Discussion:
Price Over Sales & Service

Hey guys,
I'm out of the Raleigh-Durham, NC area and I work for a company that produces, sells and installs its own brand tires. I won't list my company on here for the time being (I don't know if there's a rule against advertising on here or not). All the time I run into people who are more concerned about price over quality product and service. I know times are tough right now. I just wanted to get some input from you guys. What is more important to you? Price or knowing that you are getting the best product out there backed by quality service?
  • Posted 26 Feb 2010 23:13
  • By casey_c
  • joined 26 Feb'10 - 7 messages
  • North Carolina, United States
Showing items 1 - 5 of 5 results.
Exactly!
  • Posted 5 Mar 2010 23:14
  • By casey_c
  • joined 26 Feb'10 - 7 messages
  • North Carolina, United States
While price is a signifiicant factor in many decision today whethr it be fro a a tire or teh complete fork lift. But if you can show or demonstrate or provide testimonial you have added value, like you say your tires last longer most intelligent customer will listen to that.

Remember the guy that signs the approval always want to get the best quality product at the lowest possible cost (I did not say lowest price) adn a sales persn that will always lower his price to beat everybody can only sell one thing price.
  • Posted 4 Mar 2010 05:30
  • By johnr_j
  • joined 3 Jun'06 - 1,452 messages
  • Georgia, United States
"Have An Exceptional Day!"
While that may be true in the long run it's always cheaper to go with a better quality tire. If you have a great tire that's getting more hours, alot more, than its cheaper competitors in the long run it will add up when you figure in how often you are changing the same tires on the same machine. And when I say buying a better quality tire that may cost more I don't mean by alot. The two are still competitive in price but the one that's higher quality will last longer than the cheaper one. This may not matter to places who don't run their lifts as much as others. But it makes a huge difference to the customer who runs 2-3 shifts per day with the same lifts in a nonstop driving environment than the customer who may only have 1 or 2 lifts and only changes the tires out every other year or so. It's all about the application the tire is being used for. While the two competing tires may turn out the same results for a lift that only runs an hour a day total, the results will be completely different on a lift that runs 15 plus hours a day.
  • Posted 4 Mar 2010 01:17
  • By casey_c
  • joined 26 Feb'10 - 7 messages
  • North Carolina, United States
its price. its always price. If a good quality tire is not requested by the customer then its price. Now some will buy a higher quality tire with better service if its "close" in price, maybe 5% or so, but you have to remember, tire dealers make money by selling them at a markup so the lower the cost the better the markup. so, in a nutshell, you can believe whatever you want but at the end of the day its all price. always will be. email me, I wanna ask you some questions! ryanwaltman AT rocketmail DOT com
  • Posted 3 Mar 2010 01:17
  • By ryan_w
  • joined 11 Feb'10 - 9 messages
  • Pennsylvania, United States
May need to move this, I think I posted in the wrong section.
  • Posted 26 Feb 2010 23:14
  • By casey_c
  • joined 26 Feb'10 - 7 messages
  • North Carolina, United States

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Global CEO, Swisslog
Board member, UKMHA
Strategic advisor, Roboteon
CEO Americas, Hai Robotics
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edition #1244 - 21 August 2025
In our feel good story for the week, we report on a donation from Wisconsin-headquartered Big Joe Forklifts to the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s College of Engineering, after discovering the institution was still using one of its 1960s walkie stackers... Continue reading
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