(04-24-2017, 12:12 AM)Hobbyist Wrote: Does he actually make them on a lathe still? Last I read he upgraded to a CNC in his shop.
It's CNC, but he's mentioned that the finishing is what takes time. Since the machines haven't been running while he's doing the finishing, he decided to introduce the Guerrilla line as a higher availability, less finished (but still good imo) product.
(05-05-2017, 01:23 AM)rodzilla1126 Wrote: How do you get on the Wolfman razor waiting list? Is there a list? I have a subscription to the newsletter but have never received an email. The only communication that I've seen is twitter updates indicating some inventory is available. These items disappear in seconds. What kind of a buying experience is that? Blindly adding items to a cart and purchasing just to have a Wolfman item?
Why can't James have waiting lists like other vendors? Is there anyone running the social media customer service, sales or marketing at Wolfman? Can I go to Alberta and show up to personally order a razor?
I recently purchased a BBS-1 from John at LAshaving because I was able to get on the waiting list almost 9 months ago. I was able to obtain 2 Wolf Whisker brushes from Peter Wolf by signing up on the waiting lists in the past year. Brad Sears is currently making a brush for me because I was in the list. I don't mind waiting for such high quality products I just want the opportunity to do so. I don't want to purchase a Wolfman on eBay that's 4 times the value!
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He does have a wait list, but I think he's still working is way through them on top of working on the BBS-1 orders.
(05-08-2017, 08:39 PM)BadDad Wrote: This is why he chooses to keep supply extremely low, so as to increase desireability and therefor price. He keeps demand high, and response low so that the inventory availability is sold within seconds. He does nothing to prevent reselling of his products at ridiculous markups, because anything he could do to help would damage his own profit margins by virtue of decreasing demand.
What makes you say that? Do you have evidence that he purposely keeps supply low? His razors have been about the same cost for a while - if he purposely is driving up demand without adjusting his prices to reflect that, that'd be a pretty dumb business decision, no? I think supply is so low because the hand finishing takes time. He polishes everything to a mirror-like finish (including his brushed razors, which I don't think others do) instead of media blasting them for a quick brushed finish. I can't imagine him being "shady." Hell, if there's a demand for $400+ used Wolfmans on eBay, I would've increased the prices a long-ass time ago if I were him.
Also, I'm sure the reselling is hurting his profit margins way more than if he was able to make enough supply to meet demand. No profit <<< some profit.
(05-08-2017, 08:39 PM)BadDad Wrote: I hope he reads every response and feels it deeply. It would show that he cares. Unfortunately, I don't think he does. He makes his money and moves on. There is nothing wrong with that by any stretch, but feigning concern over his emotional well-being because someone said his customer service sucks is a little silly...It's not like he has been accused of illegal or unethical practices without any evidence...
Of course he cares about his customers, why else would he even be in this business? If he truly hated is, he would've just moved on and go back to doing whatever machining he did before. I've talked to him about the scalped razors and he's furious about it, but what can he do? He can only make so many razors, so the only thing he
can do is increase the price, which he doesn't want to do for his customers. I can't blame him if he decides to, though.
I think throwing out baseless accusations against him gives the impression of spite doesn't help, especially when oddly reasoned economic theory is thrown into the mix - low response typically doesn't result in immediate sales, that's just high demand.
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