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#16 | |
Wizard
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Join Date: Aug 2010
Device: Nook
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Take, for example, the real life example of a hot water heater. Its' a big ticket item, and people shop, and shop hard on the price of it. So everybody who sells them, and I do mean everybody, sells them at, basically, cost. But when you buy it, you'll need other stuff to install it - the flexible lines to hook it up, a gas line, short pipe nipples, telflon tape, etc. And those install kit items, people do not shop around on so much. And once they're in a given store to buy the heater, they're not going to go somewhere else on the off chance the install kit will be cheaper. And the install kit stuff is not only at full price, it's probably priced as a high margin item, to make up for the lack of margin on the heater itself. I suspect Amazon gets less benefit from that kind of approach, but I'll bet it's not zero. (And yes, this is a standard retail business practice, and has been for a century or so. Everybody does it, because those who don't, don't last long.) |
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#17 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: near Philadelphia USA
Device: Kindle Kids Edition, Fire HD 10 (11th generation)
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http://us.macmillan.com/thegreatapan...a/marclevinson From what I read there, so long as it was family owned, A&P operated with a low everyday price policy, avoiding promotional pricing. That seems to me to mean no loss leaders. There's a story related in the book where a competitor from somewhere in the Midwest wrote to the A&P home office in New York complaining that his local A&P locations were pricing some items below cost, trying to put him out of business. The home office then went to great lengths to investigate, prove the competitor correct, and discipline the local A&P managers. And A&P was then the world's largest retailer. After the long-time pair of family managers died, A&P went the promotional pricing route and basically died. Now it is a local grocer, mostly in the New York City market. I'm not saying loss leader pricing retailers always die. But I do think there are other ways to go. US retailers of today experiencing success without predatory pricing include Wegmans and Costco. Except for price matching, I don't see WalMart pricing food below cost: http://www.simplifylivelove.com/usin...ve-at-walmart/. Not sure about books. |
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#18 |
Member Retired
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Karma: 11721895
Join Date: Nov 2010
Device: Nook STR (rooted) & Sony T2
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So Amazon is a monopoly. Should it be broken up?
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#19 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Join Date: Jan 2010
Device: Nexus 7, Kindle Fire HD
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Quote:
Meaning you're suggesting that Amazon IS guilty of "predatory pricing;" meaning you're either guilty of purposely misusing the inflammatory term for emphasis and effect, or that you just simply don't understand what it actually is. That fact that some retailers choose not to employ (and even manage to thrive) without loss-leader pricing is not proof that loss-leader pricing is "bad" or "predatory" (or that other companies should stop doing it). Please stop trying to falsely conflate loss-leader pricing with predatory pricing. One is perfectly legal, the other is not. Last edited by DiapDealer; 10-16-2014 at 08:42 PM. |
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#20 |
monkey on the fringe
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#21 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Location: near Philadelphia USA
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No.
I'm not all that interested in finding legal remedies for social problems. Should Amazon treat all authors of publishers they don't have a contract with at least as well as they treat Paul Ryan? Yes, and, I hope, voluntarily. If they ever do run into Sherman Act legal problems regarding eBooks, a more reasonable sanction might be to require that ePUB be supported, and made convenient, at the same level as mobi. However, I'm not familiar with the Fire -- do they already do that on Fire models? |
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#22 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Location: Atlanta, GA
Device: iPad Pro, iPad mini, Kobo Aura, Amazon paperwhite, Sony PRS-T2
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#23 |
Grand Sorcerer
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It is just as straightforward in this case as I think it is. Claims that Amazon was practicing "predatory pricing" were found to be lacking. Holding a <for the love all that's holy>DOMINANT</for the love of all that's holy> market position and all.
Besides, it's clear that Steve was suggesting that all promotional, loss-leader, or below-cost pricing is predatory. And while he's free to believe that, it certainly doesn't make it true. Last edited by DiapDealer; 10-17-2014 at 08:33 AM. |
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#24 |
No Comment
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Location: Australia
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#25 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Me, I'll go with the lawyer (and the DOJ's) definition.
Low prices =/= predatory pricing and neither is loss leader/basket pricing. That is settled law. So no: no monopoly, no monopsony, no predatory pricing. But, hey, there is absolutely no evidence that Bezos isn't the antichrist. The "Amazon is eeeevile" gang can hold onto that accusation a while longer. And it even fits in with Patterson's religious war claims! |
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#26 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Quote:
Predatory pricing can be hard to prove. Lack of evidence isn't the same as proof that they aren't doing it. On a somewhat different line here is an interesting blog posting about Amazon's DOMINANCE (feel better? ![]() http://dearauthor.com/ebooks/has-eve...ket-to-amazon/ Basically, the blogger discusses how the fading competition with Amazon over ebooks hurts author, including a few points that I hadn't considered, such as reduced visibility of books as well as points that I had considered such as likely reduced profitability for authors (she mentions that Amazon has already cut the royalty rates for indie audiobooks now that they own Audible). kind of in line is this blog post from digitalbooksworld that talks about how difficult it is to track market share, as well as how some smaller publishers are starting to move to Apple for the simple reason that Apple is giving them visibility. http://www.digitalbookworld.com/2014...er-in-the-u-s/ |
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#27 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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#28 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Does that not clearly imply that those who HAVE experienced success using a different pricing method than his exalted examples ARE using predatory pricing? |
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#29 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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#30 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Quote:
![]() But I'll bite: Steve, do you believe retailers who use loss-leader-, basket, or promotional-pricing strategies that result in below-cost prices on certain products in their inventory is being "predatory?" |
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