Mikey P
Administrator
I'm hearing lots of mumbling and grumbling from the small guys that their bread and butter, Juice sales, ain't what it used to be and only getting worse.
Losing sales to online sellers who are willing and able to make a living off of $10 to $20 profit from a case or bucket of suds when Mom and Pop need at least twice that to survive.
Shoe sales, bike parts, fishing reels, baby gear... doesn't matter what a brick and mortar is trying to sell it's the same for all that have to compete with Al Gore's devil baby.
It's the same all over but lets focus on those that are near and dear to us, the guys who fix our trucks, replace our O rings and stay open late so you can swing by and get the one gallon of shampoo for your early AM job you forgot about.
Is the only resort for them to go with private labeled chemicals? Or do like Cobb and start mixing it yourself? We know Larry private labels for many franchises but I wonder if he private labels for any suppliers who can't beat the big boys at their own game..
Good friendly service ain't enough in times like these to keep cleaners loyal to a shop or even a brand. MOST WILL GO FOR THE CHEAPEST OPTION for their favorite brand, and many once loyal broke dicks will go with substandard off brand stuff if need be. I hear Dollar General makes a decent pre spray.
What would you reaction be if your the Pop you've been buying your Ultra pack for 20 years from all of a sudden wants you to switch to his new "Mom's Best Silver Bullet" ?
Have you seen other industries combat the net successfully?
Any ideas?
Losing sales to online sellers who are willing and able to make a living off of $10 to $20 profit from a case or bucket of suds when Mom and Pop need at least twice that to survive.
Shoe sales, bike parts, fishing reels, baby gear... doesn't matter what a brick and mortar is trying to sell it's the same for all that have to compete with Al Gore's devil baby.
It's the same all over but lets focus on those that are near and dear to us, the guys who fix our trucks, replace our O rings and stay open late so you can swing by and get the one gallon of shampoo for your early AM job you forgot about.
Is the only resort for them to go with private labeled chemicals? Or do like Cobb and start mixing it yourself? We know Larry private labels for many franchises but I wonder if he private labels for any suppliers who can't beat the big boys at their own game..
Good friendly service ain't enough in times like these to keep cleaners loyal to a shop or even a brand. MOST WILL GO FOR THE CHEAPEST OPTION for their favorite brand, and many once loyal broke dicks will go with substandard off brand stuff if need be. I hear Dollar General makes a decent pre spray.

What would you reaction be if your the Pop you've been buying your Ultra pack for 20 years from all of a sudden wants you to switch to his new "Mom's Best Silver Bullet" ?
Have you seen other industries combat the net successfully?
Any ideas?