Well, from what I have seen, and it is not limited to camera stores 
either, what happens is the old folks retire, and the kids are not 
interested in the business (Why should they be, when they are now 
doctors or lawyers?), so the store is sold to a chain such as Ritz. The 
chain moves in and cherry picks the business. That means they only sell 
the high profit quick turn over stuff. You see, unlike the previous 
owners they are not interested in photography, they are interested in 
making money. Service becomes nonexistent as the low wage employees 
don't care about anything but payday. Then the chain closes the store 
because it does not meet their profit center minimums.

Notice that nowhere in that paragraph is anything about all the 
customers buying from NYC causing the local store to die. In fact I have 
a friend that runs a store here in town, his prices are often lower than 
Wal-Marts on similar items, his turn over is in the twice a month range, 
he is the only full time employee, and he owns the building. If he 
retired and his kids did not want to run the business it would be dead 
in a month. It is a profit center because he makes it so, without him it 
would die very quickly.

Most of the local stores that have closed blame Wal-Mart. Mostly, their 
owners had better things to do than run the store themselves, which I 
think has more to do with them not making money than Wal-Mart did.

--graywolf



Shel Belinkoff wrote:
> Why is that?  Did you have local camera shops?  Why did they disappear?
> 
> Shel
> 
> 
> 
>> [Original Message]
>> From: Bob Shell 
> 
>> The problem with this is that for a large number of us there are no  
>> local camera shops anymore. 
> 
> 
> 

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