(01-01-2017, 07:31 PM)grim Wrote:(01-01-2017, 06:30 PM)BadDad Wrote: Big enough to support multiple online and brick &a mortar vendors, suppliers and warehouses
Same for resellers of Beanie Babies. Didnt work out to well including for the hoarders or collectors.
Physical stores popped up and survived for years, then went under.
Really? Because I don;t remember a slew of Beanie Baby specific brick and mortar shops popping up all over. I remember them being sold in existing stores in huge numbers, but not a whole lot of specialization.
Of course, Beanie Babies could be argued as one of the original driving forces behind the great auction site, as well. You can still find them in stores all over, and they still produce limited number runs, and seasonal releases fairly regularly, so they are far from being out of business.
The end of the trend, but cultivated by a niche, is hardly the end of the hobby...
(01-01-2017, 07:42 PM)vtmax Wrote: Yeah, in big business I was referring to your last paragraph, not the small wet shaving community. Maggards does 99%, as they admit, online. Bullgoose is just an online retailer even though there's a space with a sign out front. Italian Barber seems to be thriving but most of the rest appear pretty minuscule. I can count most of them on two hands.
The merchants out there are proportionally big to their market. Apple's market segment is 100 times the size of Maggard's. Of course their profits are going to be reflect that. Within the comparatively small traditional wet shaving market, the fact that there are a dozen very successful merchants that are able to thrive within the specialty is a pretty strong indicator of a healthy market...
-Chris~Head Shaver~