apostate wrote:Competition generally does lower prices. That's one of the blessings of free market capitalism.
Oldgringo wrote:Like Walmart?
I am completely in favor of free market capitalism, which is why I ridicule the Occupy crowd. I am a business person. They are not. I have some inkling of what it takes to (in order): 1)
start a business; 2)
grow the business; 3)
stay in business; and finally 4) accomplish an exit strategy at the time of the owner's choosing. The quest for the person who has accomplished (1) is to accomplish (2). The quest for the person who has accomplished (1) and (2) is to accomplish (3). The quest for the person who has accomplished (1), (2), and (3) is to accomplish (4).
Here's what I am NOT going to do: 1) operate my business at a loss if I can at all avoid it; and 2) apologize for profit. There is no such thing as "obscene" profit. What
does exist, and what
does matter, is what I choose to
do with my profits, as directed by the tenets of my faith, and much good can come from that. The more I can profit, the more generous I can be. THIS (whether you do it through your church, or simply through some kind of secular giving) is
only possible if I profit from my business. There is much need in the world, and I don't think there are very many people on this forum who think that
government is the best means of answering those needs. "Any government big enough to give you everything you need is also big enough to take everything you have." Even so, if people want to hang onto every penny they earn and not be charitable with it, that's their business, and none of mine or the OP's business.
Profit is
good. Profit is praised in the Bible.
Wisdom encourages profit. When people who provide commercial services are able to
profit from those services, then they become able to render those services to a larger number of people, more efficiently. And where they have to compete with others offering the same goods or services, they either have to match or beat the competition's pricing,
OR....................
...........wait for it............
.......they have to beat the competition's
service.
I have never bought a gun from Walmart. I never will buy a gun from Walmart, because price is not my personal bottom line. Yes, price is important to me, but it is not the only factor I weigh in making buying decisions when it comes to items priced like guns are priced—fairly major purchases. OTH, I have no problem buying toilet paper and underwear from Walmart.
When I first moved to Texas, the local Walmart here in Grapevine still sold long guns. My first long gun purchase was from Sporting Arms in Lewisville—a small but well run "kitchen-table" gun dealer. My first pistol purchase in Texas wasn't from Cabelas or Bass Pro, it was from Euless Guns and Ammo. These two purchases were made from these two dealers for two specific reasons: 1) knowledgeable sales people who would take the time to help me arrive at the best buying decision based on what was best for
my needs and not the store's needs; and 2) a better selection of products than a Walmart can provide. The local Walmart offered 2 or 3 each of sort of generic bolt rifles and shotguns. They did
NOT offer anything left handed. They did
NOT offer anything in .308. They did
NOT offer anything with a heavy barrel, 1:10 twist, aluminum pillar bedded in an HS Precision stock. The point is, Walmart
can't fulfill everybody's needs.
Smart gun sellers who want to sell in the same market as Walmart simply need to offer what Walmart does not. If they try to beat Walmart at Walmart's game, they'll lose.
But all of this is moot. The CHL market is small. I'm willing to bet that the percentage of families in Grapevine who shop at least once in a while at Walmart is probably near 100%. I am equally willing to bet that the percentage of families who shop at "CHL Providers" is not more than 2% (if statistics are to be believed). CHL training is a small, niche market. There aren't really any models for "mass production" and "volume discounts." Show me the person who will teach a 10 hour class for $50, and I will show you a person who either A) has zero overhead; and B) doesn't
need the money; OR C) is headed for business failure.
(A) and (B) does not describe
most of the people who teach CHL classes. But (C) definitely describes people who have no business sense. In my Basic Handgun classes currently, and in my CHL classes when I become eligible to teach them, I want to try and operate at a profit because A) I will have overhead to pay for; B) I
need the money; and C) I can then
continue operating. I am not going to apologize for that. If the OP wants to give away his own services, that's fine. But unless he is independently wealthy, he's going to shortly lose interest in teaching because the economic penalty will take the pleasure out of it. If he expects
others to operate at a loss, then he's no better than the Occupy crowd.
I would like to think that he is a better person than they are, and that he understands free market capitalism better than they do.
As long as the state mandates a 10 hour class, people are going to try and make a go of this as a business. Compare it to the number of instructors in Texas who offer advanced tactical training. Their numbers aren't even
close to the number of people who offer CHL classes (not counting for overlap in who offers what). Why is that? Because the demand is lower. If the state were to mandate advanced tactical training for CHL holders, the number of people offering that training would blossom. If we had Constitutional Carry in Texas, with CHL licenses for those who wanted them for interstate reciprocity purposes, you would see a much smaller number of CHL instructors because the demand for their services would more approximate the demand for advanced tactical training. This is a perfect example of the state creating a market where one did not previoiusly exist, and for a product for which there is not much of a
natural demand, simply as a revenue generator for the state.
But as long as the business opportunity exists, I agree wholeheartedly with others who warn against devaluing your own product. As a website designer, I see this all the time and it is the bane of my existence. When I was in the printing industry, I saw it there. Printers devalued their own product in order to get work. And when their pricing got to the point where it would no longer sustain the payments on million dollar printing presses, they went under. The printing industry today is a mere shadow of what it was just 10 years ago. The website design industry has suffered the same kind of pressures in this economy. And now those of us who are still in business are having to deal with customers who have been conditioned to not see enough value in the product to be willing to pay a reasonable fee for it, thanks to those who used cut-throat pricing to get a share of a diminishing market. In the end, all they cut was their own throats......and made it harder for the rest of us who are still in business to continue making a living.
Profit is good. It should be encouraged. Those that try to charge too little and deliver too much are going to fail just as much as those who charge too much and deliver too little. There is a place in the marketplace for $50 CHL classes, but you'll always get Yugos instead of Cadillacs for that price.
Honesly, it continues to surprise me that there are people who just don't get this. In my experience, those that don't get it lack a fundamental understanding of human nature. They are the same people who want somebody to run up $250,000 or more in student loans; invest 4 years in college plus 4 years in med school plus several more years of internship/residency; and then give away their medical services. They want something for nothing. I'm ranting. I know. But I'm surprised that this topic even came up.
You want people to spend less money on the right to carry a gun? Abolish all restrictions on the RKBA. End of problem. But don't put the onus on honest people who choose to take lemons and make lemonaid.