I've been on both sides of the counter as salesman and consumer and here is my take:
Some store owners are total jerks - I lost several sales when working at a high-end downtown DC boutique because my cheapskate boss thought that giving a $50 discount on a $1,000 piece of gear (a lousy 5%) was too much. I'm sure that money walked right out the door and was spent somewhere else that afternoon.
Some shoppers are total jerks, too. They pick your brains, use up your time, and then buy used or shop your price all over town. That's life, a good salesman learns how to sniff out these worms early and broom 'em.
When I sold a full-boat system to a customer, I threw in the delivery and basic setup. They usually gave me a tip and everyone was happy. It also gave me a chance to scope out their house and see if they had any other entertainment needs that were unmet.
In addition, my retail-paying customers got free loaners if their equipment needed to be serviced and were allowed to take home equipment for demo, bargainers were out of luck. Plus, we'd even take in stuff on consignment to allow them to trade up. These should be the incentives for paying full-boat.
I think that if more store owners were willing to codify this stuff and show the customer how dealing with them has its advantages, they could close more sales of all types. Let the customer decide how much care they can afford and price the equipment on a sliding scale accordingly....
Some store owners are total jerks - I lost several sales when working at a high-end downtown DC boutique because my cheapskate boss thought that giving a $50 discount on a $1,000 piece of gear (a lousy 5%) was too much. I'm sure that money walked right out the door and was spent somewhere else that afternoon.
Some shoppers are total jerks, too. They pick your brains, use up your time, and then buy used or shop your price all over town. That's life, a good salesman learns how to sniff out these worms early and broom 'em.
When I sold a full-boat system to a customer, I threw in the delivery and basic setup. They usually gave me a tip and everyone was happy. It also gave me a chance to scope out their house and see if they had any other entertainment needs that were unmet.
In addition, my retail-paying customers got free loaners if their equipment needed to be serviced and were allowed to take home equipment for demo, bargainers were out of luck. Plus, we'd even take in stuff on consignment to allow them to trade up. These should be the incentives for paying full-boat.
I think that if more store owners were willing to codify this stuff and show the customer how dealing with them has its advantages, they could close more sales of all types. Let the customer decide how much care they can afford and price the equipment on a sliding scale accordingly....