Uncle Sam
Member
After a long Blog hiatus I want to focus on equipment investment costs in this difficult economic environment. No one wants to pay or invest ?too much?. During my hiatus, my own focus has been on surviving all the price changes and quality judgments that impact the costs of production of the vending systems that we offer. ?Shopping prices? has been made very quick and easy with the internet being used to compare prices on almost anything. I will be the first to admit that I use online suppliers to buy many items that we use. I try to get a fair price, a very large choice of product, and very good service.
What I call ?Buying Right? or ?Value? is a term that is familiar, but sometimes lost in difficult economic times. ?Buying Right? takes a long term look at the Value of a sophisticated product or system which brings into the purchasing equation many judgment calls: what is the value of personal time to the purchaser, quality of materials, workmanship, R & D done, reliability, ease of operations, peace of mind of the purchaser or owner, and support after the sale for technical issues and incidental problems. Paying a higher price up-front may be cheaper in the long term than buying just on ?price?.
We need to separate ?commodity items? from the more sophisticated equipment or systems which use the best quality materials and the most advanced technology available.
Commodity items are available from multiple sources online and/or discount houses that are almost identical and are usually low technology. They all look or work the same and usually are ?private labeled? or have no label. Some are just copy cat ?knock offs? of branded successful products. The small differences in selling prices (customer cost) are usually determined by the seller?s sales volume and seller?s chosen margin.
Cont'd
What I call ?Buying Right? or ?Value? is a term that is familiar, but sometimes lost in difficult economic times. ?Buying Right? takes a long term look at the Value of a sophisticated product or system which brings into the purchasing equation many judgment calls: what is the value of personal time to the purchaser, quality of materials, workmanship, R & D done, reliability, ease of operations, peace of mind of the purchaser or owner, and support after the sale for technical issues and incidental problems. Paying a higher price up-front may be cheaper in the long term than buying just on ?price?.
We need to separate ?commodity items? from the more sophisticated equipment or systems which use the best quality materials and the most advanced technology available.
Commodity items are available from multiple sources online and/or discount houses that are almost identical and are usually low technology. They all look or work the same and usually are ?private labeled? or have no label. Some are just copy cat ?knock offs? of branded successful products. The small differences in selling prices (customer cost) are usually determined by the seller?s sales volume and seller?s chosen margin.
Cont'd