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» The Letterville BullBoard » Letterhead/Pinstriper Talk » O/T How WalMart ate America (Page 2)

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Author Topic: O/T How WalMart ate America
Dale Manor
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I usually avoid these sorts of things but all this Wal Mart talk made me think of this article. It a bit of a read, but a good indication of the way they do business...and sometimes don't!


http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/102/open_snapper.html

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Dale Manor

Studio in the Sky
Minnesota


dalemanor@netscape.net

"Be who you are and say what you want, because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind."
-Dr. Seuss

http://studiointhesky.weebly.com/
http://studiointhesky.blogspot.com/

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jack wills
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and that's that!

Jack

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Jack Wills
Studio Design Works
1465 E.Hidalgo Circle
Nye Beach / Newport, OR

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Bob Gilliland
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Dale,

Great link/article! I read a few key points within the article that many here have been saying for some time now. Price does not always equal value; you may elect to not participate in the “rat race” but it does influence your market; long range vision is not something practiced and implemented by many – particularly with small businesses. Here are a few select paragraphs pulled in an effort to entice people to read the article. Quoted content below is from the Fast Company article authored by Charles Fishman and is copyright © 2009 Mansueto Ventures LLC.

quote:
Selling Snapper lawn mowers at Wal-Mart wasn't just incompatible with Snapper's future--Wier thought it was hazardous to Snapper's health. Snapper is known in the outdoor-equipment business not for huge volume but for quality, reliability, durability. A well-maintained Snapper lawn mower will last decades; many customers buy the mowers as adults because their fathers used them when they were kids. But Snapper lawn mowers are not cheap, any more than a Viking range is cheap. The value isn't in the price, it's in the performance and the longevity.
quote:
If you know nothing about maintaining a mower, Wal-Mart has helped make that ignorance irrelevant: At even $138, the lawn mowers at Wal-Mart are cheap enough to be disposable. Use one for a season, and if you can't start it the next spring (Wal-Mart won't help you out with that), put it at the curb and buy another one. That kind of pricing changes not just the economics at the low end of the lawn-mower market, it changes expectations of customers throughout the market. Why would you buy a walk-behind mower from Snapper that costs $519? What could it possibly have to justify spending $300 or $400 more?
quote:
Wier doesn't really think that a $99 lawn mower from Wal-Mart and Snapper's lawn mowers are the same product any more than a cup of 50-cent vending-machine coffee is the same as a Starbucks nonfat venti latte. "We're not obsessed with volume," says Wier. "We're obsessed with having differentiated, high-end, quality products." Wier wants them sold--he thinks they must be sold--at a store where the staff is eager to explain the virtues of various models, where they understand the equipment, can teach customers how to use a mower, can service it when something goes wrong. Wier wants customers who want that kind of help--customers who are unlikely to be happy buying a lawn mower at Wal-Mart, and who might connect a bum experience doing so not with Wal-Mart but with Snapper
quote:
Wier says, "I'm probably pro-Wal-Mart. I'm certainly not anti-Wal-Mart. I believe Wal-Mart has done a great service to the country in many ways. They offer reasonably good product at very good prices, and they've streamlined the entire distribution system. And it may be that along the way, they've driven some people out of business who shouldn't have been driven out of business." Wier wasn't going to let that happen to Snapper.
quote:
Wier had determined to lead Snapper to focus on quality, and through quality, on cachet. Not every car is a Honda Accord or a Toyota Camry; there is more than enough business to support Audi and BMW and Lexus. And so it is with lawn mowers, Wier hoped. Still, perhaps the most remarkable thing is that the Wal-Mart effect is so pervasive that it sets the metabolism even of companies that purposefully do no business with Wal-Mart.


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Bob Gilliland
InKnowVative Communications
Harrisburg PA, USA


"The U.S. Constitution doesn't guarantee happiness, only the pursuit of it.
You have to catch up with it yourself."

Benjamin Franklin

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Cam Bortz
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Bob G., Thanks for the link and those paragraphs.

I may give you a call today. We haven't talked in a long time.

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"A wise man concerns himself with the truth, not with what people believe." - Aristotle


Cam Bortz
Finest Kind Signs
Pondside Iron works
256 S. Broad St.
Pawcatuck, Ct. 06379
"Award winning Signs since 1988"

Posts: 3051 | From: Pawcatuck,Connecticut USA | Registered: Nov 1998  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Patrick Whatley
Resident


Member # 2008

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I just hate Wal-Mart because I don't like parking 200 yards from the store, walking a half mile inside the store to get to the diapers in THE VERY BACK, then having to wait in a line where I'm fairly certain I'm the only one who can speak English, just for the opportunity to have a cashier who wouldn't care if I dropped dead right in front of her roll her eyes at me when I tell her I don't need a bag for my one item.

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Pat Whatley
Montgomery, AL
(334) 262-7446 office
(334) 324-8465 cell

Posts: 1306 | From: Wetumpka, AL USA | Registered: Mar 2001  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
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