p.1 #1 · Insane prices for Paul C Buff gear in Europe. Why won't US store ship internationally?
Big dilemma here..
I have been saving up money to buy two Einsteins, with triggers / transceivers, two PLMs, vagabonds, e.t.c.
A couple of day's ago I finally had all the money I needed, and so I went to PCB website to order the gear. But then the horror struck me.. "Sorry, we only ship to US and Canada". I always thought they shipped internationally just like B&H and Adorama, but I guess I was wrong. (My misstake.)
Then I noticed that they have a website for european customers. However, my joy was cut short when I saw that their prices are almost three times of what the US shop charges!? ..I almost puked. Can someone explain to me why they are running things this way? There is no way I'm going to pay the crazy price at the european website.
I am pretty sure PCB would sell alot more gear if they shipped internationally.. They lost me for sure.
p.1 #4 · Insane prices for Paul C Buff gear in Europe. Why won't US store ship internationally?
Compared to...? Einstein is £ 500, Elinchrom 600RX £ 550, Bowens 500Pro £ 470 (from WEX UK). Sorry, I don't see the ridiculously over higher price tag (or...I'm too naive to see )
p.1 #6 · Insane prices for Paul C Buff gear in Europe. Why won't US store ship internationally?
PeterBerressem wrote:
Compared to...? Einstein is £ 500, Elinchrom 600RX £ 550, Bowens 500Pro £ 470 (from WEX UK). Sorry, I don't see the ridiculously over higher price tag (or...I'm too naive to see )
Compared to the US price. Or indeed the US prices of the above mentioned units if you really want to go down that path.
p.1 #7 · Insane prices for Paul C Buff gear in Europe. Why won't US store ship internationally?
Don't forget we don't have a national VAT in the US. Even if you could magically transport the flashes overseas for free, they're still going to be substantially more expensive due to tax.
p.1 #8 · Insane prices for Paul C Buff gear in Europe. Why won't US store ship internationally?
Rickuz wrote:
Big dilemma here..
I have been saving up money to buy two Einsteins, with triggers / transceivers, two PLMs, vagabonds, e.t.c.
A couple of day's ago I finally had all the money I needed, and so I went to PCB website to order the gear. But then the horror struck me.. "Sorry, we only ship to US and Canada". I always thought they shipped internationally just like B&H and Adorama, but I guess I was wrong. (My misstake.)
Then I noticed that they have a website for european customers. However, my joy was cut short when I saw that their prices are almost three times of what the US shop charges!? ..I almost puked. Can someone explain to me why they are running things this way? There is no way I'm going to pay the crazy price at the european website.
I am pretty sure PCB would sell alot more gear if they shipped internationally.. They lost me for sure....Show more →
You know that Alien Bees gear is 120V right? You'll need a voltage converter to plug it in to use it.
p.1 #11 · Insane prices for Paul C Buff gear in Europe. Why won't US store ship internationally?
Beni wrote:
Compared to the US price. Or indeed the US prices of the above mentioned units if you really want to go down that path.
You're still comparing factory direct vs. from a distributor
If the distributor price is need way too high, *you* could look into being a distributor and make a profit if you can undercut the other distributor's prices while still staying profitable (just remember that you have to hire your own staff for customer service, have a line of credit to buy the gear to put in the warehouse you rent, pay shipping/customs, have offices w/ phone/electic bills, etc.) And PCB has always run a pretty low margin even from the factory so you'll maybe get only 5-10% off the factory prices for buying in quantity.
I'd bet the process would be educational for everyone since this topic seems to come up every few months
p.1 #13 · Insane prices for Paul C Buff gear in Europe. Why won't US store ship internationally?
Just to put it perspective. When I was doing product development for a startup in the US we wanted to partner with an Australian telecom company. They were eager to have a US partner. They were willing to give use the best discounts they could based on quarterly volume. Even considering all the incentives they were willing to provide, the market price we had to charge put their products at a premium compared to US competitors.
I had exactly the same problem when trying to introduce US products into Europe, India, and Asia. By the time we did all the add-ons our price was nearly double what we were selling the product for in US.
PCB has made his business model in the US a direct model. There is no way for a US company to do that in Europe or Asia.
Here we benefit from the advanced technical design of the Einstein and the direct model price advantage. There you have to be satisfied with the technical design advances for the same price as other options. Just makes the decision that much tougher.
local language translation cost and printing, to comply with CE Mark requirements for user documentation
regulatory agency testing, to comply with CE Mark requirements for safety labels
If Buff carried all of those costs in multiple countries directly, the US price for his products would be considerably higher than what they are today.
p.1 #16 · Insane prices for Paul C Buff gear in Europe. Why won't US store ship internationally?
Look in the buy/sell section and buy some used gear. Or buy another brand. For not so much more you can pick up some older profoto gear, or elinchrom...
These guys are alchemists, they turn garbage into gold. 299 Euros, that is 390 USD, for a chinese piece of junk that will last four weeks before it goes up in flames or electrocutes you.
Of course, these companies have a customer service desk. They do not repair anything, they just send a new strobe, but there is no compensation for ruining your photo shooting.
Many photographers in Europe would prefer PCB gear because it's cheap, reliable and well-designed. But the British office does a perfect job locking PCB out of Europe. I sent a few emails to England, just asking for delivery time - five email, no answer within two weeks. I called their office, but nobody picks up the phone. I just gave up trying to contact them.
If I were Mr. Buff I would kick their butt, eliminate the middlemen and take orders from the rest of the world. The funny thing is, even if I paid the shipping plus customs fees and taxes a direct import is still much, much cheaper than buying from the British.
p.1 #18 · Insane prices for Paul C Buff gear in Europe. Why won't US store ship internationally?
JuliusCesar wrote:
If I were Mr. Buff I would kick their butt, eliminate the middlemen and take orders from the rest of the world. The funny thing is, even if I paid the shipping plus customs fees and taxes a direct import is still much, much cheaper than buying from the British.
He did exactly this in the past, wasn't worth the trouble sending items back and forth over the big dividing blue. Believe me, the money the British distributors make from an Einstein isn't THAT much as you might assume.
p.1 #20 · Insane prices for Paul C Buff gear in Europe. Why won't US store ship internationally?
Yup. A $25 beauty dish bag was over £60 by the time the bonkers delivery change was added on by PCB Europe. They also tried to charge £25 postage on a 51" plm.
OP, you probably don't want PCB lights outside the US anyway because the support will be almost non-existent.