originally posted by SFJoe:
Comrade Hanes,
What makes NYC the exception?
Bankers.
originally posted by SFJoe:
Comrade Hanes,
What makes NYC the exception?
Population densityoriginally posted by Yixin:
originally posted by SFJoe:
Comrade Hanes,
What makes NYC the exception?
Bankers.
I was going to volunteer you to go meet him in person Sunday.originally posted by Bill Lundstrom:
Actually, there's more to this story but as SF Joe said, TMI.
If you were lucky enough to live in Wilmington, you might find it all rather amusing.
originally posted by Tom Glasgow:
I was going to volunteer you to go meet him in person Sunday.originally posted by Bill Lundstrom:
Actually, there's more to this story but as SF Joe said, TMI.
If you were lucky enough to live in Wilmington, you might find it all rather amusing.
originally posted by Oliver McCrum:
then sell it for such a low price that no other retailer wants to sell it. So as the supplier, you get a two case sale and that's it.
originally posted by Tom Glasgow:
Population densityoriginally posted by Yixin:
originally posted by SFJoe:
Comrade Hanes,
What makes NYC the exception?
Bankers.
originally posted by Marc Hanes:
In New Jersey the odious Retail Incentive Program (RIP) allows big players an advantage in keeping market share. The state law which says you cannot sell below wholesale cost favors the big retailers -- the little or new guy can't create market share with loss leaders. But the big guy can purchase from wholesalers at quantity levels to get RIP checks from the wholesalers and make money there, on the back end, not on the actual sale itself.
originally posted by kirk wallace:
originally posted by Oliver McCrum:
then sell it for such a low price that no other retailer wants to sell it. So as the supplier, you get a two case sale and that's it.
This is getting closer to what I find mysterious. Why does the "bomber's" behavior make the other retailer want to avoid that wine? Especially if they know that the bomber has very little to sell at the artificially low price?
originally posted by Tom Glasgow:
Are there retailers outside London or Paris in the UK or France that can match what's on offer in the respective city?
originally posted by kirk wallace:
originally posted by Marc Hanes:
In New Jersey the odious Retail Incentive Program (RIP) allows big players an advantage in keeping market share. The state law which says you cannot sell below wholesale cost favors the big retailers -- the little or new guy can't create market share with loss leaders. But the big guy can purchase from wholesalers at quantity levels to get RIP checks from the wholesalers and make money there, on the back end, not on the actual sale itself.
Thanks for this; i was unaware of this RIP thing; sounds absurdly distortive and an invitation for bad behavior.
Examples?originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
originally posted by Tom Glasgow:
Are there retailers outside London or Paris in the UK or France that can match what's on offer in the respective city?
Yes.
This is how I feel about Burgundy.originally posted by Yixin:
Focal point. The wine is priced, in the consumer's mind, at a certain level, and woe to the retailer who dares to go above the 'fair price'.
originally posted by Marc Hanes:
One quick anecdote, yesterday a distributor of high end Georgian wines (don't laugh)
An example, Santa Margherita Pinot Grigio.
Some of which don't even have decent A/C for their no-SO2 stock. I share your puzzlement. Though it is easier to hop in your car in NJ, and wine is heavy if you are just buying a bottle for dinner and not having a case delivered.But there appear to be in NYC. I am always puzzled by the ever growing number of stores in NYC opening, even in the last year or two. All "boutiquey" and oriented to natural wines and going after the exact same target market.
Amen, Brother Hanes.Hence, all the money which still flows to politicians regarding regulation of the sale of alcohol.
Thus, the "race to the bottom." ...
Barefoot Moscato and Ruffino Chianti Classico.
So dish.originally posted by scottreiner:
originally posted by kirk wallace:
Thanks for this; i was unaware of this RIP thing; sounds absurdly distortive and an invitation for bad behavior.
oh, the stories i could tell...
originally posted by SFJoe:
Mmmmm, I love 2005 Clos Rougeard with pizza.