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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Seattle
    Posts
    8,548
    If you like that bike shop, take the bike there.

    They'll get over it. They'd rather SOME business than none!
    heck you can tell them the bike was a gift from your grandmother!
    Mimi Team TE BIANCHISTA
    for six tanks of gas you could have bought a bike.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Brooklyn, NY
    Posts
    820
    Congrats on going for the Scott... It's a sweet bike. I've heard really good things about Cambria Bike.

    Go ahead and use your LBS. It really is just business. We are all so attached to biking here that we think of it personally all the time. There is nothing wrong with getting a good deal on last year's leftovers. Some might say it's the only smart way to shop!

    As for selling on Ebay, we did it with DH's Roubaix. Worked out fantastic. Maybe it was just luck, but it was the first thing we ever sold on Ebay and the whole thing went off without a hitch. We got the price we wanted, and the guy loved the bike.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Uncanny Valley
    Posts
    14,498
    By the time you pay for the extra labor they should charge you to install parts you bought someplace else, you won't think you've got such a great deal. Honestly, I do a little work for somebody in the motorcycle industry and sometimes get tires in lieu of payment (one of the few things we don't have the tools to install at home), and I expect to pay extra for my LBS to mount and balance them since I didn't buy them there.

    Fitting is another thing. Not every shop has a highly skilled fit tech, so it's going to be common for people to bring bikes from elsewhere to LBS's that do. You're paying a set rate for the fitting because of that, and you are going to buy from them whatever parts you need as a result of the fit, right?

    Fair's fair. If I'm going to buy something online, I'd better be able to install it myself. I understand perfectly about buying stuff online when I have a cr*ppy LBS, or when they're so far away from me that I don't really consider them "local." But if you have a good relationship with your LBS, why wouldn't you want them to be able to stay in business?

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Brooklyn, NY
    Posts
    820
    One scenario I can think of when you might do this is if you fall in love with a particular bike or brand of bike, and your LBS is just simply not a dealer of that brand. Doesn't mean you don't want them to stay in business if you buy the bike elsewhere but still use them for the fit and maintenance.

    I, for example, just got it into my head that I wanted to ride a Blue RC4. It was a pretty superficial decision, but still, that was the bike I wanted. Nobody around here carries that brand at all...

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Location
    Off eating cake.
    Posts
    1,700
    WRT buying parts online then getting the shop to fit them...
    You are a regular customer of your LBS, not some random passer by. See if they'll do a price-match for whatever it is you're thinking of buying online or give you a good deal on installation if it is impossible for them to get close enough in price for the item(s). They make the sale and you get a good price.
    Drink coffee and do stupid things faster with more energy.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Uncanny Valley
    Posts
    14,498
    PS I didn't mean I thought you were the antichrist

    It's just that if you're getting something from your LBS that you can't get online, then you ought to be willing to pay for it, because it's the reason that they have the overhead that they do.

    I don't mean fitting, or selling you a particular make of bike, for the reasons I said before, but I do mean knowing their product line and helping their customers find what they need (as opposed to what they think they want); making sure bikes are properly set up before they leave the shop; etc. If they don't give you any more help than a big box store would, and I've been in LBS's like that, then to heck with them, but I wouldn't bring them my bike for service, either.

    So many people complain about talking to tech support in India, or buying poisoned dog food from China, but don't see the connection when they choose where to make their own purchases.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    somewhere between the Red & Rio Grande
    Posts
    5,297
    The LBS I purchased my bike at went out of business. After that I realized my bike was improperly fit and causing me pain. I took it into the shop near my work and paid $40 to have the fit redone. I then bought $50 insoles. The shop was very nice and concerned that I have a proper fitting bike. Plus if you think about it a paid fit is pretty much 100% profit. They now get my business before any other shop and I only bought my shoes online because I really wanted a color they couldn't get.

    The shop should be happy to help you no matter where you bought it. The great service the shop I use provided fitting my bike won me over as a frequent customer.
    Amanda

    2011 Specialized Epic Comp 29er | Specialized Phenom | "Marie Laveau"
    2007 Cannondale Synapse Carbon Road | Selle Italia Lady Gel Flow | "Miranda"


    You don't have to be great to get started, but you do have to get started to be great. -Lee J. Colan

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    San Francisco, CA
    Posts
    1,080
    I'd beg to differ that a paid fit is 100% profits. The employee who fit you is paid either a salary or an hourly wage. If the fit takes 2 hours and the employee makes $20/hour, then there is zero profit on a $40 bike fit.

    There is also opportunity cost for the other things that employee might be doing (like selling a bike) that he can't do because he's fitting you (for no profit).


    Quote Originally Posted by Aggie_Ama View Post
    I took it into the shop near my work and paid $40 to have the fit redone. I then bought $50 insoles. The shop was very nice and concerned that I have a proper fitting bike. Plus if you think about it a paid fit is pretty much 100% profit.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Oct 2005
    Posts
    2,309

    Can a newbie lbs owner weigh in here??

    Ok, first of all, Cambria is a good shop. Just give the bike a good look over to make sure they didn't "trade out" components. I have heard some stuff about one of their shops. Don't know if it's true, but always good to be cautious...

    Now as for buying a component online and then asking them to install it?? Ohh that made me bristle. It's kind of like taking your own food into a restaurant and sitting at their table and eating it. It just seems to be bad form IMO. There was a discussion amongst lbs owners in a trade mag about that recently. Some say they will, some say absolutely not. It's hard to exist as a brick and mortar with the internet folks under cutting you. BUT if they are not able to get the component you need, then I would say it's ok. Have you asked them if they can get it for you, and if so what kind of price they'll give you?
    I know some shops will install for free if you purchase it from them. For our shop it just depends. I would think that most shops would be willing to work with you tho.
    And NO, I do not think you are evil for buying online. When I'm pricing things for the shop I always try to look at what the online market is pricing it at. I can't always match it, but I try to stay within a stones throw.
    One thing I don't think alot of people realize either is that some online stuff is previous years goods. So they think the lbs is overcharging them for say a 105 rear derailleur, but what they lbs is selling them is a current model, and the online version is 07 or older. If your lucky your lbs will have an older model on hand and is prolly discounting it.
    As for the fit. Does this shop have a certified fitter on staff and charge for it? If so, then no worries. That's part of their business model. It's just another service, so I wouldn't think twice.

    I had a similar experience a couple of weeks ago. A lady came in and asked me to measure her for a bike. I took all her measurements and plunked them into the system. Gave her the size, saddle height, reach, etc. and then she took those measurements to my competition. Apparently she had a credit at the other store, so she was going to use it to order a road bike. She didn't like how the other lbs had measured her, so she came to me. Sure enough, He had measured her big. Which I attribute to the fact that he can't get the bike smaller than a 48cm. She measures at a 45-46. The bike she's getting will be too big for her. I'm sure I'll see it in here when it doesn't fit. I'm not certified yet (coming after Ironman) so I don't charge anything. And I also don't put it out there that I will do a professional fit. But I do know enough to be able to swap out stems, adjust cleats, etc.
    I'm just hoping that by helping her it will eventually mean she'll actually spend some $$ at my store, rather than just use me for my knowledge. All I can do is hope. At this point I'm trying to spin it as good bike karma...

    Hope this helps. You are not evil!! No worries!

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Vermont
    Posts
    1,414
    Thanks everyone.

    None of the local shops carry Scott. So I guess that makes it a little better?

    I think I would never have the nerve to walk in with a crankset I bought on Ebay or Nashbar or whatever and ask LBS to install it. Not to say there's no temptation, but I don't think I could actually do it. I do need to learn to do my own mechanical work though.

    The shop I have a relationship with is OK. I really like one of the sales guys there and one of the mechanics. I've also gotten BS from both sales and service, though, and as mentioned, they sometimes do a pretty mediocre job fixing my bike, so... I feel loyalty to them because, as mentioned, they do know me and my bikes. It's a little like feeling guilty for going to a new hairstylist when you realize you've had a string of bad cuts though.

    RM, I am sure that if your shop were in my town none of this would be an issue.

 

 

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