Visited a Store and was shunned


I live in an area where brick & mortar stores are not easily assessable to demo equipment. While traveling for business, I decided to stop by an establishment on the U.S. West coast. My interest was in the Dynaudio Confidence 20 since I’m looking to upgrade from the Contour 20i. I’m not here to name names or throw anyone under the bus, just purely to voice my frustration and disbelief on how I was treated.

I was greeted with skepticism and a general lack of interest in discussing the product. There were two gentlemen working that day and neither had any interest in answering questions or providing a listening demo. As a matter of fact, when I asked to listen to the Confidence 20 speakers one of them immediately said “no way”. Both speakers were on stands sitting next to several amplifiers so it wouldn’t have taken much time to setup.

I was intent on making a purchase that day and having the speakers shipped to my residence, but decided to leave the store based on my experience.

It’s a shame that most of us have to relay on equipment reviews when establishments such as this lack interest in the customers that support the hobby.

vette5451

My friend and I visited Audition Audio in Birmingham AL back in the 1980s.    We were treated well.  Pretty sure it was Jim Smith himself who helped us.  We both ended up buying a pair of Magnepans that day.  Best sounding Magnepan setup I have ever heard,  but not easy to reproduce at home.

And I know this sounds insane, but honestly the enthusiast Audio buyer is being squeezed out by the mega buck pure consumer.  

By this I mean, they don't want to investigate DAC chips, or speaker material, or think about horns vs. planars.  They want to buy a home theater system and be assured it's wroth the million dollars. 

Development money is tight, and in home theater for instance, having the funds to keep up with video/HDMI/audio and licensing issues is a very expensive proposition. 

I don't know this for sure, but my feelings are that Theta Digital ran into this, and tried for a while to bridge the consumer and installer markets, and finally gave up on the walk-in consumer.  I think other brands may have also.  Honestly I say this with very little evidence, so take this with a grain of salt.  I'd love to understand this whole marketting/dollar dynamic better. 

on a related note, I think Stereophile, TAS and the like probably spend more time thinking about those installers as their prime audience than we realize. 

Regarding making an appointment.  If you want someone to do something for you, then you should make it as easy as possible for them to do what you want.  Making an appointment and letting them know what your intentions/expectations are is a way of making it easy for the retailer.

Many years ago I had the owner of a multi-store Chicago area hi-fi emporium tell me that audiophiles were a pain to deal with.  They would spend hours talking and listening, but not do that much buying.  They were tolerated as long as they didn't interfere with paying customers.

when I first walked into an audio store (mid 90s on Boylston), the salesmen tried to sell me one of the cheapest speakers (which he did and which I still own and love btw) and he pointed to the most expensive ones and said: I don't care about selling the entry level ones today, I want to sell you these in 20 years. Because that's where you will end up.

I always remembered it. That some day I will have a killer system because I will just be 10 times better off financially and be ready to buy such a great piece of equipment. That's how a good salesman thinks.