Cedge
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2007
- Messages
- 1,727
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Part of my birthday booty was a nice new portable stereo for my shop, to replace the one that finally died. I can't complain... it lasted through more than 20 years of daily use. My wife picked up a new 380 watt unit at Wally World for a "C" note. We put it together only to find that the left bass channel was non existent, so back it went. No hassles and cash in hand, we left the store.
We decided to stop by Circuit City to see what they had. There on the shelf was a Sony 530 watt unit, but the price was a bit more than double what the original purchase was. I figured I'd put some of my toy money with the refund and make the upgrade. Nope... out of stock.
I asked what sort of deal they could make on the display model that I'd been playing with. The girl disappeared and came back with a quote of $150.00 without the box. I said it was a deal if everything was there, including the warranty. She assured me it was, however they soon learned that the remote was missing, along with the instructions. I offered them $100.00 with a warranty and was turned down, but they counter offered with another $20.00 reduction, making it a drop from $209 to $129.00.
You'd be amazed at how often a big box retail store will negotiate. I've bought high end cameras where they not only applied online specials but added on an in house reduction just to cinch a sale. All it takes is asking the simple question, "is that the best deal we can make?" The camera deal saved me a couple of hundred dollars and the stereo was a nice $80.00 windfall. If you compare the $235.00 price, over at Best Buy, I did even better.
Don't be shy.... I even used this technique with Travers tools and saved several hundred bucks on my recent purchase of the Super X3 milling machine..... enough to pay for the new power feed (well... one of them) some of the tooling upgrades it required.
Yup... I do love to horse trade.
Steve
We decided to stop by Circuit City to see what they had. There on the shelf was a Sony 530 watt unit, but the price was a bit more than double what the original purchase was. I figured I'd put some of my toy money with the refund and make the upgrade. Nope... out of stock.
I asked what sort of deal they could make on the display model that I'd been playing with. The girl disappeared and came back with a quote of $150.00 without the box. I said it was a deal if everything was there, including the warranty. She assured me it was, however they soon learned that the remote was missing, along with the instructions. I offered them $100.00 with a warranty and was turned down, but they counter offered with another $20.00 reduction, making it a drop from $209 to $129.00.
You'd be amazed at how often a big box retail store will negotiate. I've bought high end cameras where they not only applied online specials but added on an in house reduction just to cinch a sale. All it takes is asking the simple question, "is that the best deal we can make?" The camera deal saved me a couple of hundred dollars and the stereo was a nice $80.00 windfall. If you compare the $235.00 price, over at Best Buy, I did even better.
Don't be shy.... I even used this technique with Travers tools and saved several hundred bucks on my recent purchase of the Super X3 milling machine..... enough to pay for the new power feed (well... one of them) some of the tooling upgrades it required.
Yup... I do love to horse trade.
Steve