by bgsengine » Sat Aug 24, 2019 1:57 pm
Yeah, as I posted in the other thread, my take-away from that is Briggs, like other manufacturers have been seeing that market dynamic as I mentioned - Box store units are going ever cheaper (liquidations and inventory reductions, etc) , costs of service is increasing to where it's cheaper to just throw away the broken unit and buy a new one, than to fix the old one. Only real need for service is in warranty, or people trying to get cheap mowers fixed cheaply - the others , as they noted with the housing market - fewer homeowners and those that do own homes are hiring landscapers or mowing contractors to mow their lawns, so they have no need for their own consumer grade mowers any longer, or if they do their own, many of them are wealthy enough anyway to buy commercial units, and those are often taken back to the shop that sold them.. It's no longer feasible for a small shop to stay in business these days unless they have a large volume and repair ticket backlog to keep them busy and sell all their daily hours.. Then there's the battery powered stuff - far less maintenance on those, fewer problems to fix, no gas , oil, etc stuff to deal with, so no work for the small service-only shops to do..
In short, industry is moving to where consumer grade gas powered equipment market is constantly shrinking, as battery power takes over that market, Commercial contractor equipment is where the market is moving to, so the only shops that generally stay busy and operate as the owner's sole income source, are going to be the ones that stock and sell commercial grade equipment, the independent service-only shop is either gonna have to find other income sources, or close down entirely and just do it as hobby work.. That's my 2 cents worth. (adjusted for inflation, not even worth a sneeze in a hurricane these days..)
How poor are they who have not patience. What wound did ever heal, but by degrees? - Iago (Othello Act II, Scene 3)