T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1041.1 | Organization | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Fri Dec 04 1987 08:37 | 28 |
| First I have to say, that at THIS moment I'm not particularly motivated
to take up the ball on organizing this. I think we do need some
organization and of course at every purchase, someone needs to do
the legwork of getting quotes.
Perhaps we should start with a discussion of how you "get into the
loop". I've created informal buyers unions and the following
information needs to be known:
1) What EXACTLY you are looking for
2) What is YOUR top price (above which you would "pass")
3) Understanding the committments. You can not "order" something
and then "change your mind" because that affects the whole deal.
Trust me, it's very important that what is agreed upon is clearly
understood and honored. There is significant risk here.
4) Money transfers
5) How you WITHDRAW your "order". We don't want to have someone
ordering 3 HR-16's only to discover that 2 people bought them
somewhere else and don't want them anymore (see also "committments")
I'm very busy right now. It would be great if someone would draft
an informal proposal for public comment.
db
|
1041.2 | Assuming the Lotus position... | JAWS::COTE | Sequencists are musicians too! | Fri Dec 04 1987 08:51 | 17 |
| I'm willing to put together a spreadsheet so that the costs and
savings of a bulk purchase can be shared equitably.
Why is this necessary? Because in a bulk purchase (3 MKS-20s, 2
MIDIVerb IIs, 6 HR-16s, etc...) you're going to have some items like
the MVIIs that you'll probably find a larger price differential
between dealers, while items like the HR-16s are gonna be hard to
find a discount on for a while. I don't think the MVII purchasers
should subsidize the HR-16 purchasers beyond the power of buying
in bulk.
It'd be tricky to do, but methinks assuming the Lotus 1-2-3 position
for a couple hours would yield something...
Comments?
Edd
|
1041.3 | Proposal needs your tomatoes... | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Snowstorm Canoeist | Fri Dec 04 1987 14:50 | 53 |
| Just so we have something to shred, I'll propose the following.
Note that I am NOT volunteering as the "trusted party", but I do
have a particular store (amenable to haggling and package deals)
that I will contact...
Flaming Tomatoes Here, folks...
By the first of a month, you put in bids on gear. You do this by
sending a money order in to some "trusted party" for the maximum you
are willing to pay for it. That bid represents a COMMITMENT to
purchase for that value or less, and gaurantees that if the gear is
purchased, that will be the most that is paid for it. Shipping by
UPS/FedEx is included in your bid.
(Why a money order rather than a check? So that we can truly claim
"cash in hand")
All bids ought to be recieved by, say, the 1'st of the month. The
list (who, piece, bid $) goes into a topic note.
By the 7th of the month, each participant shops their favorite contact
store. They get a total cost for all bids, with a line-by-line
breakdown. Each stores results are posted in a reply note in this months
topic.
If a store can't sell at less or equal to bid price, the best price
is posted, but no gear will be bought. That way, if the bidder
rethinks his position, he can up his bid.
On the 8'th, the store with the lowest TOTAL cost gets the order.
If a store does not carry one or more manufacturers, then the winning
store is the one which gives the lowest prices on that subset of
things it does carry (or can order at a gauranteed price). The
money orders are sent to the store, and they UPS the material out.
If the winning store does not carry what you bid on, you can NOW
ask for a refund. You have until the 15'th to post your refund
request.
By the 15'th, all stores are re-contacted for a new line-by-line
on the remaining items. Results are posted in the monthly note.
Those that want refunds have them.
If you haven't asked for a refund by the 15'th, the material WILL
be purchased at the best price (provided that it is less than your
bid price)
On the first of next month, the cycle repeats...
|
1041.4 | | MENTOR::REG | | Fri Dec 04 1987 15:03 | 17 |
|
This is a question, not a tomato;
What if the lowest total price doesn't get me the lowest price
for my item ? i.e.
a) How can I then back out and go it alone ?
b) If ans to a) is "Ya can't !". Then why should I be subsidizing
the other partys ? [Yeah, I'm a nice guy, but not when it
comes to paying an extra $50 so that someone I don't know can
save $51]
Reg
|
1041.5 | Can you say 'Allesis'? | AKOV76::EATOND | Press.. Press.. Pull! (nyuk, nyuk) | Fri Dec 04 1987 15:05 | 5 |
| RE < Note 1041.3 by CTHULU::YERAZUNIS "Snowstorm Canoeist" >
How are delayed shipments dealt with?
Dan
|
1041.6 | With a razor??? | DARTS::COTE | Sequencists are musicians too! | Fri Dec 04 1987 15:11 | 27 |
| I see a problem...
When you make a BIG order, are you likely to know the actually price
*you* paid for any piece??
Ex: HR-16s go for 450. MLP. no discount in quantities of 1
DX7 go for 1600 easy to get get discount to 1400...
MKS-nn go for 2850, can be had for 2500
So we order...
10 HR16s 4500...
5 DX7 8000...
2 MKS-nn 5700..
_________
List 18,200
- (5*200) 1,000
(2*350) 700
_________
net 16,500
...but since such a big order we get it for 16,000 flat.
How do we split the $500???
Edd
|
1041.7 | The west is the best | SRFSUP::MORRIS | Ashley Morris | Fri Dec 04 1987 15:33 | 4 |
| re -.1
5 DX7 for $8k?
At the Guitar Center in Hollyweird they cost $899!!��
|
1041.8 | Do we have to batch the orders ? | MENTOR::REG | | Fri Dec 04 1987 16:12 | 9 |
|
Well, an *ALTERNATIVE* might be to establish ourselves as a
buying group with all the usual outlets. Then we could individually
ask for the decommusic additional discount (hopefully > 0) on single
items. Dunno how to do this, incorporate as .....???, not for profit
buying group ???
Reg
|
1041.9 | Check this plan out | BEOWLF::BARTH | | Fri Dec 04 1987 16:26 | 32 |
| In response to Ed's "how do we divide up the savings?"
Well, assuming you will save more as the price of the product goes
up, we just take a percentage of the total price for each item;
e.g., making Edd's example simpler:
1 item for $100
1 item for $200
1 item for $50
total $350
Say we get a discount of $50 -- total is now $300
Take each item, divide by total cost:
$200/$350 = 57%
$100/$350 = 29%
$50/$350 = 14%
So, the person who bought the $200 dollar item gets $50*(57%)
= $28.50
the person who bought the $100 item gets $50*(29%) = $14.50
etc.
How's that sound?
Ron
|
1041.10 | Gross overbids and underbids break percentage refunds. | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Snowstorm Canoeist | Fri Dec 04 1987 18:09 | 34 |
| Actually, I hadn't envisioned it that way- I had more a "you pays
what the store with the lowest price claims is the line-item cost".
If you overbid, you get a refund. If you underbid, you get the
opportunity to revise the bid or withdraw it.
That way, you couldn't get an incredible deal on a DX7iiFD by bidding
$50 on it... you would not find a store willing to part with the
DX7iiFD for that little on the line-item cost. If we split straight
percentagewise, it might be possible that a dealer would be able to put
together a package (say, 10 DX7iiFD's) and be lower than all others.
So, he gets the order. There's enough money in the kitty to pay off
the order. So the order goes through. But the other 9 DX buyers have
subsudized this cheapskate. That's not very fair. But you have
no way of assuring that this cheapskate will cough up the other
$800.
Likewise, people who grossly overbid (i.e. Microverb for $500) would
not be penalized because we found a dealer selling them for $150.
If we split the return percentagewise, that $350 would be parceled
out to everyone who had a part in the order, even if they just ordered
a 1/4" cable. I'd rather see the entire $350 go back to the poor
guy who overbid it.
That's why I don't think percentage kickbacks are a good idea, unless
you can set (accurately) the amount of cash each item should go
for a priori, and prevent under/overbids.
Maybe we do need an extra phase in there, so that when people see
what various line items cost (versus their bids) they can revise
(upward) their bids if they're willing to go the extra amount.
That would push the actual ordering of the big order back to the 15th.
I bet there's a bug in here, waiting to bite us...
|
1041.11 | Can two tango in the States? | HEART::MACHIN | | Mon Dec 07 1987 04:34 | 13 |
|
Let's hope the dealers don't get together and form a Dealers' Union
to see how much they can push up the price of your addiction!
Over here, that's technically illegal (known as a 'price ring'),
and petrol stations, for example, have been sued by consumer
organisations.
But what if the dealer you usually ring for a keen
price tells you neither he, nor any other dealer he knows, is prepared
to drop below a certain sum? Am I being naive to think that, in
a place as big as the States, this is possible?
Richard.
|
1041.12 | ...not a glass of water | HPSTEK::RHODES | | Mon Dec 07 1987 08:57 | 15 |
| I don't mean to be a big ripe, juicy beefsteak tomato, but the people in
the Macintosh notes file tried this and found that most of the mail
order dealers are already giving a huge discount due to the fact that
they do quite a volume, and thus wouldn't really move on their prices.
What they did accomplish, however, was to find a few places with the
best individual price. They then all went their own way.
Note that this may not be applicable to music equipment. It is still
worth a try (something tells me that Profound will deal). Also, note
that sales tax is now applicable to mail order purchases and is the same
percentage as the state the item is shipped to. So now mail order purchases
include both tax *and* shipping. This double whammy may make it cheaper
to deal with a local dealer...
Todd.
|
1041.13 | Union implies individual sacrifices for the greater good | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Mon Dec 07 1987 10:10 | 29 |
| Re: sales tax.
There's plenty of NH folk in this conference, including me.
re: percentage discounts vs line-item.
My feeling is that using the line-item method is the most fair however
I think both are acceptable.
Regarding the objection to discountable item buyers subsidizing
fair traded or fixed price items:
1) Maybe you wouldn't have gotten that much of a discount on the
DX if the order didn't include the 10 HR-16s.
2) That amount you "bid" should be your idea of a "good price".
You should be happy with that.
The overall idea being that you CAN NOT measure the individual benefit
that each person contributes. This is a "union" and this is just
part of being in a union. If the Union works (and I suspect it
will) you will end up with lower prices than you could have got
outside the union even if you're buying discounted merchanidise.
If you're going to take the attitude that "I should get more because
my item ______", don't join the union. There's no place for that
kind of attitude in a buyers union.
db
|
1041.14 | Watch out- I think you may be being ripped off | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Snowstorm Canoeist | Mon Dec 07 1987 15:52 | 16 |
| Tell me more about this sales tax on interstate shipping.
Are you sure it doesn't only apply on items mail-ordered within
the SAME state? Something in the Constitution (Article VIII ?)
specifically removes the authority of states to impede, tax, or
regulate intERstate commerce (not so for intRAstate commerce).
Or is this some new interpretation that I haven't seen yet?
Note- I have seen a couple of shady retailers charging tax no matter
where you are. If you're out of state, they keep the money as an added
cut of profit. Example: Publisher's Central Bureau. I have sent them
checks for amount+no sales tax, they cashed the check, and sent me the
merchandise.... and did not hassle me for further money.
|
1041.15 | Live free and BUY! | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Mon Dec 07 1987 17:52 | 15 |
| re: .14
In theory, whenever you bring stuff into the people's republic of
Massachussetts, you have to pay a (get this) "Use Tax" for it.
This "use tax" certainly applies to musical equipment and so those
of you who are residents of the 'Common wealth' (what a great name
for that state) will have to take care of the use tax on your
own.
db
p.s. Isn't it ironic how this is the state that commemerates
the Boston Tea Party: the symbol of protest against unfair
and excessive taxation?
|
1041.16 | Forgive me, this just burns ... | ECADSR::SHERMAN | Correct as always, King Friday ... | Mon Dec 07 1987 21:09 | 28 |
| re: -.1
> p.s. Isn't it ironic how this is the state that commemerates
> the Boston Tea Party: the symbol of protest against unfair
> and excessive taxation?
Not true as far as implications go. Back then they were taxed without
representation. We had nobody in the government that really represented
how *WE* felt. Instead, there was a ruling party that represented the
views of a few who hardly paid any taxes or who had only their own very
personal, self-centered interests at heart. Why, today we are represented
by respected and honorable elected officials like Michael Dukakis (famous for
drafting one of the state's biggest tax increases, then famous for getting
rid of it), Teddy Kennedy (oooooh, don't say Chapiquiddick (sp?), after all
he's forgotten it, why shouldn't everybody else?), Barney Frank (a proud,
self-proclaimed Sodomite), Whatsizname Studz (another proud, self-proclaimed
Sodomite), and ....
Hey, wait a minute! Gee, db, I'm sorry ... you're right! Maybe we should
organize a Boston Lottery-Tickets Party. (We'd have, what, about ten flavors
of lottery tickets to flavor the harbor with?) By the way, it's not
that I don't like these guys. I just don't like what they *DO*.
Steve_who_looks_forward_to_voting_against_his_*favorite*_candidates
_and_who_lives_in_the_state_where_the_governor_figures_the_way_to_refund
_after_over-taxation_is_to_promise_to_reduce_taxes_two_years_later (no joke!)
|
1041.17 | Wake up and smell the tea leaves in the harbor | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Tue Dec 08 1987 09:10 | 12 |
| > Back then they were taxed without representation.
Having lived in NH while working in Mass, and thusly having paid
the "Non-resident" income tax, I can tell you with great assurance
that taxation without representation is still practiced in Mass.
db
P.S. I am also voting against Dukakis, the candidate who rode Reagan the
hardest about the Iran/Contra affair and then resorted to the
same exusatory tactics as Reagan when it was revealed that
the Biden tape came from his campaign.
|
1041.18 | | SALSA::MOELLER | | Tue Dec 08 1987 10:57 | 1 |
| my RATHOLE MONITOR just went "BZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ!!"
|
1041.19 | RIPOFF ALERT- RIPOFF ALERT | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Snowstorm Canoeist | Tue Dec 08 1987 14:07 | 10 |
| I think someone is being ripped off with "out-of-state sales tax"
I (within the last 24 hours) bought, via telephone and credit card,
a 3-day pass to Walt Disney World, to be mailed to my home.
Price was 55.95, plus two dollars P&H. Total cost- 57.95 .
No tax.
I would think that WDW would be up on their tax law. They have
enough lawyers...
|
1041.20 | Non-issue, sorry 'bout the rathole | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Tue Dec 08 1987 14:42 | 6 |
| Out-of-state salestax does sound like a rip-off, but even if not,
it's a non issue for the Commusic Buyers Union.
There's plenty of New Hampshire addresses in this conference.
db
|
1041.21 | | UFP::LARUE | Jeff LaRue - MAA Senior Network Consultant | Tue Dec 08 1987 14:52 | 10 |
| Re: "Out-of-state" sales tax
A company is required to charge sales tax on a mail order _if_
the customer (i.e. destination) is in a state where the company
has business offices _and_ that state charges a sales tax.
...can't remember where I read that...but my experience seems to
bear this out....
-Jeff
|
1041.22 | Have I been RIPPED OFF? | HPSTEK::RHODES | | Tue Dec 08 1987 18:48 | 12 |
| The info in .21 seems correct to me too.
I bought tires for my car (mail order, from a different state) two weeks
ago and was charged Mass sales tax. They claimed that a new law had passed
that taxes all mail order items at the rate of the receiving state. I thought
I read about this as well.
Maybe I have been ripped off. The obvious solution would have been to buy
music equipment from a reputable dealer instead, and drive on rims. I
do have my priorities, don't ya know.
Todd.
|
1041.23 | | BAXTA::BOTTOM_DAVID | Not so famous rock star | Wed Dec 09 1987 07:22 | 3 |
| Profound sound is charging tax
dave
|
1041.24 | Finder's Fees | AQUA::ROST | You've been living on solid air | Wed Dec 09 1987 10:29 | 18 |
|
Re: tax
One thing that I had read (how true it is, who knows) is that MA
is one state that has a "finder's fee" for taxes.
Let's say you order $10.00 worth of stuff from Blatz, Inc. Blatz
charges you 50 cents sales tax, at the going rate of 5%. They send
part of that to MA revenue department, but get to keep some as a
"fee" for collecting the tax.
Such a law is intended to get mail-order businesses which do *not*
fall under the "in-state outlet" statute to collect the tax for
MA. That way, the state gets part of what they feel they are obligated
to, and the merchant gets to pocket an extra percent or two on every
order.
|