Many moons ago, Best Buy tried their hand at entering the high end speaker market. They came out with a line of speakers that were competitive enough, and at a fourth the price of what most of the higher end speakers were costing at the specialty stores. Even today that brand still has a following (albeit small).
However, there was one small factor that BB did not take into consideration.
"People don't shop at Best Buy for high end speakers, and they certainly wouldn't want their friends to know they went there."
The program lasted long enough for the employees to take advantage of their discount.
Right now, I price my pens at whatever I think they are worth. Some I price lower than what I may perceive another turner to be selling, some I may price higher than what I perceive another turner to be pricing his equivalent.
I'm not doing this to be in a business, although the money is nice. I don't think the pen maker who charges $100 more for his pen (than I do) has to worry about me cutting into his profits, because I doubt his customers would even so much as look my way if I was sitting right next to him.
China makes a product of the very quality that our companies want them to. They could make it just as good as us, but then it would devalue our manufacture, so our companies have them traditionally make a product of lesser quality in order to make themselves look better.
Likewise, take a television, and price it at $1000.00 at Best Buy only to see people scoff at it. Then take that same set, and price it at $7500.00 at the high fidelity store that caters to those who can't find enough things to spend their money on. It won't stay in stock.
Some of those pens look like a good deal.
Thanks for the link. :wink: