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**********Tango Yankee said:The bottom line is that although some may bemoan the practice, it is still the time-honored practice of "shopping around." Sure, I could do all of my shopping online, but all the online guys have to work with is how well their websites allow you to interact with them and price.
When I walk into a brick and mortar store it gives the sales staff an interactive opportunity to win me over. It doesn't have to be just on price. If we all said OK, we won't walk into a local shop because to do so without buying anything is stealing the local shops lose the opportunity they might have had to sell us something.
And I would point out that even if I go in and look, and ask questions, they are getting my time and attention and opportunity to sell to me in return. That is worth something! My time and attention is worth something! Now that you've pushed the issue, I'd say that's a fair trade. Ask any sales person whether or not they'd rather have a warm body walk in the door and give them that chance, or have that same person stay home and click a mouse.
I think they'd go for the chance.
Regards,
Tom
In a sense I agree with you, I did take the time to see what the B&M store had for pricing. But I was relying on the reviews, my mind was made up already as to what I wanted, I did not need to rely on their displays or pick their brains. I was hoping that if they had a sale it would be within a reasonable spread. Like someone said above if it's a percentage that is acceptable to me I'd pay more. The thing is it's a year later and the stores have my model for less than the great on-line price I got.