I plan to get some better chisels a new plane and a few other bits in an order that will end up being between £500 - £600 and was wondering if anyone has ever asked if they will do a deal on this kind of order and whether it was worth asking?
Sometimes retailers give a discount if you give them a larger than average sale as it can lead to a customer paying more by adding an item. Like back in the mid to late 00's I bought a tv and surround sound, the guy I was dealing with knocked off 3% which led to me buying a bluray player too.why should they give you a discount? not trying to be argumentative, but why?
I plan to get some better chisels a new plane and a few other bits in an order that will end up being between £500 - £600 and was wondering if anyone has ever asked if they will do a deal on this kind of order and whether it was worth asking?
Are they Chinese copies, though?I should think if you bought a full set of the Hotley planes he would knock you the postage off.
I've had more than a few discounts by doing my due diligence, pitting retailers against each other for a large item sale like a £1000 TV.why should they give you a discount? not trying to be argumentative, but why?
At the counters of electrical wholesalers or plumbers' merchants, I've seen novices go in with their shopping list and just ask for it to be fulfilled - and they'd be charged full retail. Those of us a bit more cautious would say what was wanted & ask not for the items, but for a price ... the door back to the street's right behind us, and we can choose to just leave without buying, after all ...
Builders' merchants vary, and you have to divine the company (or branch) culture as to how to play it. Some have an automatic price structure if you have an account (often related to your annual spend). But I had a Jewson monthly account for years, it was where I got sawn 'joinery red' along with other stuff - and still had to ask for a price on every item. But I knew that a price was available, so if I was collecting I used to choose the stuff & load it in the yard, then take the yard ticket into the shop to book it - and walk straight through the counter into the back office, see who was free, put the ticket on their desk and sit down whilst they did their sums.
But it doesn't have to be for work ... in a large & very well organised secondhand bookshop on 2 floors up in the good old north country lately, I found a couple of collectable cds that I was keen on in a rack upstairs. At the till, I asked 'could you do me a deal on these?'. Together they were marked at £17 and I got 4 quid off.
So you never know till you ask. But corporate culture might be another matter - I doubt that you could do this in Screwfix or Wickes. Which is a shame, because it takes part of the fun out of life. :-((-:
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