Seasonal Goes Discount
by Dennis DiPaolo
April 2009
Every year I walk through all the
stores in our area that sell pool supplies
and check to see that our prices are in
line. Sometimes I’ll raise a price,
sometimes I’ll lower a price, but
generally nothing is surprising. It’s a
competitive market, so no one is half the
price (or double the price) of the
competition. The swing is mostly +/-
5%, with the outside at 25%.
Cheap brands are cheaper than
expensive brands. High quality is more
expensive than low quality. Not
counting a short-term sale, we all pay
roughly the same price and mark-up
roughly the same.
Last July 3, though, when I
wrote down every price at Wal-Mart and
Lowes, I also wrote down the
ingredients. Before I adjusted for
ingredients strength, we were all pretty
much in line. We were each the
cheapest about as often. Looking at
ingredients, however, was a real lesson.
I knew how “discount” stores
were changing the strengths of expensive
chemicals. That’s been standard for
years. I was just amazed when I saw
cheap chemicals that were not at 100%
strength. For instance, a bottle of 70%
pH increaser that seems 15% cheaper
than our 100% pH increaser is actually
15% more expensive than ours to use!
Here’s the upshot: on July 3, 2008, on an
assortment of 23 items and sizes, Wal-
Mart was cheapest three times, Lowes
was cheapest four, and we were
cheapest sixteen times!
To be fair, those 23 items were
the sizes used mostly by our customers
who generally have pools between 4,000
and 50,000 gallons. If your pool is less
than 1,000 gallons (the sizes more
commonly sold by Wal-Mart), they are a
little more competitive. We have the
results in the store, and we will revise
them once the season gets rolling again.
Right now we are having a huge sale that
gives us an unfair advantage over all the
other stores. Also, some items still have
last year’s price tags on them! By late
May, most everyone’s prices will have
settled down for the season.
So here’s my first lesson: we
have an expensive image because we
have a nice store and good help. We
carry medium-to-high quality brands and
products. Our cheapest pool chemical
brand (at least until this year) is still a
premium brand: Target™ Pool Supplies.
“Discount” stores have a cheap
image, but are not cheaper than us. They
beat the really, really small stores, but not
the big ones like us. That was not the
actual lesson. The lesson to me is that I
know better and I had not noticed how
much we beat the “discount” stores. So
how would I expect you to know?
Second lesson: since the market
crash last October, sales at Wal-Mart and
McDonalds are up while sales at
department stores and casual restaurants
are down. People hearing all the gloom
and doom, even though there has been no
change in their income, would rather
choose price over value even when it’s
not necessarily cheaper in the long run.
So what are we doing about it?
First, our April Sale is 25% off the
lowest marked price of the entire pool
department, not 20% off like it has been
for the past nineteen years. That’s
money out of my and Jeanne’s pocket to
give you an economic stimulus to BUY
NOW. It is also meant to take the
sticker-shock out of a few products that
went up a lot world-wide this winter:
vinyl, chlorine, and PHMB.
Second, we are bringing in lots
of lower-priced alternatives. We will try
to keep them on special “Discount”
shelves so that you can tell the
difference. This is a decision that has
taken lots of second-thoughts and
trepidation. You have come to expect
only high-quality from us.
That’s why we are segregating
the cheaper brands. Some of them, like
generic drugs, are just as good.
Sometimes they are not as strong – but if
you just read the directions and use more,
it ends up doing the same thing. A
plastic leaf rake won’t last as long as an
aluminum one, but maybe it will last
until you get another job and that’s all
you need for now.
Here’s our promise to you: we
are not down-grading anything that we
already have. The quality that you trust
is still here. We are just adding some
new products that would not normally
have made it into our store until now.
We will still stand behind everything that
we carry. All of the new items are an
excellent value, and we will mark
everything clearly, if it is not obvious as
to what the difference is.
Here’s what we ask of you: some
trust and patience while we learn how to
work with this experiment. If it is not
obvious to you what the difference is, ask
us. And please give us a try if you were
tempted to downgrade to a “discount”
store this year. If you currently buy your
supplies at a discount store and just come
to us for the free advice and water
testing, shop a little harder. We beat
their prices on every quality product, and
now we are also carrying the same
quality that they do.
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Seasonal Specialty Stores
120 Route 101A · Amherst, NH · 03031
Tel: (603) 880-8471 · Fax: (603) 595-8497
E-mail: webquestions@seasonalstores.com
Store Hours change with the season

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