T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3213.1 | | LEDS::ACCIARDI | | Tue Dec 12 1989 22:18 | 15 |
|
The A500/A590 system at the Leiser Superstore in Auburn MA was working
perfectly. There was a whole diskful of the great ray-traced
animations, and everything was set up and working properly. Someone
even figured out how to get all the ASSIGNs set up correctly.
The A500 really stands out among the sea of low-cost CGA/8088 clones
that they're selling. The only problem is that they don't sell a shred
of software for either Amy or the PC clones! Who on earth would buy a
system from a dealer that can't even demo a simple word processor?
Especially, as Steve points out, when their prices are almost full
retail?
Ed
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3213.2 | CBM off target | SALEM::LEIMBERGER | | Wed Dec 13 1989 04:27 | 10 |
| I think that CBM has taken a step in the wron direction with is's
mass market decision.While thay will get more visability this way
one has to wonder if this is good.I mean more visability in a setting
that will not support the pontential of the system,and at a cost
that is not structured for the mass market may do more harm than
good.It will probably promote IIgs sales more than amigas.Remember
that if your shopping for a computer in a TV store,you probably
don't understand the market.I can hear it now"I saw an Amiga this
week,looked ok but no software"
bill
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3213.3 | One mass market deal was axed. | STAR::ROBINSON | | Wed Dec 13 1989 10:13 | 4 |
| FWIW, the new prez of Commodore axed the planned deal to sell 500s through
SEARS. The old pres had set it up and the advert made it to the catalogue,
but they pulled the distribution ostensibly for just the reasons mentioned here
and on the nets and in the mags - selling mass market can harm the Amiga image.
|
3213.4 | | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ BXB1 | Wed Dec 13 1989 11:32 | 26 |
| I'm ambivalent about the "mass marketing" of the A500. While I would
NOT want to run into A500s at Toys-R-Us or Caldor, I WOULD like to see
them at Sears, Lechmere, and similar places that can do them SOME
justice. Why? Because customers won't find the Memory Location and
the other truly great Amiga shops by themselves.
First-time computer buyers don't know where to go or what to buy. Most
would rather buy from a dealer that they have some confidence in.
The same types of places that sell name-brand TV sets and stereo
equipment are likely candidates for PC sales, including the A500.
Commodore should help these companies to break into that market, if
they haven't already done so. Commodore is in the nice position of
being able to supply a PC clone at an attractive price, and the A500
(also at an attractive price) to catch the Apple crowd. The dealer
should also be supplied with a few (not more than a dozen titles total)
decent productivity packages for each (the Gold Disk Appetizer pack is
a good start in this regard).
Once new users are in the fold, THEY'LL find the serious dealers for
upgrades and additional software. As I see it, everybody wins!
Commodore gets much better market exposure (and hopefully sells a bunch
of systems), the "mass-market" dealers have a new product line without
an obscene investment, the serious dealers have a larger installed base
to draw from, and (as a result of increased Amiga sales) more software
houses crank out quality software and accessories for the Amiga.
|
3213.5 | | HPSCAD::DMCARR | Asleep at the mouse | Wed Dec 13 1989 12:06 | 15 |
| Re: .3 (Axeing 500 sales thru Sears)
Definitely NOT TRUE. I'm not ashamed to admit that I bought my 500 thru
Sears, just 2 weeks ago. Took just a week to arrive in the store from the
time I placed the order. Why thru Sears & not a dealer? My wife's an
employee & the price with her discount was just too good to pass up.
All the rest of my equipment came from either Memory Location or Omnitek,
so I don't feel bad at all having bought my 500 from Sears. FWIW, 2 years
ago I purchased my 128D from Sears as well. I really wonder why they don't
carry the Amiga in the store, since the other Commodore computers are
on display (64C & their IBM clone). I'll agree, you don't get the support
you get from a C= dealer, but its a viable method of getting Amigas
some publicity.
-Dom
|
3213.6 | | CANAM::SULLIVAN | Steven E. Sullivan | Wed Dec 13 1989 14:13 | 49 |
| Ed,
> The A500/A590 system at the Leiser Superstore in Auburn MA was working
> perfectly.
The problems that I fixed had happened yesterday afternoon. Before that, it
had been working well. It is again!
> The A500 really stands out among the sea of low-cost CGA/8088 clones
> that they're selling.
I agree 100%. It definitely generated some interest while I was there. I feel
this is THE reason to place the "entry point" in a mass market store. It gets
people going on it. It also helps to have sales folks that are interested in
the product... As I said, I had met one, I hope there are others there too.
The A500 is priced in the range of Leiser mass market products. It also gets
much more visibility there than at the Memory Location or System Eyes. People
who are not explicitly looking for an Amiga get a change to compare it to
the dregs of the IBM clones which are priced in the same area. Makes the
Amiga look really fine!
> Who on earth would buy a system from a dealer that can't even demo a
> simple word processor?
Ah, but they could! There was a music program, paint program, word processor,
and some other programs available as well - from the appetizer package. Also
the Amiga 500 tutorial was there as well. See, not as bad as you might think!
I feel that mass market selling of the A500 is not bad if:
1) The mass marketeer provides access to Amiga software directly (or)
2) The mass marketeer does not sell software but provides a list of SW dealers.
3) Commodore provides 1-800 number SW dealer location services which are BOLDLY
pointed out in the documentation (in the box). You know, where are the
nearest "n" dealers of Amiga SW?
With the above, even Memory Location should be happy about mass marketing the
Amiga 500. The initial sale is lost, but that is relatively low margin anyway.
What is won is the followup software business the mass marketeer probably did
not want anyway. Result - Much higher software and peripherial sales at the
Amiga specific shops we all want to support anyway. Remember, the Amiga 500
is within the price range of an impulse buy, and people who buy the Amiga
from a mass marketeer would likely not have searched out the memory location
*before* buying an Amiga.
-SES
|
3213.7 | | STAR::ROBINSON | | Wed Dec 13 1989 17:50 | 4 |
| re: .5 Very interesting. So much for believing everything you read! Since
I hadn't seen any displayed in SEARS, I thought the story was true. It seems
weird to display 128s but not Amigas.
Dave
|
3213.8 | | BAGELS::BRANNON | Dave Brannon | Wed Dec 13 1989 23:18 | 15 |
| re: Sears
one other possibility could be that CBM tried to cancel the
deal but Sears knows how to write a good contract to prevent things
like that. After all, I don't imagine Sears would have been real
thrilled to have to send back the $500+ to anybody who ordered a 500
from the wish book.
Of course, then again, there is the new SEARS, the one that boasts
of brand name merchandise and has finally started competing with
K-Mart and other mass market stores. Just the sort of place CBM
claimed to want to keep the 500 out of. Has anybody seen a 500
in the store, not just in the wish book?
-Dave
|
3213.9 | Risk vs Benefit | CGHUB::MILLER_C | Chuck - Don't Worry, be HOPpy! | Thu Dec 14 1989 10:46 | 29 |
| I think a key point that should be considered when weighing the
pros & cons of mass merchandising is that the people will pick the
brains of the experts at the computer stores and then buy the systems
at the discount chains. It only takes a couple of years of that
type of behavior to drive you local computer store out of business.
Mass merchandising can be the death knell of a technical product
whose success is built upon the resources behind the sale.
When you go to Lechmere's or Sears to but a TV or Stereo and you
have technical questions about features of one product vs another,
or one vendor vs another, you find out that this bonehead ususally
works in the Kitchen Department and all he can do for you is ring
up the sale (if you know what you want). Where is the added value?
Selling a couple of A500's into household without having the technical
ability to properly set expectation about the features, learning
curves etc will leave a customer frustrated and feeling like this
technolgy is a bunch of hype. Then they go about badmouthing the
manufacturers product.
I do not like throwing my money away, but I recognize the value
of technical expertise (not everybody has the DEC Notesfile at their
disposal), and there is a cost associated with that expertise.
A manufacturer has to be very sensitive and selective in how they
pursue sales channels.
Chuck
(who just got off his soapbox)
|
3213.10 | Leiser seems not to want cooperation with SW sellers....
| CANAM::SULLIVAN | Steven E. Sullivan | Thu Dec 14 1989 13:43 | 10 |
| RE: .6
I called the Memory location and spoke with Don Towne. He told me he has
already contacted Leiser corporate and they consider him to be competition.
This means they do not want any referals to The Memory Location [or other
amiga dealers....] in the Leiser Stores. Heavy Sigh! I think a cooperation
could benefit Leiser, Dedicated amiga dealers, and most of all the Amiga
customer.
-SES
|
3213.11 | start them on the right foot | LEVERS::MEYER | Dave Meyer | Thu Dec 14 1989 16:20 | 34 |
| Lechmere and Sears have been selling Epson, Laser, Franklin, Panasonic,
Brother and a number of other brand names for a number of years
now with little damage to those names. Radio Shack has been selling
their Tandy line for nearly a decade and sales are still brisk in
spite of "boasting" a below average bang-for-buck ratio. These
three chains are not Zayres or Caldors or Medi-Marts, not quite,
and the buyers expect to find "respectable" merchandise on their
shelves. Their customers don't want to know about cutting edge
stuff and wouldn't know what to do with it or why they should try.
They want to be able to return it if it breaks, have it delivered
if it's bulky, not have to argue about the warranty, and if they
give one to Aunt Maud who still lives over the river and through
the woods then she won't have to bring it to THEIR local store if
there's a problem.
There have been suggestions that people who want advanced utility
or information might either pirate it from the specialty stores
or never find the specialty stores to fill their needs. Face it,
most computer users to not have the specialty needs that many of
those active in this file take for granted. A very many Amiga 500s
are purchased with arcade action in mind and WP, DP, graphic design
and spreadsheets on the tongue. This is not unusual for any model
capable of graphics. Check out the ads in the WantAdvertiser - or
your local variant - and see the used systems being sold with "hundreds
of dollars worth of games" and one or two productivity packages.
The folk who buy at Sears most likely are not yet ready to deal
with what the specialty stores have to offer, like the A2500HD with
(mumble software mumble), but will take the product that catches
their eye and then either grow up to the serious stuff or hide their
mistake in the closet. Better they grow up in the GUI tradition
than on a clone.
Apologies to anyone who feels that my sweeping generalizations
were intended to apply to them. Just reading, much less participating
in, a notes file such as this raises you out of the category of
"most users".
|
3213.12 | | HPSCAD::DMCARR | Asleep at the mouse | Thu Dec 14 1989 22:19 | 25 |
| Re: .11
> The folk who buy at Sears most likely are not yet ready to deal
> with what the specialty stores have to offer, like the A2500HD with
> (mumble software mumble), but will take the product that catches
> their eye and then either grow up to the serious stuff or hide their
> mistake in the closet. Better they grow up in the GUI tradition
> than on a clone.
> Apologies to anyone who feels that my sweeping generalizations
> were intended to apply to them. Just reading, much less participating
> in, a notes file such as this raises you out of the category of
> "most users".
Gee, thanks Dave. What a friend. :-) Apologies accepted. :-) :-)
A lot depends of course on the expertise of the person in the mass-market
store (or specialty store for that matter) selling/demoing the merchandise.
Omnitek (an authorized C= dealer) has taken some heat lately in this
conference for not being "up to snuff". I've been given some pretty
pathetic demos at Apple dealers and had seen some pretty impressive
demos given at Lechmere when they were selling Atari STs. I'll agree,
I wouldn't want to see 2000s on sale at Sears, but getting the 500 out
there in this manner is okay by me. Just as long as Amigas don't start
showing up on the Home Shopping Network :-}.
-Dom
|
3213.13 | Oh, Hi there. | LEVERS::MEYER | Dave Meyer | Fri Dec 15 1989 00:52 | 9 |
| Dom,
now how did I guess that my comment might catch YOUR eye? ;-)
The one time I looked at computers in Sears, not that long back,
not one of the three salespeople knew as much about ANY of the several
computers on the rack as I knew about most of them. What could
they offer for a demo ? Some software that various customers had
opened in the store - and they hadn't the slightest idea how to
use it. Oh, it needs a mouse? (joystick?) Gee, we don't have any
of those on the floor right now. I didn't buy there.
|
3213.14 | HSC | NAC::BRANNON | value added | Fri Dec 15 1989 13:20 | 14 |
| Actually, selling Amiga 500's via the Home Shopping Channel isn't
that bad an idea. They target the not quite PC literate user that is
just looking for a complete package (hardware & software) that matches
the claims HSC makes. Its an impulse buy. I enjoy listening to the
callers that get put on the air at 3am in the morning justifying why
they just bought an over $1000 computer from HSC.
They offer to provide the same level of security that an earlier reply
indicated was needed.
Plus it would give the Amiga alot of "free" publicity for at least name
recognition.
dennis (who has never bought from HSC)
|
3213.15 | Sears instead of mail order? | TLE::RMEYERS | Randy Meyers | Fri Dec 29 1989 02:34 | 19 |
| Commodore needs to do something to add to the dealer base, and I suspect
that Sears isn't such a bad idea.
One of the goals of Copperman is no mail order, and he seems to be working
to eliminate it. Once he does, that means that potential Amiga owners
in areas not served by an Amiga store will not be able to get machines.
"Low end" dealerships like Sears or electronics stores are needed to
make Amigas available in backward parts of the country. (Its my impression
that the "low end" dealerships tend to offer machines for close to list
price, so a full service dealer would rather compete against Sears
than a mail order house.)
About Sears:
The version of the story that I remember was that Commodore was negotiating
with Sears before Copperman became president. Copperman loved the idea of
Amiga 500s in Sears stores, and hated the idea of Amiga 500s only in
the Sears catalog. Unfortunately, he wasn't able to get the 500 into the
stores, or back out of getting them in the catalog.
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