abracadabra said:In most any business the key word is efficiency. If a retailer can drop a middleman he'll do it in a New York minute. If he can reduce his cost by locating near a supplier so his shipping costs are reduced he'll do that too. The www is all about efficiency and the business that is the most efficient will dominate.
With the advent of the www the traditional brick and mortar stores are going to have to find ways to adapt or disappear simple as that.
Just like Wal-Mart replaced a lot of local small buisness the www will do the same for more small business while others will adapt and grow. The LHBS's business model has changed they need to recognize that. With forum's like this their expertise is no longer as valuable as it once was. And home brewers wishing to socialize, last minute purchases, spur of the moment purchase, brewers needing this or that in a hurry are all pretty small potatoes and is not IMHO a sound business model.
I like the idea of a LHBS creating a bulk buyers club. Say charge $25 a year and letting the members buy at or near cost. They come in pick up their entire bulk purchase and more than likely spend a few extra $ and leave. 100 members would generate $2500 a year and 100 bags of grain which should create an additional discount for the LHBS from the dist.
In a dynamic economic system I believe it's called creative distruction. Just like pretty much nobody's job is safe (unless you work for the govt.) nobody's business is safe either.
Austinhomebrew said:All homebrew stores have to have a brick and mortar store or they are not allowed to sell homebrew supplies.
I am sorry but I can't live on $25 a year so that you can buy what you want at cost. I want free rent and employees that work for free. It's not going to happen.
You are not creating $2500. No one gets that $2500 except the grain distributor. The discount you are referring to if you buy more grain is a penny a pound. A whole 50 cents more per bag. Employees cost 25 cents a minute at a minimum. The extra 50 cents per bag would pay for the employee to load the bag into your truck. At least I would have that covered.
I am going to bow out of this discussion because it is not based on reality at this point.
Bellybuster said:haha...reminds me of the time I brought up on an email list the place where one could rent a 20lbs CO2 tank that can be filled for $17 instead of the 5lbs bottle return program at the LHBS for $49 each swap. I was pretty much run off the list due to an LHBS owner being on the list ....it was fun
Bellybuster said:haha...reminds me of the time I brought up on an email list the place where one could rent a 20lbs CO2 tank that can be filled for $17 instead of the 5lbs bottle return program at the LHBS for $49 each swap. I was pretty much run off the list due to an LHBS owner being on the list ....it was fun
abracadabra said:It was just an idea nobody's forcing you to use it. And you are not the only LHBS owner out there that might read this thread.
Geesh what a grouch!
abracadabra said:It was just an idea nobody's forcing you to use it. And you are not the only LHBS owner out there that might read this thread.
Geesh what a grouch!
Sir Humpsalot said:I don't have a lot of money right now... But I'm listening...
I suppose from your perspective, the best way to do a group buy would be to put it on your site that you will purchase 100 (or however many) March pumps once 100 people have placed a downpayment, and you will sell them at a nicely discounted price to those 100 people.
Let each homebrew club, website, etc., all get the word out through their own channels and see if you can't make a nice buck and supply it at a dirt cheap price.
abracadabra said:It was just an idea nobody's forcing you to use it. And you are not the only LHBS owner out there that might read this thread.
Geesh what a grouch!
Austinhomebrew said:Everyone here knows that I am not a grouch,
I am just being realistic. If I charged a $25 annual fee so you could buy things at cost, if I looked in the general direction of a customer I would lose money.
Selling items at cost or close is bad for everyone and the economy.
Trying to now.GaryA said:I agree this sounds like a great idea. When are you going to open the shop that offers this?
Sir Humpsalot said:Cut the guy some slack. He spends his time here well and benefits us from being here. A bulk grain club might be fine for a LHBS, but it sounds like a lousy idea for an internet retailer, IMHO. And even for an LHBS, you'd have to be concerned about people buying for friends, or worse, buying for a club. And it's not even the dishonesty of that that would be the problem, so much as the fact that it would become incredibly difficult to estimate which grains and quantities to stock because you would definitely have a dramatic change in your grain orders. I say that because, obviously, the heavy brewers who are buying bulk would jump onto that deal first... and who knows home many of those will be there, but they'll all want a sack or two at a time. And just like that :snap: you could get Maris Otter into stock and be out of it within an hour. No more for another week.
Or you could ration it, limit them to maybe 15 pounds at a time. But then you seem like a scrooge when you're sitting on top of large sacks. And who's to stop that guy from just coming in 4 days in a row to get his sack at cost?
Evan! said:Got into this thread a bit late, but...I think the bottom line is, get the prices for a bulk buy on paper and show them to the LHBS owner. If he's a real businessman and has any respect for free market principles, he'll either meet your price or let you go with the bulk buy with no hard feelings. On the other hand, if he's a protectionist/socialist who doesn't really understand free market capitalism, he'll probably be an ******* about it...in either case, you'll then know where customers stand with this guy.
abracadabra said:In the first place I didn't suggest he do it for his online customers.
In the second place I thought his response was condescending.
In the third place if he could do it with pumps that don't spoil with time why can't
he do it with grains that do spoil.
I'm sorry but I just don't follow the logic of the rest of your argument.
abracadabra said:And by cost I was refering to your entire cost (Shipping, labor, rent, ect) not the purchase price of the grain itself.
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Sir Humpsalot said:The rest of my argument is simple. Grain takes up space and it spoils. Extra storage space also costs more money. LHBS's don't have the ability to just sit on thousands of dollars worth of grain that might be purchased sometime in the next few months or later. They try to remain lean as that reduces their rent (they can get by with a smaller store, or stock more different items).
So anything that dramatically alters their customer's buying habits and results in them running out of things or having difficulty predicting future needs is going to result in many unhappy customers.
Maybe a place like AHS who has a huge internet presence could do it for their in-store customers, but why would they when the in-store customers are already getting a great price (internet price, but no shipping sounds real good to me- no need for a further discount).
BierMuncher said:
abracadabra said:Trying to now.
Yep, Gourmet Alaska, the only guys in town. I hadn't thought about shipping grain up as freight before... I should look into that.Onescalerguy said:SPLASTik
Yeah thats the standard rate to Craig via NorthlandServices(used to be Boyer).I'm sure it varies town to town.Who do you use in Juneau?Gourmet Alaska?
malkore said:AustinHomeBrew,
I know that you are a vendor, and need to stay in business.
But if I can't afford to buy grain, then buying hops and yeast and equipment is a moot point because I can't brew without grain.
I've also kept aquariums in my day (and by that I mean large tanks, small tanks...total combined capacity of over 500gallons).
I had the same problems in that hobby: the local fish store wants $9 for a bottle of chlorine treatment that I can buy online for $4 plus $2 shipping.
Then, like now, I have to strike a balance. My LHBS doesn't even sell grain mills because they know they cannot compete with Monster Mills and Barley Crushers.
But its no cheaper for me to get hops online than at the LHBS, and liquid yeast isn't enough of a difference.
As a hobbyist, I have to buy online and at the LHBS, to support my hobby, and to support my LHBS.
And I buy a LOT more stuff at the LHBS than online...which I reserve for cheap kegging gear and specialty stuff liek dry yeast my LHBS won't stock.