This is me. I love instant gratification on my purchased so I an willing to spend a bit extra if it goes to support local folks and I get it sooner. Win/win. I started shopping at best buy again when they started price matching Amazon. Guns just seem to be outrageously out of whack most of the time and the folks that work in so many locations tend to be of a certain unpleasant variety. $100 more is generally my limit on guns and its hard to find somewhere that comes that close to online prices. More than that and I think of ammo or reloading supplies and then the tax on top of it!clarionite wrote:I support local when I can. But I won't pay 2-3 times local for what I can buy online if I can help it.
I prefer instant gratification, helping the local economy, and seeing what I buy before I buy it.
Last weekend I was looking for a guitar stand. I needed two. I found two, one was marked at $20. Online it was $12. with shipping and the wait, I decided I wanted to buy it local. The other was $35. I could buy it online for $16. I opted to buy it online. Local stores should be aware of the online market and price accordingly. If they don't, they have no one to blame but themselves for the Showroom shoppers.
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Return to “Gander Mountain Bankruptcy”
- Sat Mar 11, 2017 8:21 am
- Forum: Off-Topic
- Topic: Gander Mountain Bankruptcy
- Replies: 61
- Views: 12033
Re: Gander Mountain Bankruptcy
- Mon Feb 13, 2017 11:26 am
- Forum: Off-Topic
- Topic: Gander Mountain Bankruptcy
- Replies: 61
- Views: 12033
Re: Gander Mountain Bankruptcy
Consumers will likely get the assets that distributors or other corporate entities didn't want to buy in bulk from Gander Mountain. What will likely be left are items with lower market appeal and profit margins like clothes and small accessories. And even those will be discounted in steps - marked up to full MSRP and then "discounted" slowly until it's all sold off. Liquidation sales rarely produce bargains for the consumer.