"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I thought I was the guy that is right about everything? I could be wrong...or can I?
UH OH! SOMEONE DISAGREES WITH THE GUY THAT'S RIGHT ABOUT EVERYTHING!!
Chill out man. All I'm saying is that while a web site may be convenient, it's not an end all be all.
And the huge shops with no web presence? I'll bet they'll be the same or larger in 10 years.
Word of mouth man, word of mouth. Long term relationships, etc.
My pops, a general contractor, is much the same way. No web site, doesn't answer the business phone,no advertising, no schmutzy Facebook gimmicks.
The people that he wants to work with have his cell phone number and can contact him.I'd love to one day be in that position. John Q. Public be damned.
I used to think much like you, refused to business with anyone without a web page to order from.Then I sought out better products and service rather than convenience.
Quote from: ebscreen on November 07, 2012, 02:46:53 PMWell generally true about web sites, I've found that more often than not, the old school companiesthat have been around for ages but have no web presence tend to have a better product/price/service than the new guysand their fancy pages. While not nearly as convenient, a little leg work goes a long way. Sericol for example.Frankly you CAN have it both ways. This is evident outside the screen print world. Of all the industries I deal in this one is the one that seems to run from web sites. BTW, I didn't say they couldn't have a phone line and take phone orders. I said how do you expect people to know a bout your 1000's of products if all you got is a forum id and a phone line. Web sites are NOT expensive to run and if done properly it would simply be a tool to make more sales and sales without needing to involve extra time for story time on the phone with 90 customers a day. Not everyone enjoys that, even if you do. Again if a company wants, one wouldn't affect the other.Quote from: ebscreen on November 07, 2012, 02:46:53 PMThere's several six plus auto shops in my area that have no web presence whatsoever, and probablyprefer it that way.My post was more so pointed at suppliers of screen print supplies, not actual screen print. But yes a shop and a supplier can make it without. Run that out 10 years though, will the same be true? I bet you will see a drastic change there going forward in the future. Quote from: ebscreen on November 07, 2012, 02:46:53 PMWhen I first started I conveniently ordered some manual pallet brackets from Ryonets web page,they are junk. Same thing with the squeegee's I got from there.So by your math a man on a phone can't sell you junk, but a web site can. Right? I have it on good info that some of Sonny's products flat suck, he deals on the phone. I don't think he is a bad guy or offers all bad products, but if I am understanding you right only honest people work by phone or you can only be sold crap by the internet?Quote from: ebscreen on November 07, 2012, 02:46:53 PMI think the mediocrification of America largely goes hand in hand with moving away from brick and mortar.It doesn't have to, and in many cases it doesn't, but it can certainly aid it.I don't get that at all. For example I can walk into Best Buy, and ask for computer advice or parts and get mediocre results. I can go to New Egg, or dozens of other sites, save as much half on the product and read 1000's of reviews about such. Far more useful than a 17 year old waiting to get off work so he can pop his zits.
Well generally true about web sites, I've found that more often than not, the old school companiesthat have been around for ages but have no web presence tend to have a better product/price/service than the new guysand their fancy pages. While not nearly as convenient, a little leg work goes a long way. Sericol for example.
There's several six plus auto shops in my area that have no web presence whatsoever, and probablyprefer it that way.
When I first started I conveniently ordered some manual pallet brackets from Ryonets web page,they are junk. Same thing with the squeegee's I got from there.
I think the mediocrification of America largely goes hand in hand with moving away from brick and mortar.It doesn't have to, and in many cases it doesn't, but it can certainly aid it.