Cranky and Bitter DEALERS Oh my!
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I attended the Florida FUN show and I was amazed at how totally rude most of the dealers were. There is all this feedback being posted lately about how dealers get pissed off at buyers for doing this and that. Are we supposed to accept the fact that ALL dealers are gods and walk on water and will never try and screw you over for a few bucks, give me a break.
I've met more rude dealers than I have buyers!
Heres MY list of things DEALERS should and should not do.
Dealers, please use this as a learning tool.....
1) Because we are younger, don't treat us like we are inferior life forms wasting your time. There are a lot of younger collectors like myself who take this very SERIOUSLY.
2) Because we are younger, maybe we do, and I DO have the funds to buy coins from you, but opt not to because your rude and will always help a older person first (this happened too many times to count at the FUN Show). I even had people calling my "Young Man", I'm 38yo, but look much younger.
3) Price your coins in the case, (YOUR WEB SITES HAVE THE PRICE POSTED) not some code so that you can judge the person to see how much they will pay (some dealers price there coins and some do not) I have tested too many dealers at shows by sending a buddy over who is older and getting a price, then I walk over and check the price, 90% of the time I am always quoted a higher price, WHY? example 1882 CC DMPL PCGS 64, friend was quoted $275.00, I'm quoted $310.00, 10 minutes later.
4) If we ask to see a coin in the case, don't pick it out and fling it across the table, hand it to us like you would to a regular customer.
5) We stand in line, patiently, awaiting our turn to check out your coins, yet you carry on "Good ole Boy" conversations with a guy who has been there for an hour and yet you will not give us the time of day and you get tuded out when we ask to see the coin.
6) Don't get tuded out if we have a redbook or greysheet, there are way to many coins to memorize pricing, YOU HAVE ONE!
7) Don't waste my time with nonsense crap about the so called history of the coin and how you aquired the coin, or other nonsense about the coin you just sold for an incredibly low price. You dont want me wasting your time with needless bantering, goes both ways.
8) If we ask for a business card, how about handing one over without getting pissy, case in point, I only had a day and a half to do the FUN, two seperate dealers had a lot of inventory I was interested in, I asked if they had a web site, they said yes, once dealer was very easy going and nice to talk with, the other was insulted that I was not buying at the show, guess who is getting my business? Kinda a no brainer.
9) Just becasue we don't buy an item at the show does not mean we won't be future customers, have any of you ever heard of "Future customers" or ever grasped the concept that you may have coins in the future we may want?
10) Show us the respect we show you. If your getting a lot of rude customers, take a look at the common denominator, yourself.
Final thoughts. I treat everybody with respect at the shows and never waste a dealers time, so those of you who want to flame me with insults, go ahead, you are only proving my point.
I personally spend 1k to 3k a month either on ebay or at online coin shops which I have developed a relationship with, I've gotten some great deals from these online dealers, I can only wonder if I would have gotten the same deals in person?
I've met more rude dealers than I have buyers!
Heres MY list of things DEALERS should and should not do.
Dealers, please use this as a learning tool.....
1) Because we are younger, don't treat us like we are inferior life forms wasting your time. There are a lot of younger collectors like myself who take this very SERIOUSLY.
2) Because we are younger, maybe we do, and I DO have the funds to buy coins from you, but opt not to because your rude and will always help a older person first (this happened too many times to count at the FUN Show). I even had people calling my "Young Man", I'm 38yo, but look much younger.
3) Price your coins in the case, (YOUR WEB SITES HAVE THE PRICE POSTED) not some code so that you can judge the person to see how much they will pay (some dealers price there coins and some do not) I have tested too many dealers at shows by sending a buddy over who is older and getting a price, then I walk over and check the price, 90% of the time I am always quoted a higher price, WHY? example 1882 CC DMPL PCGS 64, friend was quoted $275.00, I'm quoted $310.00, 10 minutes later.
4) If we ask to see a coin in the case, don't pick it out and fling it across the table, hand it to us like you would to a regular customer.
5) We stand in line, patiently, awaiting our turn to check out your coins, yet you carry on "Good ole Boy" conversations with a guy who has been there for an hour and yet you will not give us the time of day and you get tuded out when we ask to see the coin.
6) Don't get tuded out if we have a redbook or greysheet, there are way to many coins to memorize pricing, YOU HAVE ONE!
7) Don't waste my time with nonsense crap about the so called history of the coin and how you aquired the coin, or other nonsense about the coin you just sold for an incredibly low price. You dont want me wasting your time with needless bantering, goes both ways.
8) If we ask for a business card, how about handing one over without getting pissy, case in point, I only had a day and a half to do the FUN, two seperate dealers had a lot of inventory I was interested in, I asked if they had a web site, they said yes, once dealer was very easy going and nice to talk with, the other was insulted that I was not buying at the show, guess who is getting my business? Kinda a no brainer.
9) Just becasue we don't buy an item at the show does not mean we won't be future customers, have any of you ever heard of "Future customers" or ever grasped the concept that you may have coins in the future we may want?
10) Show us the respect we show you. If your getting a lot of rude customers, take a look at the common denominator, yourself.
Final thoughts. I treat everybody with respect at the shows and never waste a dealers time, so those of you who want to flame me with insults, go ahead, you are only proving my point.
I personally spend 1k to 3k a month either on ebay or at online coin shops which I have developed a relationship with, I've gotten some great deals from these online dealers, I can only wonder if I would have gotten the same deals in person?
" I hoard coins, that's what I do, it's my nature"
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Comments
"Senorita HepKitty"
"I want a real cool Kitty from Hepcat City, to stay in step with me" - Bill Carter
I had no idea you spent so much time at my table at FUN!
GSAGUY
Unfortunately, it seems to be a right of passage to experience these things in the coin business. When I was younger, I went through most of what you have listed. It seems to be human nature. However, if there were a way to get coin dealers to go to school and get and degree on coin dealing, I would be the first to promote it. Since there is no uniform accredidation, every dealer does business his/her own way. So there is no uniformity, unlike engineering, accounting or architecture.
TRUTH
Twowood
In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson
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BTW I am 32 and have long hair but I dress fairly nice (maybe the dress has something to do with it). If anyone looks like a kid it is me.
I will attend Long Beach in late Feb. and am curious to see what the large show dealer mentality is.
now that I remember it seems like the only dealer I got the cold sholder/rudeness from was GSAGUY
Cheers,
Bob
The guy had a stack of GSA's? Was he bald headed? Did he have on very bright tie?....................then it wasn't I!
JB,
I remember you sitting there. You're the fellow just couldn't wait while I read the paper, ate my luch, trimmed my nails, and talked to the chicks. You're so impatient man!
GSAGUY
P.S. If you've never been to a Long Beach show, you'll enjoy it. And hey, I get to introduce to one of the most collector-friendly dealers known to man....David Weinstein!
GSAGUY
and serve me with imported champaign.I was young once, but it was so long ago,
its hard to remember just how bad it was.
Camelot
Weinstein, ahhh I have seen posts about him. Maybe I will try him out with the dumb looking young hippie routine. that might be fun.
The guy got spun in twenty directions, just because I spilled a latte grande on his case, jeez. Everybody pulls the GSA's outa the box's and throws them away anyway, when they get slabbed....
maybe that explains his not taking my offer of $100.00 for the 79CC GSA....
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What's the car in background? We've got a 62 Olds Starfire, ground up restoration. Every make it to any of the car shows? Or are you too busy working the dealers at the coin shows
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"Senorita HepKitty"
"I want a real cool Kitty from Hepcat City, to stay in step with me" - Bill Carter
You look more like an IMPALA than a Bel Aire
Bulldog
No good deed will go unpunished.
Free Money Search
With the increasing ability to bypass dealers and aquire coins via the net, ebay for example, perhaps the margins have decreased and require a high degree of specialization to turn a decent return. Almost all dealers are complaining about their ability to find decent product to sell. This is not surprising, we no longer have to accept half of Redbook value and listen to the comments about our coins being at least one grade lower than we think they are.
The single, biggest change in the hobby has been internet trading and the ability for the average guy to buy and sell within a more narrow spread. This should eventually have a very positive effect on coin values.
It used to be that you could expect to hold a coin for 10 years before realizing a return on collector grade material. This is no longer the case. You can buy close to retail and sell close to retail. For a dealer to make a decent return, he must aquire his inventory considerably less than retail. Why would anyone sell to a dealer at graysheet or less when they can easily market their goods at a targeted, eager buyer, more than willing to pay retail?
With the exception of those dealers that play in Laura Sperbers league, many dealers are having to change their way of dealing in coins. Quite a number of them are likely capitalizing on the boom in modern coins that can be bought from the mint and resold to the vast number of new collectors desiring the flash of a pretty coin. There is big money being spent on modern issues and the well hasn't been tapped dry, nor will it become dry in the near future I suspect.
How many of us that have been collecting for any significant amount of time would have ever imagined turning a profit of 1000% on a modern proof set in just a matter of a couple of years? I sure as heck didn't.
Strictly from a business perspective, if I were to attempt to become an active dealer, I would be hard pressed not to dive into the modern craze for a few years.
When we are planning for posterity, we ought to remember that virtue is not hereditary.
Thomas Paine
'84-CC to show you (John Ruiz aka Strat saw and liked it at Anaheim). Don't know if I'll be in a buying mood-depends on how things flow in February.
I'm sorry about the Columbia crew and the state of affairs around the world, but life goes on...
Take care,
Barney
I'm always in a buying mood...........especially when it comes to nice CC dollars. And if Strat liked it, it's got to be a nice one. I've showed him a few monsters and have usually gotten in return, "yea, that's kind of cute"!!!!!!!
GSAGUY
<< <i>Arg, try being a teenager and going to a coin show. I asked to see a coin he said "do you have the money"... it was a $45 coin! Also a crooked old dealer wouldnt let me hold any of his coins, he didnt even pull them out for me just told me it was a blazer, it was like listening to an E-Bay auction when I was 2 feet away from the coin! >>
heh, this reminds me when steve o'day was helping greg roberts (spectrum intnl) back like 87,8 (they were young then) at this st louis show at a table next to mine after steve made some acquistions from us on some cameo dmpl dollars greg was buying up as he was intially getting his backup funding right (and i mean right) steve checks out dude next to me, an old fart from nyc (name like a fish) he was questioning steve's ability to buy 5-6g with a check on stuff he ok'd and set aside. greg strides over and asked what's the prob? jerkoff says he aint into no hot check scams,never heard of em,etc,etc, so greg pulled out about a 50-60g jed clampet size wad of huns and said what's the prob? guy says oh,ok no prob. greg shoved 2 heaps of slabs back to the inside dealer's side edge of of the table, a few fell off onto the floor then said a few choice words. they sat back down with sandy & i and spent a few more g. the best part is that night me,steve ryan and a daigo who's name slips me split the bill and hosted a hot blackjack gig in a penthouse that eve. guess who arrives hearing about it wanting in? yep,fish man. heh heh, cant get over it,it was a knee slapper for decades to come. he got slopped on about a dozen jack d shots and coca cola and we cleaned him for over 10g in crisp huns...it was awesome..NEVER doubt the ability of a youngster. many who started with little now have much and a very good memory.....
"Senorita HepKitty"
"I want a real cool Kitty from Hepcat City, to stay in step with me" - Bill Carter
"Senorita HepKitty"
"I want a real cool Kitty from Hepcat City, to stay in step with me" - Bill Carter
09/07/2006
That was me at GSAGUYS table not him. Real good looking dude, correct
Rainbow Stars
gsaguy, you got any 78cc gsa's. I've got an extra 50 bucks in my budget this week
I might even go up to a $100 for a 79CC gsa......snicker......
"I hoard coins, thats what I do, thats my nature"
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Show me an honest, popular & pleasant dealer and I'll show you a guy that was popular in school, probably on the football team, and went on to be a working stiff and accidentally fell into being a dealer. These are the real people.
Maddox....sure, loaded with 78-CC's...and 79-CC's for that matter. I'll put you on a payment plan.
Toneddollars.............sit down and be quiet..........you're still in time out!
GSAGUY
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Sincerely, Richard
That scoundrel didn't even tell me about that envelope full of C notes. Since the table was mine, you'd have thought I'd have be entitled to at least a split of the booty.
GSAGUY
i would suggest confining your business to the dealers/sellers who frequent these boards. Most of them are very helpful and considerate to everyone. Many post lengthy threads offering nothing but their own experience and knowledge - asking nothing in return.
2 Cam-Slams!
1 Russ POTD!
I thought you knew about it especially when I heard you say that you wanted to find the most expensive restaurant in Orlando and didn't even invite me LOL.
Thus, I tend to go to some of the higher-end stores that supposedly have higher-end customer service. But, I look very young and I don't go dressed very well. (I'm there to buy clothes, not to walk the runway!) Many of the people there simply wouldn't give me the time of day, like I can't possibly be the type of client that has money. (I'm a senior VP on Wall St.)
This also happens to me at other types of stores: watches, jewelry, shoes, etc.
It's really quite annoying how dismissive and condescending some retailers can be. Nowadays, when I find a store without this stupid mindset, I'll patronize it faithfully. Or, I'll simply order it online or via the telephone.
EVP
How does one get a hater to stop hating?
I can be reached at evillageprowler@gmail.com