Garden Centres - what a joke!
Garden Centres - what a joke!
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Discussion

Lead

Original Poster:

134 posts

252 months

Wednesday 25th May 2011
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Called into two large garden centres today to buy a lawnmower to be told that they don`t stock them!!!. I could buy clothing , candles, childrens books, marmalade etc etc. How can they trade as Garden centres when the item that we all need to maintain the biggest part of the garden is not even sold there? Anybody else got other examples of false trading descriptions?

RemainAllHoof

79,471 posts

306 months

Wednesday 25th May 2011
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Bizarre. I am surprised.

furtive

4,501 posts

303 months

Wednesday 25th May 2011
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They do sell them there. They just don't hold a stock of very large expensive equipment, which is fair enough. Where would they store them?

Heskey

4,048 posts

217 months

Wednesday 25th May 2011
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Lead said:
Called into two large garden centres today to buy a lawnmower to be told that they don`t stock them!!!. I could buy clothing , candles, childrens books, marmalade etc etc. How can they trade as Garden centres when the item that we all need to maintain the biggest part of the garden is not even sold there? Anybody else got other examples of false trading descriptions?
Green signage doesn't necessarily mean it does gardening stuff!


Simpo Two

91,526 posts

289 months

Wednesday 25th May 2011
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I agree it seems odd but maybe they can't sell enough (due to competition from the DIY sheds, Amazon etc) to make it worthwhile. £100 in a garden centre, £90 in B&Q and £80 on Amazon with free delivery. Profit per square metre is going to be very low.

Dennis99

308 posts

187 months

Wednesday 25th May 2011
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http://www.lawnmowersdirect.co.uk/

Owned by the well established Bartram Mowers of Norwich.

Ordered a Sanli LS40 Sunday night, delivered by courier yesterday lunchtime, job done.

mattdaniels

7,362 posts

306 months

Wednesday 25th May 2011
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I know how you feel. I went to the Barbers to buy a jacket and the bloke tried to cut my hair.
getmecoat

mattdaniels

7,362 posts

306 months

Wednesday 25th May 2011
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I know how you feel. I went to Ikea to buy a flat pack and it was just a cupboard not a whole flat!
getmecoat

mattdaniels

7,362 posts

306 months

Wednesday 25th May 2011
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And I was really disappointed by the stock at the pawnbrokers.
getmecoat

mattdaniels

7,362 posts

306 months

Wednesday 25th May 2011
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Forgive me, the Jubilee line is screwed so I'm travelling across London in a black cab and really bored!

netherfield

3,085 posts

208 months

Wednesday 25th May 2011
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My uncle worked at the local garden centre,they gave up with machinery about 3 years ago.

Customers walk in and ask for advice on which machine to buy and then bugger off and get one on the internet.

Simpo Two

91,526 posts

289 months

Wednesday 25th May 2011
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StevieBee

14,895 posts

279 months

Wednesday 25th May 2011
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Lead said:
Called into two large garden centres today to buy a lawnmower to be told that they don`t stock them!!!. I could buy clothing , candles, childrens books, marmalade etc etc. How can they trade as Garden centres when the item that we all need to maintain the biggest part of the garden is not even sold there? Anybody else got other examples of false trading descriptions?
Have a friend who runs a garden centre and I can tell you why this is the case.

Comes down to the big shed retail chains and some of the multi-chain garden centres signing area rights on certain products. There are not that many Lawnmower manufacturers out there - it certainly isn't what you'd call a crowded market place. So, the manufacturers do deals with the likes of B&Q that allow B&Q to take a slightly smaller margin than they would normally demand in return for area exclusivity. The lawnmower manufacturer is happy because they are getting more for the stock they provide. The retailer is happy because they are the only place in town where you can get that mower at that price.

This doesn't mean that an independent garden centre can't stock them but the trade price and conditions would be set at a level that would deem it unwise to do.

Skyedriver

22,439 posts

306 months

Wednesday 25th May 2011
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No such things a GARDEN Centres any more.
Books, christmas decorations, resturant, clothing only
I am old enough to remember when they grew their own plants now anything live is imported

BigBen

12,125 posts

254 months

Wednesday 25th May 2011
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StevieBee said:
Lead said:
Called into two large garden centres today to buy a lawnmower to be told that they don`t stock them!!!. I could buy clothing , candles, childrens books, marmalade etc etc. How can they trade as Garden centres when the item that we all need to maintain the biggest part of the garden is not even sold there? Anybody else got other examples of false trading descriptions?
Have a friend who runs a garden centre and I can tell you why this is the case.

Comes down to the big shed retail chains and some of the multi-chain garden centres signing area rights on certain products. There are not that many Lawnmower manufacturers out there - it certainly isn't what you'd call a crowded market place. So, the manufacturers do deals with the likes of B&Q that allow B&Q to take a slightly smaller margin than they would normally demand in return for area exclusivity. The lawnmower manufacturer is happy because they are getting more for the stock they provide. The retailer is happy because they are the only place in town where you can get that mower at that price.

This doesn't mean that an independent garden centre can't stock them but the trade price and conditions would be set at a level that would deem it unwise to do.
This was the case when I had a Saturday job in a garden centre 19 years ago, simply could not compete on price with Homebase or Argos so did not try to.

Johnnytheboy

24,499 posts

210 months

Thursday 26th May 2011
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I (sort of) work for a garden centre, and I have always found it odd that they/we don't stock garden machinery.

Ultimately I think it stems from what business (nurseries) garden centres have evolved from. Lawnmower etc. sellers have evolved from agricultural machinery places, and have the service back-up to go with it, while garden centres don't have it.

bean455

674 posts

232 months

Thursday 26th May 2011
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We only use Garden centres for coffee and Jacket potatoes,go figure!

Simpo Two

91,526 posts

289 months

Thursday 26th May 2011
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Skyedriver said:
No such things a GARDEN Centres any more.
Books, christmas decorations, resturant, clothing only
I am old enough to remember when they grew their own plants now anything live is imported
True but - firstly, they have to try to make money in the winter when nobody is gardening. Secondly, the price of land is such in the UK that it probably makes good business sense to sell the nursery space for housing and import plantlets from somewhere else. And so maybe population turns us from a nation of exporters to importers as we simply can't sustain our own population. So there you go: too many people and you go bankrupt...?

Johnnytheboy

24,499 posts

210 months

Thursday 26th May 2011
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In the case of xmas decs, they make good sense for garden centres as they fill the area taken up by garden furniture from September to January.

mph1977

12,467 posts

192 months

Tuesday 31st May 2011
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As others have said the DIY sheds can do you a good price, the agricultural machinery places or a mower specialist can do the service and backup ...