On the other hand it should hence be none of our concern (as customers) since the sellers selling constantly at price below cost will lead them to windup of shop (no profit).
Which means bye bye WSRetail (and others) if it does continue with "predatory pricing".
Which also means the situation will become the same as it was before e-tailers came into existence in India.
This whole thing is based on the presumption that offline dealers are ethical. They are anything but ethical. Most are jackals ready to pounce on you any moment.Bigbyte pretty much summed it up perfectly. If you guys can't see what's wrong in that, I got nothing to add.
What they are doing is not only unethical, it's also against anti-competition laws. In France, Walmart, which was doing the same thing, was told to either stop selling the product or sell it at the market price.
All this would have been hunky dory if our country, like China, had opportunity for people to take jobs in the manufacturing industry at good wages. But that is not how the setup is at the moment and until we can challenge China or put regressive customs on all things made in China, where will all these people who will get displaced go. They way our middle-men are setup, it does make stuff expensive, but it also provides jobs to many people. If we are calling them out on being selfish and greedy, aren't we as consumers being the same when we decide to close our eyes towards such anti-competetion practices, just so we get a better deal.
Ironically, the sellers who are selling via Amazon despite knowing what they are doing, are digging their own graves.
Trusted dealer? LOL Yeah you can trust them to fcuk you over at every chance they get. And you have to take it with a smile.No.. you don't understand. These large online retailers are still running on loss. They have the money to suffer the loss for a few years. Their target is not immediate. They are clearing space for them.. driving the small scale sellers out of business. It won't be WSRetail going out of business but your neighbourhood mobile phone shops. (I just took phone shops as an example)
Just consider this, 4years back.. all your phones were bought from your trusted dealer in your nearby town. Now??
So who is losing?
This whole thing is based on the presumption that offline dealers are ethical. They are anything but ethical. Most are jackals ready to pounce on you any moment.
I used to buy regularly from a shop in Chandni Chowk(local electronics market in Kolkata). 2 month ago, I bought 3 USB OTG cables from them at Rs.100 apiece. I tries to haggle but the guy did not budge. I trusted that guy and hence paid him the money.
Later I found out that the same thing was being sold in the footpath for Rs.40. Even I had bought it from Ebay, I could have had it home delivered for Rs.70.
6-7 months back, I had bought an Enter USB sound card for Rs.160 from him. The same thing was available in Ebay at around Rs.70-80.
I used to trust that guy since he had sourced many a hard to find item for me and my friends. But after this, I will never go back to him unless I require something very urgently.
Seen this one too many. If you buy something from a shop, its priced more even if the very same thing is available at 1/3rd the rate on the footpath. Specifically with respect to mobile screen guards.
On a different note, a friend needed a LAN wire. She asked me to go along to get the same from a nearby shop - the guy quoted an exorbitant rate. For that price, you could easily get a LAN crimper, two jacks, and re crimp the broken wire yourself. So, trusted dealer goodbye. His laptop rates too were on the higher side.
And you also know the reason for that, don't you.
Shopkeeper has to pay rent for the shop, electricity at higher rates and also pay the attendants that he employs. But you get the option to check out different products, get the product in your hand the moment you pay and even checking the product for DOA, in case of certain products. As for your example about scratch guards, I see shopkeepers applying scratch guards for Rs. 200, that I buy for Rs. 20 and my supplier buys for Rs. 7. Mobile phone shops' major earnings are through sales of accessories because the margins for an average seller are pretty pathetic to say the least.
It's the same for every business. A free lancer will be much cheaper than contracting a company to write a software for you. And from what I have heard from my friends in the IT industry, even there the companies charge exorbitantly compared to the work that is being done.
Why is there an assumption that only brick and mortar stores have employees and pay rent + electricity. Who answers the phones for flipkart, who delivers their products, who packages it, who admins the site; and who will pay rent + electricity for their server space and warehouse space?Shopkeeper has to pay rent for the shop, electricity at higher rates and also pay the attendants that he employs.
Direct selling firms are facing the heat from online retailers. Amway, Tupperware and Oriflame have issued notices to e-commerce sites including Snapdeal, Flipkart and eBay, asking them to stop selling their products.
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/42748507.cms
Why is there an assumption that only brick and mortar stores have employees and pay rent + electricity. Who answers the phones for flipkart, who delivers their products, who packages it, who admins the site; and who will pay rent + electricity for their server space and warehouse space?
Frankly there's no point in even employing people at brick and mortar stores when they sit like buffaloes behind the counter. The whole experience of buying a product at a showroom is ruined when you encounter these salesmen with the take it or leave it attitude coupled with their half baked knowledge. If they aren't going to be useful, you might as well interact with a static webpage.
Univercell's MD apparently said with his volume he could easily match online pricing - but he didn't want to
Most of this brouhaha is fuelled by the recent entrants of Motorola and Xiaomi. Motos sells for the same price worldwide, so if they can manage it in foreign countries with minimum wages, then why not in India? I guarantee you if Motorola approached these brick and mortar stores first before deciding to launch it on Flipkart, they would've messed up the pricing or not even bothered to launch it.
Edit: I agree about the need for India to groom its own manufacturing sector.
Samsung launched the S5 Mini exclusively on FK. What will happen to it then?We might not find Samsung mobiles online from now on. http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...-smartphones-online/articleshow/42741523.cms?
By the way whose buying Samsung phones now a days.![]()
Yeah everyone's surprised. S5 mini is a flop product though.Samsung launched the S5 Mini exclusively on FK. What will happen to it then?
Recently I have not heard of any phone from Samsung which has been a hit. But still their crap sells in decent numbers since they have a brand value.Yeah everyone's surprised. S5 mini is a flop product though.
No matter it won't sell stock to e-tailers. But small business would list on Online shopping sites.
Nothing is permanent but change.
On humane grounds , I sympathize with the offline traders. But pity at them not accepting the change. The world is changing fast. From industrial age we moved to digital and beyond. Competition is cut throat, so businesses will have to look for newer ways to cut costs. They cannot stop evolution, but should adapt.