Jim
PS I will say their great selection of teaware is cheaper than
anyplace you can find it.
We go around and around on this... but I vote with my dollars, and I
vote no. I'd rather support the real good guys even if it costs a
sheckle or two more. Plus, no way can they beat Kam Man, or Ryu-Mei,
or even Border's where with a weekly coupon I can get your beloved (I
like them too) Bodum Pavinas for about $6. I just got a chawan from
Ryu Mei that is excellent and blows away any prices I've seen
anywhere, and I'm supporting a small business owner who is doing
things right. I also think you are cherry-picking the few really good
deals because there are also shockingly overpriced items and tea as
well at that beauty counter.
- Dominic
Jim
PS I dont buy ANY tea from a website. I went through a silly period
when I did. Then it was limited to shipping puers from China. Oh you
mean the guy who does business on the web and is too cheap to open a
store front. Yeah right.
On Nov 4, 8:08 am, "Dominic T." <dominictibe...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Nov 4, 8:46 am, Space Cowboy <netst...@ix.netcom.com> wrote:
> > I finally figured out the business model for Teavana.
>
I might be biased since I'm an IT guy, but I could see how an online-
only tea shop would far outweigh the costs and overhead of a brick and
mortar store. It's a niche product, there are only a few cities that
can sustain one fully. The product is light, ships well, samples are
an easy thing to offer to still allow for the customer to see and
taste the product... I think it makes perfect sense.
Someone like the Ryu Mei shop catches my eye in that it is a Chinese
entrepreneur who decided to take a chance and set up shop in Japan,
and do his best to offer low prices and good service. I respect that.
I also respect honesty. I will gladly pay double to support someone
who deserves it over saving a buck and furthering a cause that is in
direct opposition to my values and ideals. It doesn't matter if it is
Wal-Mart, Teavana, or Empire Carpet.
- Dominic
Jim
PS I had the store employees scrambling to figure out if I could
update from XP to 7 using the upgrade package. They had some XP
netbooks dirt cheap. No you cant. It also costs the same if you
upgrade netbooks from the 7 starter package to the corresponding home
premium. You figure that would be cheaper than upgrading from Vista.
On Nov 4, 12:24 pm, "Dominic T." <dominictibe...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Nov 4, 11:25 am, Space Cowboy <netst...@ix.netcom.com> wrote:
...Im no Grinch but I do buy teas in the discount bins...
I also support my local tea shop. The storepeople are knowledgable and
can give you advice on what teas to select. It is a pity that they only
have a few 100 varieties in stock, half of them low quality flavoured
teas. There are some good ones in the remaining 100 and I usually have 8
teas out of two dozen "regular picks" in my cupboard.
I have tried online ordering, but the shipping costs were not worth it
for the quality.
> It also costs the same if you upgrade netbooks from the 7 starter
> package to the corresponding home premium. You figure that would be
> cheaper than upgrading from Vista.
My favourite upgrade is to an Ubuntu Netbook Remix. And I was lucky to
buy my EeePC 900 without MS tax. But we're drifting off-topic.
Jim
PS A 64bit OS on a 64bit processor was too sexy for me to pass up.
It was just as cheap as XP on a netbook from about a year ago.
On Nov 4, 3:01 pm, Peter Roozemaal <dont.spam.math...@xs4all.nl>
wrote: