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friendly 2 da void posted:Just wanna say this is fascinating stuff and IMHO you should pitch it to a media outlet It's known. I didn't go rifling through drawers in City Hall or filing FOIA requests or anything- half of this is literally taken from news coverage of Seacoast real estate transactions. Basically, when people look to start a church, they make a business plan. That plan often includes real estate investment, including in commercial. Seacoast is just an especially successful example, in a state/region with especially poor zoning regulation.
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# ? Jan 30, 2019 04:41 |
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# ? May 24, 2024 14:12 |
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Discendo Vox posted:It's known. I didn't go rifling through drawers in City Hall or filing FOIA requests or anything- half of this is literally taken from news coverage of Seacoast real estate transactions. Basically, when people look to start a church, they make a business plan. That plan often includes real estate investment, including in commercial. Seacoast is just an especially successful example, in a state/region with especially poor zoning regulation. To be quite honest, I had no goddamn idea there were franchise chain churches until I read this thread and it’s freaking me out. It may be known locally because of the impact it has on the area, but I doubt the greater population of the country has no idea that the local mega church is just Subway with a cross. It really is fascinating and horrifying at the same time. Your example in particular is really something. Resident Evil’s “a horrible, shady corporation owns literally the entire town” concept doesn’t seem so far fetched now.
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# ? Feb 3, 2019 07:33 |
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bloodysabbath posted:To be quite honest, I had no goddamn idea there were franchise chain churches until I read this thread and it’s freaking me out. Yeah, they've been at it for awhile now.
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# ? Feb 3, 2019 09:15 |
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bloodysabbath posted:To be quite honest, I had no goddamn idea there were franchise chain churches until I read this thread and it’s freaking me out. It may be known locally because of the impact it has on the area, but I doubt the greater population of the country has no idea that the local mega church is just Subway with a cross. It really is fascinating and horrifying at the same time. Your example in particular is really something. Resident Evil’s “a horrible, shady corporation owns literally the entire town” concept doesn’t seem so far fetched now. I’m verysick and can’t ecplain atm but in this case. The franchise thing is very publicly known the real state investments are not. Edit look up “telechurch”
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# ? Feb 3, 2019 14:54 |
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Beachcomber posted:Yeah, they've been at it for awhile now. the catholic church is kind of the exact opposite of franchising though
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# ? Feb 3, 2019 14:58 |
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bloodysabbath posted:To be quite honest, I had no goddamn idea there were franchise chain churches until I read this thread and it’s freaking me out. It may be known locally because of the impact it has on the area, but I doubt the greater population of the country has no idea that the local mega church is just Subway with a cross. It really is fascinating and horrifying at the same time. Your example in particular is really something. Resident Evil’s “a horrible, shady corporation owns literally the entire town” concept doesn’t seem so far fetched now. I mean company towns have been a thing since at least coal mining existed, and I'm sure earlier concepts existed like it. Umbrellas almost better since they didn't invent their own currency
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# ? Feb 3, 2019 15:08 |
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mandatory lesbian posted:I mean colonies have been a thing since at least coal mining existed, and I'm sure earlier concepts existed like it.
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# ? Feb 3, 2019 17:51 |
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exploded mummy posted:the catholic church is kind of the exact opposite of franchising though yeah it's the in-n-out burger of religion
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# ? Feb 3, 2019 18:55 |
You can buy everything you need to start a church nowadays, right down to the sermons. Which is why every Evangelical pastor has the same god-damned story about buying their elementary school sweetheart 16 packs of juicy fruit because the pastor only had $4 and gum was 15 cents a pack.
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# ? Feb 4, 2019 00:23 |
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Juciy fruit is terrible value, they lose their flavor in ten seconds.
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# ? Feb 4, 2019 00:34 |
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I guess Big Red is only good for fornicatiors?
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# ? Feb 4, 2019 01:11 |
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RandomPauI posted:You can buy everything you need to start a church nowadays, right down to the sermons. Which is why every Evangelical pastor has the same god-damned story about buying their elementary school sweetheart 16 packs of juicy fruit because the pastor only had $4 and gum was 15 cents a pack. What's the moral of this story?
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# ? Feb 4, 2019 02:42 |
I don't remember, probably something about quality over quantity. Jesus karioke don't come cheap after all.
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# ? Feb 4, 2019 09:18 |
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adhuin posted:You making and selling laptop stands? What about generic foods and super markets? How are they abusing their position? Anyone can do what amazon does. Would we hold brick and mortar stores accountable for having their own trucks to deliver products? Magius1337est fucked around with this message at 05:17 on Feb 5, 2019 |
# ? Feb 5, 2019 04:59 |
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Whoa hell Yeah let's do this again
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# ? Feb 5, 2019 05:11 |
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Magius1337est posted:What about generic foods and super markets? They absolutely are, that's why laws are discussed in the EU to protect smaller suppliers (that will probably go nowhere, but it shows there's a problem).
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# ? Feb 5, 2019 14:33 |
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Magius1337est posted:What about generic foods and super markets? Thank you for responding to this 34 day old post that spawned a multiple page derail. With the exact same question about supermarket brands that was already asked and answered several times already! Really a great thing you've done here.
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# ? Feb 5, 2019 16:59 |
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FCKGW posted:Thank you for responding to this 34 day old post that spawned a multiple page derail. With the exact same question about supermarket brands that was already asked and answered several times already! Don't post-shame.
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# ? Feb 6, 2019 04:41 |
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Balliver Shagnasty posted:Don't post-shame. why not what's even the point of this website if you can't post-shame
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# ? Feb 6, 2019 07:31 |
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Balliver Shagnasty posted:Don't post-shame. This was never a rule of the thread. So if you enforce it now, that makes it an expressed ex post facto post-post-shaming post.
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# ? Feb 6, 2019 07:48 |
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Lampert is trying to skate on the pension liabilities. Choice quote from the former CEO of sears canada. quote:Sears could have regained its feet up until 2005, after five years of being poorly run by Alan Lacy, whose crowning act was turning it over to Lampert, said Mark Cohen, the former CEO and chairman of Sears Canada and current director of retail studies at Columbia University's business school.
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# ? Feb 6, 2019 20:13 |
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JC Penney will cease selling appliances by the end of the month. Furniture will be sold online only as well soon.
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 08:21 |
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You know how some things are called "Natural Monopolies"? I wonder if a less extreme version of that logic isn't part of whats happening with the death of malls. I understand that things like brand loyalty and people being saps for good marketing keeps at least some variation going. But I look at my local mall with it's dozens of Identical clothing stores and I wonder how they can share the same demo's without spreading the customer base too thin. I get that there's different genres of clothing store, but so many sell the exact same "image" that I wonder if malls simply reached a point where there weren't enough warm bodies to support two of the more or less same store next to each other.
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 10:41 |
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galagazombie posted:You know how some things are called "Natural Monopolies"? I wonder if a less extreme version of that logic isn't part of whats happening with the death of malls. I understand that things like brand loyalty and people being saps for good marketing keeps at least some variation going. But I look at my local mall with it's dozens of Identical clothing stores and I wonder how they can share the same demo's without spreading the customer base too thin. I get that there's different genres of clothing store, but so many sell the exact same "image" that I wonder if malls simply reached a point where there weren't enough warm bodies to support two of the more or less same store next to each other. Yes and no, it's a little more complicated. I think it's accurate to say that malls are a form of natural localized monopolies. There is a high barrier to entry (building the goddamn thing) and positive network externalities (by gathering a cluster of stores within walking distance). Once the mall is established, having a business outside of the mall becomes significantly more difficult as the consumer can drive to the mall and browse several stores in a very short time-frame. In this way malls effectively monopolize huge chunks of consumer demand and retail space demand within a limited geographical area. The only real way to compete for a long time was by building a larger mall or one within a shorter distance. This also plays into why malls are dying, because the internet has all the advantages that malls had times 11.
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 11:22 |
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I remember hearing about how Chinese shopping districts have stores that sell exactly the same products even in super specific niches (like say, military surplus uniforms) all clustered together, and it makes sense with some thought; if people want to buy, say, a shirt, they're going to go to the place with the most shirt stores, and if they can't find what they want in one store they can go to the other one right next to it. If you have a shirt store on its own somewhere, people are less likely to go there when with the same or a little more effort they can go to the mall where the other shirt stores are and get more options in both product variety and prices. I get the impression most of the dying malls were in marginal districts in the first place, and it didn't take a lot of lost business to enter a death spiral.
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 12:29 |
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MiddleOne posted:This also plays into why malls are dying, because the internet has all the advantages that malls had times 11. How much of this is also due to the average person getting a bit poorer each year, as the cost of living continues rising but inflation-adjusted wages stay the same?
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 12:40 |
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QuarkJets posted:How much of this is also due to the average person getting a bit poorer each year, as the cost of living continues rising but inflation-adjusted wages stay the same? That applies to almost every part of the retail sector though, not specifically malls.
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 12:49 |
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QuarkJets posted:How much of this is also due to the average person getting a bit poorer each year, as the cost of living continues rising but inflation-adjusted wages stay the same? It's also laziness. Driving to the mall, circling for parking, dealing with crowds, etc seems like a lot more work than just putting the item I want into google.
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 16:42 |
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Ghost Leviathan posted:I remember hearing about how Chinese shopping districts have stores that sell exactly the same products even in super specific niches (like say, military surplus uniforms) all clustered together, and it makes sense with some thought; if people want to buy, say, a shirt, they're going to go to the place with the most shirt stores, and if they can't find what they want in one store they can go to the other one right next to it. If you have a shirt store on its own somewhere, people are less likely to go there when with the same or a little more effort they can go to the mall where the other shirt stores are and get more options in both product variety and prices. I've gone, it's not as crazy as it sounds. It's more like, a market anywhere would have but long established enough that people have buildings instead of tents or tables. Like you've gone to a farmers market, where 8 guys are selling carrots, and 4 people are selling cheese (and one guy sells both carrots and cheese) and everything everyone sells is kinda on an overlapping spectrum all bunched together. It's that, but they also have an entire small store of that stuff as well as the tables out front. And like, stuff is grouped reasonably, so there is a street that just sells silverware and that sounds crazy, having a whole street that just has stores that just sell silverware, but it's really an alley off a street that sells cookware so it's basically like just the "silverware department" at sears or something where stuff is roughly grouped in a way a single owner store would have grouped it.
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 17:13 |
Well you can haggle in a lot of countries too so having the same thing just means they might have the same item but you can haggle the price down. There’s a reason why almost any retail clothing store has perpetual coupons/sales, cause nobody wants to go to malls to buy poo poo.
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 17:31 |
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Invalid Validation posted:Well you can haggle in a lot of countries too so having the same thing just means they might have the same item but you can haggle the price down. There’s a reason why almost any retail clothing store has perpetual coupons/sales, cause nobody wants to go to malls to buy poo poo. About 5-10 years ago JC Penny tried to do away with the discount and sale bullshit. It cratered their sales. People absolutely want to be lied to and told the $20 shirt they're buying for $30 is really a $50 shirt.
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 18:02 |
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Xae posted:About 5-10 years ago JC Penny tried to do away with the discount and sale bullshit. I read about that; genuinely made me sad.
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 18:35 |
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People loving love thinking they got a great deal
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 18:42 |
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Proud Christian Mom posted:People loving love thinking they got a great deal Well in some ways you do. The idiot full price shoppers are subsidizing the discount/coupon shoppers.
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 18:46 |
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Hand Row posted:Well in some ways you do. The idiot full price shoppers are subsidizing the discount/coupon shoppers. I don't think they're selling to discount shoppers at a loss. If anything, everyone ends up paying more than they would in a world where coupons/this type of behavior didn't exist.
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 19:48 |
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Not at a loss but at a lower margin. Like overall a company needs 50% margin. The full price purchasers buy at say 60% margin, so the company can drive low margin purchasers with steeper discounts at 40% margin or whatever. While JC Penney tried just saying hey here’s 50% margin for all instead of starting at 60.
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 21:08 |
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It seems the people who act like customers are bad for wanting discounts are grossly mistaken. Did not this store advertise itself as the place with all the special complicated sales for many decades? Even if the prices were truly less after the change, it's no surprise that destroying your main identifier is bad for the brand. It seems that only this sale gimmick differentiated the store from similar chain. Plus, once you break the "sales" attitude which had occasional true deals, it is easy to see why customer get spooked away from perception store will move to flat out raise the prices, is it not? You already change one major pillar of store, how can you keep the trust? Reminds of the New Coke debacle!
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 21:36 |
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Invalid Validation posted:Well you can haggle in a lot of countries too so having the same thing just means they might have the same item but you can haggle the price down. There’s a reason why almost any retail clothing store has perpetual coupons/sales, cause nobody wants to go to malls to buy poo poo. Sure, I guess I just mean it seems weirder on paper to hear "there is a street they sell nothing but goldfish!" than to see it and realize it's basically just a market that happens to have fixed permanent buildings.
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 21:39 |
It’s psychological, you’re more likely to buy something if you think you’re getting a good deal. And since wages have stagnated for decades everyone is poor as poo poo and won’t buy full priced even if the price is what it would be during a sale cause we’re all fuckin poor and need deals to survive.
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 21:42 |
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# ? May 24, 2024 14:12 |
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Owlofcreamcheese posted:I've gone, it's not as crazy as it sounds. It's more like, a market anywhere would have but long established enough that people have buildings instead of tents or tables. A mall I went to a mall in Bangkok that was like that. Every floor was basically a department so you just went to the clothing floor or the electronics floor for all the shops selling that. I thought it would make browsing around less interesting, but it was actually nice because you could just skip the makeup/soap section instead of having to walk past a Sephora and the Lush and the Bath and Bodyworks to get to what you wanted.
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# ? Feb 7, 2019 21:44 |