Home Forums Bike Forum Supporting LBS (I know one more)

  • This topic has 90 replies, 32 voices, and was last updated 15 years ago by juan.
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  • Supporting LBS (I know one more)
  • juan
    Free Member

    Oh well good to know I am an idiot then…

    RichPenny
    Free Member

    Only idiots shop in Tesco, you're welcome to the place if that's the kind of world you want to live in…

    emac65
    Free Member

    Tesco don't save me 1,000's of pounds though…..

    RichPenny
    Free Member

    🙄

    emac65
    Free Member

    🙄 🙄

    MostlyBalanced
    Free Member

    Any LBS that tries to equal the online stores stock variety will eventually turn into a museum, unfortunately.

    juan
    Free Member

    Any LBS that tries to equal the online stores stock variety will eventually turn into a museum, unfortunately

    yup

    stevenmenmuir
    Free Member

    Did you expect them to say, OK seeing as you've spent £1 we'll fit it for free. I bet they booked their holidays after they'd made that particularly huge profit.

    CaptainMainwaring
    Free Member

    I would use an LBS if he could compete with on-line shops in stock & price.Only an idiot would pay more for their goods than they have to…..

    1) They don't have to stock everything, but a well thought out selection that fits their customer profile will cater for probably 80% of what people want. They can also usually source specific stuff for you, or you can go online for the bits you need urgently

    2) Paying up to about 10% more than online makes sense. It gives you a place to try on/touch/play with stuff you are thinking of buying. You will also save more than the 10% in goodwill advice, sorting small mechanical problems for you, handling warranty returns etc

    Frankly you would be an idiot not to use a GOOD LBS when you can

    MostlyBalanced
    Free Member

    1) They don't have to stock everything, but a well thought out selection that fits their customer profile will cater for probably 80% of what people want. They can also usually source specific stuff for you, or you can go online for the bits you need urgently

    As a LBS in a small town myself, that means that I can't justify stocking any bikes over £700 retail and with the advent of DX no lights of 'off road standard' at all. I'd love to have more to show genuine enthusiasts when they do turn up here. Unfortunately there seem to be rather a lot of folks who stop briefly on decent bikes, look through the window and then move on when they see the family and entry level kit I do stock.

    emac65
    Free Member

    2) Paying up to about 10% more than online makes sense. It gives you a place to try on/touch/play with stuff you are thinking of buying. You will also save more than the 10% in goodwill advice, sorting small mechanical problems for you, handling warranty returns etc

    Each to their own but I run 3 of my own bikes & two for my kids so can save a small fortune online.As for advice,mechanical stuff etc,I think I'm probably a fair bit more capable than your average LBS shop owner thanks…….

    13thfloormonk
    Full Member

    My lbs can suck a fat one after ripping me off for £5 for a star fangled nut and to whack it in!!!!! I was desperate so paid it.

    Is this a troll? How could you consider £5 for a star fangled nut and fitting to be expensive? Shops are there to make money, or at least to break even, once you've taken into account the cost of tools etc they're making **** all profit out of your £5…

    I love online parts as they don't rip me off.

    Online parts don't install it then and there though, even if you're desperate. 😉

    emac65
    Free Member

    Online parts don't install it then and there though, even if you're desperate.

    That's correct,but then you get to do it yourself & know that it's been done right 8)

    juan
    Free Member

    ,I think I'm probably a fair bit more capable than your average LBS shop owner thanks…….

    The key is I think, you'll be surprised how many bike came in with badly fitted parts from people "who knows what they are doing".

    StumpyBlurRider
    Free Member

    i spent £60 @ wiggle an got 10p bag of sweets…cant beat that ? 😛

    13thfloormonk
    Full Member

    Emac65, the way i read that, he needed it fitted then and there, and the shop obliged.

    Had the shop grabbed the SFN from his capable hands, forced him to stand and watch as they fitted it, then extracted the £5 by force, I could perhaps understand his annoyance… 😀

    Edit: and please, paying RRP does NOT constitue being ripped off. Its amazing how people seem to get the two confused…

    juan
    Free Member

    and please, paying RRP does NOT constitue being ripped off. Its amazing how people seem to get the two confused…

    True
    RPP is kinda fair as it allows you to get be able to give a 10% discount. When my lbs sells something 180€ 100 goes to the manufacturer/importer (actually less nowadays) around 28 goes to the government. So less then 50 € goes to the shop bank account who have to then pay
    Rent of the premises, various and numerous taxes, the mechanics. So very little of it actually goes in the LBS owners pocket.

    wormhole
    Full Member

    just read jacketdogs therad…feel like a cheapskate now!! head hanging in shame because i agree with him but shop online/tesco most of the time. maybe its time to change all that.

    Ewan
    Free Member

    Just read jacketdogs post. What a joke. Why should I spend more money than I need to – what I choose to spend my money on is my own business, and if I choose to haggle over 30 quid, then I will (and do).

    Frankly I welcome large tesco's stores – I like the fact that I can go to a shop and get *everything* rather than waste my time trying to adapt my needs to what my local corner shop stocks. If they can't compete, then that's sad, but it's progress. I hate shopping, if someone can find a way to reduce the time I spend doing it and also save me money, then fantastic.

    RRP is a joke. Prices should be dictated by trade price + overheads + profit. Since everyones desired profit and overheads are different, there shouldn't be a need for an RRP.

    The best thing that's happened to the bike industry in this country is the internet – it's brought down prices and made *some* bike shops realise that if they can't match the price then they have to offer a price that is within reach of the online price (people will pay for the convience) and also offer other things of value (banter, shop rides, etc). I simply can not understand this whole 'you should support your LBS' – why? it wouldn't be expected in any other industry – bike shops need to offer compelling value or I won't shop there. If I told my clients at work that they should pay significantly extra to 'support me' i'd be laughed out of the room.

    juan
    Free Member

    If I told my clients at work that they should pay significantly extra to 'support me' i'd be laughed out of the room.

    What if your client told you they'll pay 30% less because they can't see why you should earn so much.

    Ewan
    Free Member

    What if your client told you they'll pay 30% less because they can't see why you should earn so much.

    They wouldn't, i'd have already looked at my competiors and seen they were offering the same service for 30% less and adjusted my business practices accordingly. If my competitors were not offering the same service for 30% less, then the client wouldn't be asking.

    jackthedog
    Free Member

    The domination of Tescos and the like is progress, you're quite right. It's unfortunate though that progress doesn't neccessarily mean improvement.

    I assume the progress you speak of refers to your being able to spend less time shopping, spend less money to do so, and being offered more choice.

    Those very much are benefits, no doubt about it. Although of those, to be honest I'm not sure the third really counts.

    Choice. We have so much choice. Endless choice. Flavours, colours, textures, sizes, shapes, and any combinations we desire thereof.

    Given less choice, would we be less happy? I don't know. Does more choice always equal better? Would we be more content as a people if the choices of frozen pizza/tv/anodised headsets were in the millions as opposed to the current hundreds? Would my life be any worse if I hadn't specced the specific hub and spoke colours on my current wheelset? I doubt it.

    Currently my home is served by about 30 or 40 TV channels, but I still have as much difficulty finding something to watch as I did when we just received four. I sometimes wonder if choice is all it's cracked up to be.

    So for me, the jury's out on that one. But the other two I agree with. I don't enjoy time spent shopping, nor do I like throwing my money away. So I recognise the modern methods of removing the need for either as being beneficial to us.

    Unfortunately as far as I can see, those two advantages (three if you love your choice) comprise the extent of the benefits to come from what you're calling progress.

    Because the other side of that progress is inbalance, injustice and the destruction of a society that functions in a logical and human way in favour of the creation of one that, in my opinion, very much doesn't.

    That extra few quid I spend over you buys me so much more than extra wallet space. The extra £30 it costs me when we buy our respective 72 engagement-point rear hubs goes on much more than the alumininium, plastic and steel. The thing it pays for is more than just a product. It's my personal contribution towards sustaining a way of life I think is right – one that's unfortunately being ravaged by a nation's single-minded focus on the financial.

    The opinion that the internet is the best thing to happen to mountain biking is very valid if you think of it only in terms of your ease of access to cheap choice. But there is a much bigger picture, beyond even the obvious that biking is about so much more than the products we choose. A bigger picture beyond the hobby that you yourself may very well not care about. Or perhaps very much do care about, without even realising it;

    Many of us now live in communities that have no sense of coherence. We don't know the names of the poeple that live 3 doors down. We dont talk to each other, and we've all developed a mistrust of each other. We see the youth sat outside the (chipboarded) local shops and we're threatened by them. And we go home and listen to the news and read the paper and complain at the state of the world we live in. How society is broken, and how the streets are dangerous, and how everyone is so self-absorbed and unwilling to help those around them. So many speak of having lost faith in the world.

    And yet the problem starts at home. Without that sense of community, without the communication between those we spend our lives around and those we should be there for and rely on, we start to fragment, and our happiness and contentment suffers.

    We need to feel like we're all in it together, and that we're all sharing the same world. And we need to relearn the value of each other, and think more of others and the wider social environment than our own relatively insignificant short-term gain.

    So whilever we conduct our lives from the end of broadband connections (irony noted), or scurry from our front doors and into our cars to drive to distant characterless, soul destroying superstores (did you say you hated shopping…) to buy our supplies, we're knocking further nails onto the coffin of civilised soceity.

    And while people may lay blame at the government and be correct to do so, I think the solution starts at home also. The way to stop this, as far as I can see, is to vote with your bank balance and choose which future to support.

    Even if you sometimes think it's largely futile. Though I find it tragic, you'll be glad to hear that the future is yours as far as I can tell. I unfortunately don't hold much hope for a better world. I feel outnumbered. Outnumbered by those like the clients that would laugh you out of the room should you ever ask for their support when faced with unfairly gained competition impossible to face.

    I feel impotent in my ability to change anything. But I can't let that feeling of futility destroy my hope. And so I'll continue to try, in my own little way making a difference by playing the long game and investing in the future while those around me I wish to help call me a fool.

    Ewan
    Free Member

    You read the Guardian don't you… 🙄

    You can read the break down of society into bike shops failing to compete efficently if you want. Me? I'll just be clicking 'Purchase now' on CRC. Choice is good. Low cost is good.

    Competition, efficent markets, and the march of progress is hardly a new event – Adam Smith proclaimed it in 1776.

    jackthedog
    Free Member

    The future's yours.

    And I've honestly never bought the Guardian in my life.

    Ewan
    Free Member

    You should, you'd like it 😉

    juan
    Free Member

    They wouldn't, i'd have already looked at my competiors and seen they were offering the same service for 30% less and adjusted my business practices accordingly

    Even if it means that it's not sustainable to work any more.

    Ewan
    Free Member

    Even if it means that it's not sustainable to work any more.

    Well then I'd need to look to see where my business practicies are failing. The client wouldn't pay 30% more out of charity, so i'd be going bust anyway.

    RichPenny
    Free Member

    If I told my clients at work that they should pay significantly extra to 'support me' i'd be laughed out of the room.

    Your client are paying significantly extra to support you, unless you run your business as a charity. If a massive competitor moved in and started offering similar but slightly inferior work significantly cheaper, you'd be out of a job. And people who wanted the extra bits you'd provide? They'd have no choice.

    RichPenny
    Free Member

    Frankly I welcome large tesco's stores – I like the fact that I can go to a shop and get *everything* rather than waste my time trying to adapt my needs to what my local corner shop stocks.

    Perhaps I'm lucky in that locally I can get everything I need and I don't have to drive 6 miles for it. It's generally better quality and often cheaper. Perhaps your town would still have a wide range of shops if people used them, rather than spend the few quid they might save at tesco on the petrol require to drive there?

    ozzybmx
    Free Member

    In Oz we pay WAY over the odds for parts . Im saying that things are nearly HALF the price from CR, Wiggle, Jenson ect

    The importers here rip the ass clean out of it, then the LBS takes their slice .

    We dont pay customs on items under $1000 (550 quid) , we get free postage on orders over $450 from CR and $95 from wiggle .

    The local bike shop is not going to pay my mortgage when im getting it tight , so why would anyone in the right mind pay over the odds when there is a cheaper and usually faster alternative .

    If the difference was only 10% i would consider it , but it's not .

    ojom
    Free Member

    the only thing i like about tesco is the wensleydale and blackcurrant cheese i have just nommed.

    otherwise its a faceless and homogenous humour free zone.

    not even cheap – green grocers and butcher is better and cheaper!

    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    Actualy, for everyone saying their LBS is more convenient……..

    I want to ride on Sunday for example.

    I need a new BB.

    do I:
    a) go on CRC, get it for £18, its before 3:30 so it'll be in the post tonight and on my doormat tomorow morning.
    b) shop will be closed tonight when i finish work, so I'll have to go tomorow, when they've opened (lets say 10am), no its a bus ride away, so i have to shell out another £3.50, then another £30 when I get there for the BB.

    How was the LBS more convenient? The same applies to fixing my car, I ordered everything online, it all arrived in big boxes via fedex, everyone is happy. Cant imagine how long I'd have been cathing busses all over town ordering and buying parts, 20min on the internet with a hayes manual and a credit card and the job was done!

    WorldClassAccident
    Free Member

    Back to the original question. ¨

    Go^onto the CRC or Wiggle or whatever site. Print out the page showing the thing you want with the specification and price. When you go to the bike shop take the print out and say 'Can I have one of them please'.

    They will know the internet price, the LBS price and the fact that you know it to yet still 'probably' choose to shop there.

    ozzybmx
    Free Member

    WCA , the chances are that you LBS dont have stock of 75% of the parts you want , so its just easier placing the order online , saving yourself the time and effort going down . Even in Australia i can have a CR order in 5-7 days.

    Its 2009 …. retail outlets are getting to be a thing of the past for many products, they either need to re-invent or shut up shop.

    ojom
    Free Member

    I think the heart of the matter is… you have a choice. If you like the web then use the web, if you like shops then use shops. All good.

    Its when we no longer have a choice thats the problem and also when there is too much choice.

    Things balance off eventually.

    WorldClassAccident
    Free Member

    ozzy – I use a blend of CRC and 3 different LBS. CRC for anything expensive other than complete bikes. 2 LBS for mid priced bits and mechanicing and the other LBS for cheap stuff or bits the other 2LBS don't have

    ozzybmx
    Free Member

    WCA , the shops arnt even in the ballpark with the prices here , so its a waste of time even trying . I remember an occasion i took a wheel in to get the cassette changed (have my own tools now) , the bike mechanic asked me where i got the XT cassette and price because he needed a new one ….WTF , he was saving $30 over his staff price to order it from the UK .

    gravitysucks
    Free Member

    I think the big picture here is service. Anyone can buy online and get bits cheaper but can you get those bits in an emergancy? do you have the tools to fit them? Are you competent to fit them? if they fail are you happy to sort out the warrantry and messing about getting them replaced?

    I for one will always support my local bike shop as I don't want them to disappear one day leaving me up sh*t creek when it comes to something simple like facing a BB which currently consists of drinking tea while someone does it for me with an expensive tool and then doesn't charge me for the pleasure.

    I understand that times are hard and people are looking to save money where they can but buying an X0 rear mech online because it £20 cheaper doesn't make sense to me. If your that hard up for £20 then buy and X9 and relish in the money you've really saved.

    Ultimately, I think that by buying everything from my LBS I don't feel ripped off. I think If I add up the price of all the freebies and small jobs along the way it would easily offset what money I could have saved by buying online;

    So I'm not financially worse off, I get lots of free tea, good conversations and banter from people I think of as mates which give me good advice about my bike and where to ride and then take me out into the hills to show me how it done…. Biking is a community that LBS's have an important place in.

    And for all the people that expect something for nothing…..
    "Can I get you a stick for that moon sir?"

    Ewan
    Free Member

    Perhaps I'm lucky in that locally I can get everything I need and I don't have to drive 6 miles for it. It's generally better quality and often cheaper. Perhaps your town would still have a wide range of shops if people used them, rather than spend the few quid they might save at tesco on the petrol require to drive there?

    Then i'd need to go into 6 different shops and queue up 6 times. I've got a Tesco's within 3 miles, and a Morrisons / Sainsburys / Waitrose within 1 mile. Much prefer that than a load of corner shops with no parking.

    Ewan
    Free Member

    I think the big picture here is service. Anyone can buy online and get bits cheaper but can you get those bits in an emergancy? do you have the tools to fit them? Are you competent to fit them? if they fail are you happy to sort out the warrantry and messing about getting them replaced?

    Bits in an emergency – there will always be some bike shops. Halfords or Evans are good for that (and Evans price match online). I can fit everything I buy bar a few (non emergency) things (suspension fork bushings springs (ba boom tish) to mind. The warrenty service I've got from CRC, Wiggle, and Merlin is better than the service I've got from LBSs in that regard.

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