I find it sooooo ironic that Sears, a company that started as a mail order company and then built a chain of brick and mortar stores, which were eventually connected by a very sophisticated computer and network infrastructure, is going out of business, while Amazon, the new mail order company, is growing by leaps and bounds including building bricks and mortar stores.
As an aside, how crazy is the English language, when the word mortar is a "glue" holding stuff together, a device to mix stuff together or a thing that blows stuff up?
I have found that buying from Amazon is usually the cheapest and fastest way to get things. My truck has an International engine, of which millions have been built, yet I have had trouble finding fuel and oil filters in local stores. I once went to three stores and not one filter was to be found.
Another irony, my JD tractor dealer DID keep these filters in stock. Yes, a JD dealer stocked fuel and oil filters for an International engine in a Ford truck.
JD's prices were cheaper than the local parts stores.
I could email my sales guy on Monday and have the parts Tuesday or Wednesday.
Unfortunately, my sales guy went to another JD dealer, and I then would have to call the parts desk and wait for someone to answer the phone. I don't have time for that crap so I started buying on Amazon.
Convenience is worth something. While I would love to buy from local stores, I can count the number of times I have gone to the store, and they do not have what I need. This usually wastes quite a bit of my time and so often, I could have ordered what I needed from Amazon, usually at cheaper prices, than the time it took for me to walk from my truck into the store. The time it takes to GET to the store and walk around looking for what they don't have is wasteful and frustrating.
I just needed some boat related stuff. I NEEDED a few things but I also WANTED some Dyneemia.
Fishery Supplies had everything I needed but at slightly higher prices than Amazon. Fine, I want Fishery to stay in business and the Dyneemia Fishery will cut to the length I need, which Amazon does not. Fair enough. However, there was one thing I needed, that Fishery did not have, but Amazon did....
Since my want of Dyneemia was trumped by what I needed, but what I needed was not available at Fishery, Amazon got the order.
Two of the things I bought were cheaper at Amazon. One was a set of needles. Amazon had Singer brand and Fishery had some other brand but looking at the packages, they were the same needles, packaged the same but with a different wrapper with a different name.
Fishery was also lacking details and photos on some other products I was looking at buying, and which I did not buy, because of this lack of information.
Decades ago, I was in a West Marine and it was obvious they were more into selling clothes than boat parts. Recently we were in another West Marine and they had a fair amount of empty space. We were actually looking for boat rain gear but their selection was not good at all. They did have lots of T shirts and flip flops though.
Which we could get at the numerous beach stores...
A company that does not have inventory looses the sale when that customer walks out empty handed. That company is likely to loose future sales when the customer stops going to the store because it is a crap shoot if the store will have what the customer needs....
Make it hard to buy and the customer will not be buying at the store, they will go to another store/company where the products is available and
easy to buy...
Later,
Dan