T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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95.1 | Winning through intimidation | CRUMB::TTESTA | Recycle used notes, get an Echoplex! | Wed Nov 12 1986 16:27 | 43 |
| The only way to go shopping for musical instruments is with:
******* CASH IN HAND ******
Go window shopping for prices and such, but if you even remotely suspect
that you MAY see something that you really MUST have...
bring
**** LOTS OF CASH ******
Put yourself in the seller's shoes...money talks, all else walks.
It's real hard for them to let you walk out that door with your wallet intact
after seeing your cash.
I've bought lots of stuff, from lots of different places, in different
parts of the country and one thing remains the same...
WHEN YOU FLASH THE CASH, THEY KNOW YOU'RE THERE TO DEAL.
(Long winded success story follows)
When I bought my Les Paul from The Guitar Center in San Jose, (kind of a
GUITARS-R-US!) I told them what I wanted, they told me what THEY WANTED to SELL
me, I FLASHED MY CASH, and said I'm here to try out Les Paul's until I find the
one I want...I wouldn't let them hurry me, or talk me into something I didn't
want!
I tried several in the store, for quite some time. Once I had the
one I really liked, I even had them put new strings and adjust action and
intonation without hassle one! It needs modifications? Action too high? Tell
'em you'll wait for them to fix it up and try it again!!! FLASH THE CASH and
see how fast they bend over backwards!! More playing and then I'm satisfied!
I told him I wanted to talk money. He says list price is much_too_many
bucks. I tell him I'm not interested in LIST because Joe's music store can sell
me the same thing for LESS THAN LIST. I say I brought cash because I want the
very best price I can get, 'cause I'm buying TODAY, whether it's HERE or at
SOMEPLACE ELSE! I am becoming a cordial pain in the butt!
They've invested a lot of time and energy towards me because I HAVE CASH THAT
THEY WANT! They'll deal or they'll lose the sale.
End result was that I got MY Les Paul for very little above cost.
Probably my best dealing ever, but it also took about four hours! The next week
I asked to see my salesman for some other stuff and was told he got fired for
selling something for insanely cheap...a Les Paul or something...
Tom Testagrossa
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95.2 | just one | HAMSTR::PELKEY | | Thu Nov 13 1986 12:05 | 24 |
|
< Now, don't quote me on this, this is just what people have told
< me, but it just sort of burns me. Any thoughts, experiences?
Just one glaring example I've had to date.
I went in to one of the local places. (the kind of place you
go to for years, buy alot of stuff from, took lessons at in ones
younger days..) I bought a rockman. (Read a new rockman.) Took it
home used it. Great. So I go to throw the box out, saving the foam
insert. When I pulled the foam out, I not only found a sales slip
to some Jim Duhaime guy, but also found a warranty repair claim
in there with it from Tom Sholz !
So it wasn't a new rockman, infact, not only was it used, it
had also been sent back to the company for repairs. But it sold
for new, and was priced as new.
I called, yelled, complained, and the guy their said, "Oh I
didn't know, Well you want another one..."
They did get me a new one, but I think it's the principle of
the matter that ticked me off. I think they should have sold it
as a used piece.
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95.3 | list is a joke!!! | CASV02::BGOSS | | Thu Nov 13 1986 12:21 | 21 |
|
Some more advice:
Whenever I buy any musical anything and the salesman starts
telling me list I laugh.. List price is ca,ca, it means ca,ca nobody
in the world has ever paid list price!!! Just tell me how much you
want for it... If guitar list for $1400.00 cut in half thats what
they pay for it.. then bargain from there. Effects are a joke too.
something that cost $200.00 cost them around $70.00.
They usually make big bucks and the way they make it look like
such a good deal is by telling you what it list for...who cares?
Bottom line what do I pay for it.. They all bargain...
Try bringing a guitar into a music shop and ask them what they'll
give you for it, I dont care if it's a day old Les Paul,they'll
tell you that they can buy a new one for the price you want for
your used one. And they can!!!!
Brian.(glad to know an owner of a store)
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95.4 | | HAMSTR::PELKEY | | Thu Nov 13 1986 14:58 | 13 |
| re:3
Ditto ! The best way to buy guitars is NOT to walk in a store
looking like you just fell of the watermellon wagon.
Some places are more likely to sway on prices than others.
And you're right about list price. I usually buy effects,out
board gear, and such, mail order at 60% discount. Guitars, well
I've bought only two in the last 7 years. I paid big bucks for
em, but I will not be in the market for new guitars. If I want
another axe, Strap on the helmet, put on the goggles, Want Ads here
I come !
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95.5 | Dirty Tricks!!! | GORT::CALLAHAN | | Fri Nov 21 1986 16:28 | 21 |
|
Well ! back to the integrity question...
I bought a Music Man 130w head 4x12 cab at Daddy's
in Salem N.H. used in 1978. I used the amp live for about 6 months
and kept thinking it didn't sound just clear enough. I tried the
head with a friends Marshall 4x12 cab and it sounded nice and clear.
So time to pop the grill and look inside the cab, wala! nice Radio
Shack speakers!!!. It was too late to get it fixed so I at least
told them how disgusted I was with them! I bought a Marshall 50w
head and 4x12 cab later anyways (from another store!).
The other guitarist in my band (1978 still) bought
a 2x15 Fender Cab from Daddys and on the sales slip it said JBL's
were in it. Funny this cab had the same symptoms as mine as soon
as he bought it (muddy). Pop it open and what do you know Radio
Shack speakers, well this was documented on the sales slip so right
down to the store to get them replaced!!!
Larry C.
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95.6 | Ripoff deluxe... | 18631::CLOUD | Beat it, beat it, beat yo' guitar! | Fri Nov 21 1986 22:54 | 2 |
| Sounds like a music store to be avoided.....boycott Daddies!
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95.7 | Shameless Daddy's | MILVAX::EATON | | Fri May 15 1987 12:05 | 15 |
| You're absolutely right! My boyfriend and I have done some comparison
shopping between Daddy's and Wurlitzer's. He ordered a Rocktron
XDC unit from the old Wurlitzer's in Newington NH (now moved to
Portsmouth) and without any real bargaining to speak of, he ended
up paying around $230.. Later that day, we cruised up to Daddy's
in Manchester NH to price the same unit. After 1/2 hour of bargaining,
they proceeded to tell us that they absolutely COULD NOT part with
that piece and still remain in business for a penny under $300.
Talk about WEASELS!! I'm sure Wurlitzer's takes their own hefty
cut from their merchandise too, they seem to be making plenty of
money (judging by the location of their nice new store in Portsmouth),
but a difference of $75 on a $230 unit?? I bet we could have talked
Wurlitzer's down even lower had we not been so pleased with the
fitst price he gave us. Anyone who's buying their equipment at
Daddy's is being robbed.
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95.8 | | PARSEC::MELENDEZ | | Fri May 15 1987 13:59 | 3 |
| Ref .7, I have gone to Daddy's, and I did not even have to talk
to any one to know they were way out of line.
|
95.9 | Daddy's vs. EU (How ironic) | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Mon May 18 1987 12:44 | 16 |
| Well, let's just say that I find it somewhat on the order of astounding
to find a note discrediting Daddy's and favoring EU Wurlitzer.
Whether it's deserved or not, EU's has had a long historical reputation
of being a slimey place, and I've even heard that reputation confirmed
from both past and CURRENT EU employees. The current EU employees
will tell you the place has changed drastically, but even so, the
same employees have given me obvious misinformation (I'll avoid
being judgemental and calling them "lies") about products they don't
sell.
I'm wary no matter whom I buy stuff from. Recently, I have found
that by buying lots of stuff and dealing with the same person each
time, that I have got good services and decent prices from Daddy's.
db
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95.10 | Nix on Daddy's Nashua | EMERLD::DUBE | Dan Dube 264-4373 | Tue May 19 1987 17:43 | 15 |
| I will no longer buy anything from Daddy's. For one thing, they
will never match a price unless you bring in written proof that
another store is giving a lower price (at least in my
experience).
For another thing, I have found the majority of the sales people
(at the Nashua store in particular) to be rude, arrogant, and
generally unknowledgeable.
I sometimes bring equipment to be serviced there, however,
because it is convenient and they do a good job for a reasonable
amount of money.
-Dan
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95.11 | | MTBLUE::BOTTOM_DAVID | | Thu May 21 1987 12:13 | 9 |
| Nix on Daddy's in Portsmouth.
I will never darken their door again.
Imagine not being allowed to try out a guitar or amp without first
buying it....the salesman will play it for you. nice guys...and
beisdes I hate the manager...
dave
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95.12 | doowee, cheatim, & howe CORP. | CSLALL::ONEILL | | Tue Mar 12 1996 10:31 | 10 |
| It's been 9 years since the last note ( if I read it right) was
entered. Has anyones opinion changed twords the stores in question?
Has any store emerged from the pool of decite to become a trusted
operation. Ha sanyone dealt with the music workshop in salem N.H.
With the exception of one instance ( I bought a pair of speaker
stands and they only had one to give me at the time, I had to wait
for the other) I've felt pretty comfortable dealing with them. Of
course, I do such little buisness in music stores, I maybe a poor
judge.
Jim
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95.13 | My highly opinionated treatise on dealing with music stores | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | General MIDI | Tue Mar 12 1996 11:35 | 77 |
| I've said this many times before but...
I have had nothing but the very best experience with Daddy's Junky
Music in Nashua. So much so, that I find these other accounts
"astounding" although it's hard for me to ignore them.
I think what I derive from this is drive home the point I made 9 years
ago:
I think ALL these stores are capable of good experiences and bad
experiences. Nine years ago, you would never ever have a chance
of convincing me that EU's was a "nicer" place than Daddy's.
In fact, I had such consistent and uniform poor experience there,
that when a friend of mine left Daddy's to become an EU VP, he
called me and asked ME to be on their "customer advisory board"
and attend meetings to correct what he clearly thought was a
rampant problem at EUs. (And I accepted btw).
Nowadays, I continue to have good experiences at both Daddy's and EUs
and pretty much split my business between them. I have a 15-year
relationship with Daddy's but I've found nice people at the Nashua
EU's and IMHO Daddy's has recently tossed off WAY TOO MANY product
lines (like Ensoniq, Kurzweil, etc) and thus often I can't get what
I want at Daddy's because Fred Bramante (Daddy's President) decided
not to carry that line.
And the conclusion that I come to is that the BEST way to go is to
establish a good relationship with ONE (maybe two) stores.
I'll say "more power" to anyone disagreeing, but I think that those
folks who go around stores and always by from the store that gives
the cheapest price are losing in the long run. They've established
themselves in ALL those stores as someone who will always go for the
offer that's one penny less and have little chance of becoming a
"regular" customer.
To underscore that claim, I will tell you that BOTH Daddy's and EU's
have ALWAYS been willing to match a mail-order or competitive price
(with shipping) for me. They no longer even ask me for proof. In
fact, they matched what I thought was a ridiculous mis-print on a very
expensive sampler!
These guys know (I have "let them know") that I have "chosen" them
as "my store" and they know that if they give me a reasonable price
I will buy THERE and I will send my friends there, etc. etc.
So I don't think I'm paying any more than folks who go around quoting
other places and I also get the added benefit that when I walk into
either Daddy's or Wurlitzers I am treated like royalty because they
know "Dave buys and is reasonable".
I have gotten to take things home to try-out before buying, I get phone
calls when a good deal shows up, I get them to stay open a little later
on the night of a gig when something has broken and I am desperate
for a loaner (implying I also get the loaner), I often get a lot of
freebies, and I never have even the remotist problem getting them to
let me try out ANY piece of equipment I want.
I can't even remember all the special things they've been willing to
do for me. I could probably fill several screen fulls with it.
I regard this "relationship" I have with these stores as being
incredibly valuable and I would not even remotely compromise that
relationship for saving $5 somewhere else on a $1000 piece.
So... bottom line... you can have good experiences at any of these
places if you cultivate a working relationship with the store and
establish yourself as a "good" and "regular" customer.
Not everyone can do that. Not everyone buys stuff on a regular basis
(although you'd be surprised how they can even remember folks who
come in once a year and buy something).
But for me, this method is by far the best. Your mileage may vary.
db
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95.14 | | LARRYS::BROOKS | Natural Born Hackers | Tue Mar 12 1996 17:48 | 50 |
| I think I'll offer some deep insight into the 'big picture'
I too have had good and bad experiences in large chain stores (to
remain nameless). I attribute my (and other peoples) experiences to
some historical events.
Bad experiences - reasons -
I was young, AND/OR I didn't look like a serious buyer.
Didn't have much musical equipment knowledge (even though I personally
don't take advantage of less informed people, it is quite common in many
forms of commission based sales, not just music stores)
When I did try to deal a little, I came across as a punk kid, they'd
spite my efforts...and potentially lose a $100 sale (or get they're
asking price depending on how desperate I was)
Booming mid-80's economy...credit cards abound, greed, sellers market,
store could sell for near list price, somebody would want that last
high-end Charvel, or super-duper new electronic processor, and sign
on the dotted line.
Low unemployment. Sales personnel were greedy, generally
unknowledgable, and turnover was high.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Good experience -Reasons -
Music stores experience in a different economy. If these guys want to
stay in business in todays market, they need price protection
guarantees, loaner policies, good reputation, good service, and a
knowledgable, stable staff. Most chains have made dramatic improvements
overall in the last 4-8 years.
I now have a reputation as a serious buyer. I may not buy something
everytime I come in, but I do drop 4 digit $$$ on occasion, and the
sales guys know I do my homework on prices, and can spot BS. Sometimes
I don't even haggle, because they hit me with a good initial price, and
sometimes throw in 'freebies' (couple sets of extra strings, patchcords).
Yeah, I may not get down to the last $1 of their margin, but if they
treat me fair, I treat them fair, and give them the OPPORTUNITY to earn
MY money. If they break the trust, I can get what I want many other
places. I may have to drive further, or wait for mailorder, but I get
what I want. And I won't be back for quite a while...
Larry
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95.15 | Good and bad. | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Wed Mar 13 1996 10:22 | 66 |
| I agree whole-heartedly with what Dave is saying. When I was a
frequent-buyer of new equipment, I generally dealt with the same
store for everything. Most of the sales help knew me and treated
me very well. You can have a bad experience in any store. I've
had my share of bad experiences and have learned and I believe
in some cases, the store personell have learned as well.
Believe it or not some of the better experiences were with EU
Wurlitzers. I did a lot of business with the Worcester Store
a few years back and generally got treated very well from them.
I had one trying experience with them, but it was due to one
specific salesman and I believe he learned a tough lesson. I
was shopping for a new Strat and a new Jazz Bass and wanted to
use the buying power to get the best deal on both pieces by
buying them both from the same store at the same time. The
salemen I generally dealt with were busy with other customers
and a "new" guy waited on me. I started asking him to price
the 2 instruments with and without cases, with gig bags, etc.
and he became impatient with me. He finally said that if I
wanted him to match a mail-order price, he would but he wasn't
willing to answer a bunch of stupid questions. I told him that
I would wait to speak to another salesman. Later than night, as
I walked out the door with my new American Std. Strat, I gave
him the wave to let him know that he had just lost out on a
commission. I also relayed my experience to the store manager to
let him know that this type of treatment was unacceptable. It
never happened again after that.
Some of the slimer things I've seen over the years are as such:
One store that I shop had a nice new Strat on display. The tags
said it was a 62-Reissue Strat and it was priced like a 62-reissue
(~$800). Upon picking it up, I noticed the "Made in Japan" stamp
on the neck heel. I mentioned to the saleman that this guitar was
tagged and priced wrong. He started raving about how well the guitar
plays and how much people loved them. I drove home the point that
the guitar was tagged wrong (which was deceptive) and that the price
was at least $300 too high. A few weeks later, I returned to the store
to find the same guitar with the same tag and the same price. There
is no excuse for this. This is clearly a deceptive practice and an
attempt to take advantage of Fender's product proliferation and the
public's confusion with it.
I have a guitar at home which I bought under the impression that
it was a Gibson Blues King (This is how the store had it tagged).
It turns out it is actually an L00 reissue, not a Blues King that
I bought. I don't care all that much but there is a differance
in price between the 2 and the store clearly knew the differance.
I've had other experiences where a store will quote me a trade-in
price on a piece of gear, and then when I come in to make the deal,
they change the terms. This is unacceptable to me, and I will not
do business with anyone that changes terms in mid-stream.
If you think music stores are bad, you should attend a few guitar
shows. A lot of dealers bring instruments to shows to unload them
on an unsuspecting market that they hope they never see again. You
have to be really careful at shows, especially on pieces that are
sold as vintage. This is especially true of Fender instruments.
The way that Fenders are made it is very easy to swap parts and
misrepresent the year and originality of an instrument. Amps are
another area for problems. It is very common to find speakers,
transformers, or even face-plates swapped to increase the value,
or to use in another amp. Buyer beware.
Mark
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