Wondering through the bike shops the other day, and I noticed there were hardly any second hand bikes. Usually front entrances are stacked full.....
Wondering through the bike shops the other day, and I noticed there were hardly any second hand bikes. Usually front entrances are stacked full.....
My bass is such a slapper.......I cant stop fingering those strings
A recession plus higher rego fees must have some effect, and I think most Bike Shops are struggling.
I had not noticed exactly what you described on the North Shore.
Red Baron (Ak city) was pretty devoid of second hand bikes the last time I looked though.
Interesting theme for further comment.
I think Bike shops are very complacent and not very reactive, there are 5 bike shops that know im looking for a bike and they have an idea what Im looking for, they have my contact details etc ..........NONE have contacted me in the last 3 months.................fuck it buy a race car instead![]()
Ive run out of fucks to give
i once rang every bike shop from wellington to gisborne accros to new plymouth looking for a bike for my partner, the most common reply was have you tried trade me, next most common was we don't even know what that is
Honda BROS 400 BTW
now if someone rang me i'd be typing with one hand to A find out what one was B see if there were any on trade me that may even be able to be chanelled through the dealer.
it truly was like everyone had just surrendered to the great white trade me.
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Your beliefs don't make you a better person, your behaviour does.
Its also that they are too uncompetitive.
Ive seen a few older bikes outside cyclespot, like an early 90s CBR250 in average condition, and they are asking about $5K for it. If they sold them with barely a margin I think theyd clear a lot more stock, then get a lot of customers coming back for services etc.
Servicing is a dirty word for most businesses. They do it because they have to offer it to get sales on new vehicles, equipment or whatever, but the trend is to close down this part of a business if you can.
It is expensive re necessary stock holdings, training requirements for staff, and it is usually hard to schedule a steady throughput of work which makes a profit.
It is much easier to employ a salesman in a suit or whatever and make several thousand profit on each sale (if you can.) Training "a suit" to tell lies convincingly is apparently a lot easier & more profitable than training a mechanic or technician. Welcome to 21st century NZ!
The industry is in bad shape. Economy, tax levies and cheap performance cars have had an effect. There are a few bright spots. KTM eg. But big picture, 2007 would be nice.
My guess is over the next few years there will be a shift towards the current Hyosung business model. Distributor and retailer combined.
Last edited by Big Dave; 10th October 2012 at 14:41. Reason: added a bit
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Your beliefs don't make you a better person, your behaviour does.
I'm no expert, but when was the last time you saw a second hand car in a branded car dealer? Some do keep the good trade-ins to resell, but many only have new cars. Why should bike shops that are affiliated to a brand be any different.
I'm guessing if you are going to take up floor-space in a showroom it might as well be with something that makes a reasonable margin.
Like I said, no expert, just my uneducated guess.
If you can keep your head when all about you are loosing theirs.........it's quite possible you haven't grasped the situation.
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