KingEurope
Registered Shopper
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2013
- Messages
- 92
I've been thinking this for a while - ever since the SitUp channels introduced a clock for their sales (it was around 2008-ish, wasn't it?), a major piece of the channels died.
Sure, people can say the quality of products has decreased or there's far less selection then before. But the introduction of the clock is by far the worst thing to happen. When something wasn't selling, the price would always keep dropping. "Non-Stop Drops" weren't exclusive to microwave egg cookers and solar panel turtles - every item was. It meant that real bargains can and did happen, much more frequently then today.
I remember in particular, once on Bid TV, with forum favourite Mike Mason blush. He was selling three or four Nintendo DS games and a load of accessories, only a few months after the Nintendo DS came out. Obviously the producers over-predicted demand way too much, and he was trying to shift hundreds of the things, and no one was buying. It went for ridiculously cheap (something like £10 for the lot), and Mason was standing there trying to shift them for literally 20 - 30 minutes. By the end of it, customers got a real bargain.
That would never happen today. No one wants it? They'd have kept it on £60, shove on a 1 minute clock and the only "Price Drop" was from the ridiculously high start price that the producer reduced 5 seconds into the sale. The price rarely truely drops, they'd have a few planned, sudden drops that the producer will shove in, but really, they have a planned price for it, and if it doesn't sell for that, they move on.
I haven't seen anyone else mention this on the forum before. But I can't be the only one who thinks this, right?
Sure, people can say the quality of products has decreased or there's far less selection then before. But the introduction of the clock is by far the worst thing to happen. When something wasn't selling, the price would always keep dropping. "Non-Stop Drops" weren't exclusive to microwave egg cookers and solar panel turtles - every item was. It meant that real bargains can and did happen, much more frequently then today.
I remember in particular, once on Bid TV, with forum favourite Mike Mason blush. He was selling three or four Nintendo DS games and a load of accessories, only a few months after the Nintendo DS came out. Obviously the producers over-predicted demand way too much, and he was trying to shift hundreds of the things, and no one was buying. It went for ridiculously cheap (something like £10 for the lot), and Mason was standing there trying to shift them for literally 20 - 30 minutes. By the end of it, customers got a real bargain.
That would never happen today. No one wants it? They'd have kept it on £60, shove on a 1 minute clock and the only "Price Drop" was from the ridiculously high start price that the producer reduced 5 seconds into the sale. The price rarely truely drops, they'd have a few planned, sudden drops that the producer will shove in, but really, they have a planned price for it, and if it doesn't sell for that, they move on.
I haven't seen anyone else mention this on the forum before. But I can't be the only one who thinks this, right?