radiodenver Offline Upload & Sell: Off
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p.1 #11 · The death of the local camera store | |
Funny thing though, the only "local camera store" I frequent here in the Denver area is the best place to get things you can't find at the chain stores. I won't even walk into a Wolf Camera these days, it's usually a waste of time. They don't even carry the full line of Canon lenses, so even if you wanted to test one, it would be impossible most of the time. Most times the staff knows nothing about photography or anything about something I'm looking for. Sure, you can find anything on the internet, but sometimes, I prefer to go and look at it with my eyes, put it on my camera and take a few test shots. and if paying a little more is the price of keeping them in business, then it's no problem for me. They also rent equipment and will trade equipment and have a great selection of used gear most of the time. I also like the feeling that I'm in an environment more like the old barber shop, because I've got to know the folks that work there and there's always a good photographic conversation to be had without everyone getting stupid. Find that on the internet.
jbregar wrote:
I happen to be in a decent-sized market (Denver Metro Area) that is horribly lacking in the local photo shop area. There are plenty of Wolf Cameras around here (a division of Ritz) and a couple of local shops, but my experience has been exactly the same as mentioned by the original poster. They're understocked, overpriced, and have pretty lacking service. We've seen two shops go out of biz while I've lived here, both because there's just not a sustainable market in gouging an informed customer base.
I understand that things sometimes need to cost more locally, but not 50-100% more. The $80 roll of seamless that's $40 at B&H is a good example. You're telling me B&H gets it for 1/2 the price? I doubt it.
The idea that "you can just go elsewhere if you don't like it" is a great way to run yourself right out of business. Especially with an informed consumer base like most pro and semi-pro photographers. What happens is you end up selling only last minute stuff and stuff that's not worth shipping... like lens caps, rolls of seamless, and the occasional D40 to Aunt Sally... none of which carry the profit of a D3 or D300. It's a recipe for marginalization... and it's pretty much complete in Denver. But hey, you can see just about any bag you'd ever want in Denver... but they're marked up 75-100% over the going rate at B&H or Adorama.
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