Re: TSBC rules and price comments
Posted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 2:10 am
[quote author=MoeCizlak link=topic=8445.msg45432#msg45432 date=1301014356]
You would mock someone who might be looking out for your best interests? I don't get that. If you could lend a hand to someone, would you? For those that keep close tabs on pricing and will speak up when something is not kosher, I look at that as lending a hand. Be it to a stranger or to a close buddy. I can't see how that could possibly be bad.
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I don't think anyone on a cigar board can claim being uninformed for paying more for cigars or anything else when they should do their own homework. Maybe I take it for granted that people actually research what they can buy any given product for at a local B&M or any online retailer. I worked in procurement for 10+ years, but I don't owe you or anyone else a "heads up" that some "gouger" is listing a box of cigars for $25 or $200 more than you *think* they are worth. I look at the B/S/T board every day, often multiple times a day. If I see something I'm interested in at a price I've determined it's worth in my book, I'll buy. If I think the seller's price is too high, I move on and more power to the seller if he gets someone else to buy it at that price. Now if you find something that catches your eye, but you feel the price is high and you send a PM to the seller what you'd be willing to pay, I don't fault you for that either.
Take the devil sites for example. You see people will go on there and get in a frenzy and bid more for something than they could buy it for from a number of the lower cost online retailers. Does it pain you that you can't email them to tell them the error of their ways or just laugh at them for being stupid? Google is your friend and if you're not smart enough to shop around, we don't need someone feeling as though they're the Paul Blart of protecting someone else from themselves.
Another favorite story of mine-my favorite college football team was pretty decent a few years ago and would pull in fans from other teams willing to pay 3-4+ times face value. Mind you, season ticket sales were offered and then available single game tickets were made available to ANYONE who wanted to buy them. Low and behold, we had a nationally televised game between 2 teams ranked in the top 10 at the time I believe. I found out that the ticket office offered "obstructed view" seats that were literally 40 rows up at midfield. There really was no obstruction that I could see as I sat in them myself. I listed them on ebay and was selling $40 face value tickets for almost $200 each only to have "home team fans" complain about prices when they had every freaking chance to buy them. Never mind they didn't want to pay that early in the season when it didn't appear to be a prime game, so why should I feel sorry for them for being lazy? Go ahead and call me a gouger, but I must have banked over $2k that fall reselling tickets to a handful of games when they had every opportunity to buy them before me.
Capitalism and laws of supply and demand-they're pretty basic concepts really.
You would mock someone who might be looking out for your best interests? I don't get that. If you could lend a hand to someone, would you? For those that keep close tabs on pricing and will speak up when something is not kosher, I look at that as lending a hand. Be it to a stranger or to a close buddy. I can't see how that could possibly be bad.
[/quote]
I don't think anyone on a cigar board can claim being uninformed for paying more for cigars or anything else when they should do their own homework. Maybe I take it for granted that people actually research what they can buy any given product for at a local B&M or any online retailer. I worked in procurement for 10+ years, but I don't owe you or anyone else a "heads up" that some "gouger" is listing a box of cigars for $25 or $200 more than you *think* they are worth. I look at the B/S/T board every day, often multiple times a day. If I see something I'm interested in at a price I've determined it's worth in my book, I'll buy. If I think the seller's price is too high, I move on and more power to the seller if he gets someone else to buy it at that price. Now if you find something that catches your eye, but you feel the price is high and you send a PM to the seller what you'd be willing to pay, I don't fault you for that either.
Take the devil sites for example. You see people will go on there and get in a frenzy and bid more for something than they could buy it for from a number of the lower cost online retailers. Does it pain you that you can't email them to tell them the error of their ways or just laugh at them for being stupid? Google is your friend and if you're not smart enough to shop around, we don't need someone feeling as though they're the Paul Blart of protecting someone else from themselves.
Another favorite story of mine-my favorite college football team was pretty decent a few years ago and would pull in fans from other teams willing to pay 3-4+ times face value. Mind you, season ticket sales were offered and then available single game tickets were made available to ANYONE who wanted to buy them. Low and behold, we had a nationally televised game between 2 teams ranked in the top 10 at the time I believe. I found out that the ticket office offered "obstructed view" seats that were literally 40 rows up at midfield. There really was no obstruction that I could see as I sat in them myself. I listed them on ebay and was selling $40 face value tickets for almost $200 each only to have "home team fans" complain about prices when they had every freaking chance to buy them. Never mind they didn't want to pay that early in the season when it didn't appear to be a prime game, so why should I feel sorry for them for being lazy? Go ahead and call me a gouger, but I must have banked over $2k that fall reselling tickets to a handful of games when they had every opportunity to buy them before me.
Capitalism and laws of supply and demand-they're pretty basic concepts really.