03-05-13: Mapman
"Restocking fee" done on a % of sales price does not make sense to me. It cost the same to re-stock a similar sized amp for example whether it costs $500 or $50000.
You are missing the point. The online dealer may be calling the charge a restocking fee, but, if the guy is honest and doesn't try to resale the equipment as new, he is using the fee to offset the cost to resale the unit as used, open box, demo, or what ever the dealer wants to call it.
Would you pay $25K for an amp that somebody had in their home before you? Or would you demand a new unopened factory fresh sealed unit?
A little background on pricing. The cost a dealer pays most of the time to the manufacture/Distributor for a Hi-end piece of equipment is 60% of the manufactures retail set price.
So using your $25K priced Amp the dealer will pay, up front before delivery from the manufacture, $15K + shipping....
I can hear you now.... 40% PROFIT!
Well first are you going to pay the dealer $25K for the amp? Maybe things have been slow and the dealer discounts the amp to you 10% off.
30% profit WOW!
Well that might be if the dealer is running the business out of his basement of his home and has a full time job doing something else. Even then I would bet the guy has a line of credit with a bank and will borrow the money from the bank + interest to buy the amp.
But I doubt that is the case. Would you buy a $25K amp from a guy that operates out of his basement?
If the dealer has a store front he has overhead costs.
Rent.
Utilities.
Phone, Yellow page buisness ad.
Internet hookup.
Advertising costs.
Insurance costs.
Any employees? Costs, costs, costs...
Showroom inventory?
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Deduct overhead costs from the 30%