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![]() "Harry.Krause" wrote in message ... The real ME wrote: Harry Krause wrote: I sold off nearly $3,000,000 in new motors and boats, depressing the new boat industry in southern Connecticut for an entire season. Everything was sold...every cotter pin, every quart of oil, 30 days after I started. For near full-retail, too. Harry, I am curious, how did you depress the market if you were selling for full-retail? Why are you curious? Are you planning to transport yourself back to 1974 in New Haven County and go into the retail boating business? I'll indulge you. I didn't sell for full-retail, as my father had. I sold for *near* full retail, which, in those days, for the lines my dad sold, was unheard of in the pre-season. Remember, this was in the days where a franchise meant something, and among the "something" was a protected territory, meaning there were no competitors selling the same brand name within a certain area. "You want a Cruisers, Inc., 23-footer with an I/O? Fine, the price is $15,000 or whatever, and I'll toss in some cushions." There were three large dealerships in that part of Connecticut in those days, my father's, which was in West Haven and Milford, another in West Haven, and one in Branford. Two of my father's best friends were the owners of the other large dealerships. At a memorial for my dad later that year, the two close dealer friends told me that our "sale" had killed off nearly 20% of their sales for the year, and had apparently driven two of the weaker dealerships right out of business. Of the three large dealerships, only one is still open today, operated by the grandson of the founder. All were started just before or just after WW II. Last I heard, only one of the original proprietors was still alive. The irony is that my mother and I had tried to talk my father into selling off the dealership five years before he died. The retail property was worth far more than any boat dealership could generate in sales and profit, and his interest in the marina was practically a liquid asset. After he died, the other owners of the marina bought us out at the first partners' meeting, and we sold the store property in West Haven six months later. The buyers of that parcel razed the boat store and warehouse and put up a strip mall. Kind of sad. My mom ended up doing what she and my dad talked about doing. She bought a nice place in Palm Beach and lived there in the land of perpetual sunshine for nearly another 20 years before she died. Yes, I contemplated taking over the family business. But fortunately, that thought passed in about 20 seconds. "The real ME" wrote in message ... Harry, That is a major accomplishment to unload all of your dad's inventory in record time for "near full retail". You should be commended for doing everything you can to minimize the negative impact on the other marina's in the area. I am curious, since you only discounted the items slightly, how did you get everyone to drive past all the other marinas and boat stores, if you were just slightly discounting the product. This is something many people, including our good friend on Lake Hartwell would like to know. He might be able to get those boating on all the other lakes in Georgia and South Carolina to visit him instead of their local dealers and stores. I still wonder what kind of actual physical inventory he had. With $3 million in sales he would have had to sell 200 of those 23 foot Cruisers. Knowing that only one or two of those would have been in stock and the others were probably far smaller and cheaper, I figure 300 boats were sold along with 500 or so outboard motors. Krause has to be the worlds best salesman to have accomplished that. The place had to be the size of a Walmart Super Store and traffic had to be lined up as far south as NYC. Amazing. ;-) |
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