Kitchen Buyers Beware!
Tricks of the trade used by
Kitchen Sellers
by Tom McKernan
TRICK 4
The Free
Appliance Offer
Yes that good old faithful standby, something for nothing. Does anybody actually believe that anything worth anything can really be had for free? The free lunch perhaps? This claim would seem to insult our intelligence but then it does seem to work for some companies, usually at the lower end of the market.
So where does this free stuff come from? Is there a secret cave somewhere, full of great appliances, which only the privileged few can access and help themselves from?
Actually, and you already knew this, the stuff has to be paid for by someone. So how does it work?
| Appliances, like all consumer goods, are constantly being updated and every so often wholesalers find themselves with out-of date stock that will not sell.
They mark it down as ‘stock run out’ offers at reduced prices (normally down to what it is really worth). And offer it to retailers and kitchen makers. This is the standard stuff of sales and special offers of course. Nothing wrong with it, new and guaranteed but hard to sell because it is old stock and out-of-date.
If you are not a person who has to have the latest model and it is what you want then it is possibly a bargain at the reduced price. But can it really be free? |
 |
The fact is that whether it is old stock or the latest model, the kitchen supplier has to pay for it. The kitchen supplier then has to recover the money from someone.
Guess whom?
TRICK 1 - Who
owns the cheque book?
TRICK 2 - Adjusting
the mark-up
TRICK 3 - The
Kitchen Sale
TRICK 4 - The
Free Appliance Offer
TRICK 5 - Selling
Up
TRICK 6 - Pressure
Selling
Independent
guide to kitchens,
kitchen planning and design ideas, advice, suppliers, appliances & great
kitchens in New Zealand.
Copyright © 2000-2012 Hints and Things
All Rights Reserved.
No portion of this site may be reproduced or redistributed without prior
written permission from Hints and Things. All trademarks & copyrights
throughout Hints and Things remain the property of their respective
owners.
Hints and Things cannot be
held responsible for any information given on this site nor do they
necessarily agree with, or endorse, the views given by third parties. |