Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Competing with Wal-Mart

It's a national past time to hate Wal-Mart.

Why not? They're the big, evil company that is developing that field across the street with all of the nice trees so that they can lay-down some asphalt, throw up a couple of hundred thousand square feet of sub-par retail space, and put all those good, hardworking local folk out of a job. Fire up the picket lines Bessie, Mr Walton's coming to town! We can't have this big retailer in our back yard because Mr. Bob's Hardware store will go out of business!

Let me tell you the story of shopping for a doll-house for my daughter's birthday. My wife and I met for lunch and went to the local toy store near our office. We had a shopping list of things that we wanted to get for our daughter for her birthday. After being pleasantly greeted by the staff, we went to find the doll house. This was the big gift, and many of the smaller gifts were built around accessories for the doll-house. We were disappointed to see that the doll-house was out of stock. And due to the fact that the big Toy Fair was last week, replenishment orders are slow (as all toy dealers are putting in orders for toys this week). No problem, the manager of the store upgraded our Doll-House Townhouse to the much bigger (and 50% pricier) Doll-House Manor, for the same price as the original, cheaper Townhouse.

Let's take a look at my experience at the toy store:
  • Greeted by friendly staff. Check.
  • Shelves fully stocked (except for the one item I wanted!), and everything neatly presented. Check.
  • An item was not in stock, so the manager gave me a nicer item for the same price. Check.
  • The manager carried the big item to the cash register. Check.
  • Store personnel offered to wrap our merchandise free of charge. Check.
  • Since wrapping the gifts was going to take a few minutes, I went over to Target to get some things. They said "no problem! We'll hold everything for you when you get back". Check.
  • We pulled up in front of store and opened car doors up. The folks are already carrying the gifts and putting them into our car. Check.
Now, let's compare this same experience with the local Wal-Mart:
  • Greeted by a person that I feel really uncomfortable talking to and even making eye contact with. Check.
  • Many items out of stock. Shelves in disarray. Always walking out with some sticky stuff on my shoes that feels creepy (even for me). Check.
  • Item not in stock. I usually cannot find help. If I do find help, the person is an idiot and is clueless. Check.
  • No one has ever asked to help with a large item at Wal-Mart. Check.
  • Store personnel would never wrap my gifts, nor would I trust them. I doubt they could even point me the right direction of the gift wrap. Check.
  • I would never, ever leave my purchased merchandise in the hands of a Wal-Mart employee why I go off and do other things. Check.
  • No one has ever helped me load a large item into my car that was in the employ of Wal-Mart. Check.
  • Bonus points for Wal-Mart - overweight customer wearing slinky clothes two-sizes too small so that I can belly fat with stretch marks popping out of her Spandex. Check.
  • Bonus points for Wal-Mart - over-friendly customer that insists I help her find the CD of "that guy on the Home Shopping network with the guitar that sings those Mexican songs". She assures me that I know of whom she is speaking. Check.

There is a lesson here. If you are a mom-and-pop store, there are plenty of ways of competing with Wal-Mart. However, if your plan involves trying to price-cut Wal-Mart and provide the same shitty service you have been providing over the last 30 years, you deserve to go out of business.

Instead, you must evolve. Don't price-cut Wal-Mart -- you cannot win. However, you can win on providing better products and better service. This toy store has won me over as a customer, and I cannot wait to spend my money there again.

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Back to Raquetball.

My wife noticed that LA Fitness was running a promotion where sign-up fees would be waved if you signed up a family member. This was the perfect opportunity to join LA Fitness. I've been holding off for a while because I just cannot stand spending $150 bucks for someone to enter my application into a computer.


With my membership in hand, I was able to start playing Raquetball again. I played with Rebuck and Mary Beth yesterday and had quite a bit of fun. The courts were very nice (very new), but I had a difficult time adjusting to the back walls. The back walls are glass which makes the contrast level completely different than the other three walls - which are bright white! This took a bit to get used to!

Friday, February 22, 2008

Bill's Newest Lego Friends



Meet Victor the Lego Spider and Mr. B.

Sunday, February 17, 2008

Lego Stores

On our way back from Long Island, we stopped at the Bridge Water Commons in New Jersey. This mall is a nice half-way point between Long Island and Harrisburg, so it turns out to be a nice place to get out of the car and stretch our legs. We normally just stop in Bridge Water to grab lunch, but I recently found out at there is a real Lego store in Bridge Water!

Needless to say, I twisted everyone's arm to go there today. Overall the store was pretty neat. As you can see they have Huge Lego Bricks at the front of the store that are taller than my daughter. Neya had a fun time in the store looking at all of the neat creations. I got to see the new 2008 Town Plan in person as well as the Eiffel Tower (neat stuff!). They had tons of bins of free bricks that you could buy. We picked up some brick separators, a small ambulance for the town, a Mosaic set, a Lego Santa Snow Globe (hey, it was only 4 bucks!), and a couple of boxes of "just bricks".

Most of the stuff I can get online just as easy, but I'll keep coming back to the store, just because it's cool.

The New Knight Rider

Worst Acting, ever.

The Ass Clowns from Cupertino are at it again

I went to fire up iTunes today, and Apple for some reason thought that I would love to download 4 250 MB episodes of "MTV Facebook Sampler" content.

Thanks, Apple.

Thanks for wasting a 1 GB of my disk space. Thanks for tying up a GB of my bandwidth. Thanks for not e-mailing me and asking I would be even interested in this content.

I'm just glad that I was paying attention to my downloads when iTunes fired up.

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Google Apps: Day 2 - The Calendar Strikes Back!

I started to give Jenn a tutorial on Google Apps, and now it's really starting to pay off. I have created a family calendar (that is shared, with full access between our accounts). She has started to add all of the "Kratzer family stuff" that goes on.

From a personal family productivity standpoint, this is great!

Saturday, February 9, 2008

My First Full Day with Google Apps.

I have now been on Google apps for about 24 hours. My overall experience is good, but there is plenty of room for improvement:

  • Google's services have been unavailable a couple of times (I couldn't purchase a premium account and adding a calendar results in a crash, as well).
  • Googles Pages sucks. Let me say that again. Google Pages really sucks.
  • GMail is great. And the Calendar is pretty snazzy. (which is good, because this is why I wanted to migrate to Google Apps in the first place).
  • I have no idea why blogging isn't integrated into the suite of apps. This seems like a natural fit and a giant mis-step for Google. However, from reading the discussion boards, it looks like JotSpot will be replacing Google Pages (good) and JotSpot also supports blogging (that's good too). Google: Hurry up with this! :-)
  • The start page / portal stuff is a complete ghetto of widgets. I'm surprised that Google didn't spend more time to build a large library of quality widgets.
  • No Google Reader integration? *sniff*

All in all, I am quite happy. I will most likely upgrade to a premium account to show my support for this excellent service (and I'll still be saving money by migrating off my ISP!). I hope Google keeps working hard to improve and extend the application functionality and support!

Friday, February 8, 2008

Welcome to a Brave New Online World

I've finally done it.

I've finally moved my domain (thekratzers.com) over to Google Apps.

This means that all of our e-mail is online, our calendar is online, and my blog now runs through Google.

This has been a long time coming. I moved my pictures online to SmugMug several years ago. I moved my backups to Amazon.com (thanks JungleDisk).

I've always had an online presence, but I just got tired of my hosting providing (and for $120 bucks a year, they weren't delivering anything near what Google could offer).

Next step: I need to find a way to use SVN over Amazon.com S3. :-)