Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2005/06/20
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]No one, myself included, Marc, suggested that there was anything miraculous about the basket system - simply that it works very well for B&H. And unless you know far more about B&Hs bottom line than the rest of us, you quite clearly have no idea what you're talking about - but as usual want to prove your self-perceived intellectual superiority to anyone who disagrees with you by going off on weird, irrelevant tangents. But after all these years, I'd be disappointed by a short, polite, on point response from you. ;-) On 6/20/05 12:11 AM, "Marc James Small" <msmall@aya.yale.edu> wrote: > At 10:41 PM 6/19/05 -0400, B. D. Colen wrote: >> But that's quite impractical when people are buying photo equipment that >> the >> merchant doesn't want stolen...so the basket system makes great >> sense....be >> shown what you're interested in; get a sales slip, and as you head for the >> register, the item begins its ride from the stockroom to the checkout >> counter.... > > Thank you, BD, but the same approach also works for small bottles of > perfume and the like. The point I was making was a double one, and I am > sorry that the subtility of this passed you by: > > a) The US Retail Trade used this system between the 1880's and the 1920's, > and abandoned it. Best Products used this system into the 1990's, and they > went belly-up, in large measure due to their manpower costs. And > > b) There is nothing miraculous in B&H's basket system; it was being used > by Macy's or whoever in 1910. I enjoy a hearty regard for innovation, but > I find it distressing when the media, once again, has such a short memory > as to praise something as "new" when it is something adopted and discarded > long ago: this indicates that many, if not most, journalists are > distressingly bereft of any knowledge of their nation, their people, and of > their history, social, industrial, political and scientific. > > The reason that US retail stores went to allowing the folks to prowl the > shelves was a determined analysis that the cost of shop-lifting was less > than the cost of all the extra overhead in the fancy baskets or in the > counter help. This became much greater after Roosevelt's "New Deal" came > in in the later 1930's, with a quck but cerain doubling of the actual cost > of employees due to government requirements, regulations, mandatory fees, > and all of this. Most companies found it easier to reduce their workforce > than to fight the White House, and so the US retail industry then went over > to allowing the customers to prowl the place. > > I can go into any store in Roanoke and shop from the shelves. I almost > certainly can do this in New York with the apparent exception of B&H, now > that the last Automat is done to death. If B&H wishes to double its > workforce costs while not improving its performance, that is there > decision: and a real journalist would want to know more about this and to > write a driving article about why a successful company adopts a most > decidedly negative retail approach. > > Seriously, BD. You MUST know some folks who can read or write, and some of > them MUST know an econ professor of some ability: ask him or her about the > fiscal benefit of the "basket system" and I believe that you will see what > I mean, that it is a fine answer to the needs of the Art Deco era. > > Marc > > msmall@aya.yale.edu > Cha robh b?s fir gun ghr?s fir! > > NEW FAX NUMBER: +540-343-8505 > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information