BigBallinStalin wrote:patches70 wrote:To compete, smaller chains must get creative. By setting milk as a loss leader, it is designed just to get people in the door. The deal on the milk is a good deal, relatively speaking, so people come to buy the milk and chances are they'll buy other things as well. Especially things that go with milk, like cereal, chocolate milk mixes and such thing. The chain can lower the margin on the milk slightly and raise the margin on those related items thus increasing volume, sales and profit and at the same time offer an actual deal on the milk. The consumer has the choice to purchase the other items or not.
But the main goal is not to dump, but simply to get customers in the door. To compete. That's it. There is no chance that this chain and drive Walmart out of business. Walmart does the same thing where it is able. Get the customer in the door by waving a carrot and hope for the best.
If I read the article correctly, what's interesting is that the small retailer has already PAID for the milk at a price which would not disturb milk producers. The retailer then sells the milk at a loss (hence loss leader)--much to the annoyance of other retailers.
All the concerns raised by FT and AAFitz are moot in this case. The milk producers are paid the same, and the milk at the store is sold to customers at a lower price. Well-intended voters like FT and AAFitz advocate for price controls to protect milk producers (while neglecting consumers and taxpayers), but milk producers aren't even the issue, and the good intentions of Team FT-Fitz will lead to bad outcomes (supporting the large retailers which hate competition, i.e. crony capitalism).
Thanks for steering us on track, patches.
I thought this was an obvious point and that everyone was complaining about other stuff.
Yes retailers should be able to offer free milk with the purchase of a box of cereal if they want. They can hand them out to every fifth customer if they want and the producer would still have been paid.