for them not to.
Would have made sense if the end "good" ideas from this thread could have be followed up in a seperate thread for the industry related posters take on the feasibility of implementation.
I personally can agree with a bit of both sides, customers will always want more, and no industry should allow the customer to dictate everything.
I think anyone can sympathise with the bike industry people. If someone came into my world with shallow knowledge of it and dared to express an opinion then I'll tell them to take that opinion elsewhere.
But, you can't blame the customer for asking for more - expect it and play nicely when they do - insults just piss off posters and everyone else who reads thm, and perpetuate a image (rightly or wrongly) of an industry that doesn't value the opinion of its customers.
Apologies for the long post.
Back on topic - If I had a bike shop I would scrap the discount card given to purchasers of bikes from that shop. This just lets everyone else know that they are getting a worse deal than anyone who bought a bike from there (when buying anything else such as parts or accessories).
It also makes any sales, to non bike purchasers, prone to the customer wanting to haggle as they already know that the shop is willing to give upto 10% discsount to some of their customers. It effectively creates a two tier customer system.
There - that should get the ball rolling again.
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