NZ Herald wrote:Snowgum managing director Ross Elliot told the Sydney Morning Herald that Kathmandu, which operates close to 90 stores in Australia, had "perfected the art of pricing a product at an exorbitant retail price then offering it at 60 per cent off to attract buyers".
"The adventure wear category has traditionally maintained integrity in retail pricing, but Kathmandu has changed all that," Elliot said. "The Kathmandu high-low pricing model where products are constantly on 50, 60 and 70 per cent discount, all year round, has forced the whole category to follow suit."
wayno wrote:kathmandu R&D?!? copying the overseas market leaders...
GPSGuided wrote:That's a shame! What will all the scouts boys and girls do?
blacksheep wrote:Kathmandu are clearly streaks ahead of the rest of their competitors at their business model. The others are very much trying to follow their every move (watch X-mas campaigns and play spot the difference with all of them). Does the market here really only want this type of retail, or are some companies and their execs too short of original and creative alternative strategies? It would seem Snowgum followed the model of retail Kathmandu perfected, but with much less firepower and a product that left them somewhat wanting. Whereas Kathmandu has invested quite a lot in design and R&D over the last year or two, I know that others in the sectors have cut back on design and product development…the gap will widen further between them and the also-rans..I say "buy" (shares that is, product on a case by case…). Your brothers father in law was a perceptive man and made a painful but probably sensible decision Wayno..differentiate or die, or at least be better at what the big guy is doing..
Amanda wrote:blacksheep wrote:Kathmandu are clearly streaks ahead of the rest of their competitors at their business model. The others are very much trying to follow their every move (watch X-mas campaigns and play spot the difference with all of them). Does the market here really only want this type of retail, or are some companies and their execs too short of original and creative alternative strategies? It would seem Snowgum followed the model of retail Kathmandu perfected, but with much less firepower and a product that left them somewhat wanting. Whereas Kathmandu has invested quite a lot in design and R&D over the last year or two, I know that others in the sectors have cut back on design and product development…the gap will widen further between them and the also-rans..I say "buy" (shares that is, product on a case by case…). Your brothers father in law was a perceptive man and made a painful but probably sensible decision Wayno..differentiate or die, or at least be better at what the big guy is doing..
Hi Cam,
Have you noticed that Mountain Designs has gone down a different road to Kathmandu over the last 6 months? They have tried to tell the consumer that they are offering 'Everyday Value Prices'. The Xmas catalogue has a quite different feel to a Kathmandu catalogue. Plus a different feel to MD catalogues of old. http://issuu.com/mountaindesigns/docs/m ... _2013_aust. Your thoughts?
One challenge I have found as a MD Store Manager is the customer cry 'but it's not on sale'. We explain that our 'everyday value pricing' is competitive with other outdoor retailer's prices on comparable products - even when they are on sale. This is no secret, its on the front page of the Xmas catalogue. A lot of people on this forum are quite savvy with outdoor retailers and the various marketing strategies. But as you know many customers fall for the Kathmandu model and think they are getting a great deal. A higher price 'anchors' it in the customer's mind and then they think they are getting a bargain when it is 60% off.
Cheers
Amanda
MD Hobart Store Manager
wayno wrote:take a look at polartec, the north face, montane, marmot, rab, their ads...
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