It’s no secret that divers who buy gear from Internet
retailers save money. Some dive shops have come up with
creative strategies to maintain their competitive position,
but for the most part local dive stores are at a serious
price disadvantage and a lot more than that.
For decades, we’ve heard the rallying cry “support
your local dive shop.” In the 1950s, companies like U.S.
Divers sold gear by mail, but in the 60s dive stores began
to spring up. Skin Diver Magazine carried ads for discount
dive stores like Central Skin Divers in New York City; ads
for discount camera houses followed and soon discounted
Nikonos cameras were part of photo store ads. Dive
stores didn’t like the competition, so when Rodale’s Scuba
Diving Magazine was introduced in the early ‘90s it refused
ads from mail order houses; in return most dive stores
stopped selling Skin Diver, replacing it with Scuba Diving
Magazine. Skin Diver’s circulation fell, along with advertising
revenue, and after efforts by several publishers to
resuscitate it, the magazine stopped publishing in 2003.
Today, the “support your local dive shop” mantra is
vital to equipment manufacturers, who fear the Internet
will put many dive stores out of business. In fact, in the
past seven years, 687 new shops have opened, but 735
have closed. Fewer dive stores may mean that fewer divers
will be certified, and beginners are the major market for
manufacturers. While some companies sell gear through both the Internet and stores, others, such as Scubapro
only sell their gear directly to dive stores, hoping to maintain
price and prestige. And keep the dive stores alive
and certifying new buyers. (Note: how Scubapro gear gets
online is another story we’ll discuss later.)
PADI (in fact, all agencies) exists to certify divers, so
shrinking dive shops doesn’t help. PADI does not accepting
advertising for Internet retailers in its magazine, Sport
Diving. Nor does Dive Training Magazine. It depends on
dive stores, where the magazine is distributed free and the
higher the circulation the greater the advertising revenue.
But is “support your local dive shop” a dying business
model, when equipment is so much cheaper from
Internet suppliers (some of whom have dive stores)?
After all, a basic Economics 101 theory is that consumers
will naturally move to purchase products where the
price is lower. Dive equipment is pricey. So, when a diver
knows that $800 BCD in his dive shop’s window can be
purchased for $500 with just a few mouse clicks, he can be
hard pressed to support his local dive shop — though he
depends on the shop to be there when he needs it.
But what does a diver need from his local dive store
that he can’t get online? Well, the Internet can’t certify
divers or pump air or
help a novice assemble
his equipment for the first
time. Those are needs.
But, other services dive
stores provide — faceto-
face advice, technical
information, hands on
opportunities with gear, trips with local divers, the smell
of neoprene, schmoozing — aren’t essential to many certified
divers. How, then, will the dive store landscape look
ten years from now. And what will be the effect on sport
divers?.
The Internet can’t certify divers or
pump air or help a novice assemble
his equipment for the first time. |
Undercurrent is neither advocating Internet shopping
nor supporting local dive shops. We are interested in
looking at how the Internet will affect us — not just where
we buy our gear, but where people get interested in diving,
get certified, buy air, meet fellow divers, and whether
the dive store of today will morph into another form
tomorrow. We emailed many of our 13,000 subscribers
and an additional 15,000 nonsubscribers to garner their
attitudes about Internet buying. We are also contacting
dive stores and talking with many people in the industry.
The Internet is a boon for some, a bust for others. But
what will the effect be on you and me, sport divers?
In our first installment, we will look at the motivations
of divers who buy gear on the Internet. Most Internet
consumers don’t worry about supporting their local camera
store, book store or pharmacy. But, do we divers have
a different relationship with dive stores than with other
merchants? Let’s begin this three-part series by seeing
why divers shop the Internet.
The Cost of Equipment:
Yes, dive equipment is awfully expensive. One of our
respondents, Keith Smith, said that he looked into diving
five years ago, but “was scared away by the prices that
the dive shops were charging, but last year I was looking
online and found prices so low that three friends and I
have purchased $10,000 worth of stuff, including scooters.”
Divers on tight budgets have to make spending
choices. Lee Chamberlain told us that “the difference of
$20 to $100 can make the difference between a day or for
that matter a week’s worth of diving.” And then there are
families: Rick Goble told us that “I purchased fins, masks,
and snorkels for my two sons who were taking their certification
at a local shop and was charged 250 percent more”
than he would have paid online.
Thanks to discounts, divers like Douglas Murphy buy
better gear. After getting certified, he found the cost
of gear “prohibitive at my dive shop and others in the
Chicago area.” Online “the pricing was at least 50% less,
which allowed me to purchase mid-level products.” He
could afford to buy an integrated
dive computer, “where at my local
shop I would have had to settle for
a basic pressure meter and would
not have been able to afford a
computer.”
Even many high-end purchasers
are price conscious. Denton Byers
says, “I often giant-stride into the water with $10,000 of
gear on me, and that figure excludes any camera/hunting/
video/rebreather gear. Through a dive shop, it
would have been $15-$20,000, and some items I couldn’t
afford.”
No Sales Tax
All but five states collect sales tax, with rates as high as
7%, plus add-ons from counties, cities, and local districts
that lead to 8 or 9% rates. States can’t collect tax on outof-
state on line purchases, so for nearly all divers there is a
cost incentive to shop online.
Convenience:
To most Web buyers, convenience is as important as
price. One can sit at home (or in the office on a boring
day), place an order, and have it delivered the next day if
he wants. Websites are open 24/7. There is no driving
to the store, Janice Heasty says, “When I need a major
item I have to drive 2 ˝ hours.” And there is no wasting
time in the shop looking for merchandise they may not
have. And, it can mean saving your bacon. Northwest diver Doug Banik recalled, “I was about to leave for L.A.
and wanted to try my new drysuit in Catalina, but needed
undergarments ASAP.” A Seattle online shop, Edmonds
Technical Diving, shipped them overnight to his L.A.
hotel. “It arrived before I did!” Michael Weber (Leesburg,
VA) got a charger for his Sea Doo Scooter shipped to
Mallorca in three days.
Most online buyers pay shipping costs, though policies
and promotions vary. Greg Barlow, a customer of Dive
Rite Express, mentioned that their site (a factory-authorized
reseller of Dive Rite brand gear) regularly offers
free shipping. Still, Richard Osborne finds “even when I
do pay shipping charges I am still ahead of the local dealers’
prices.”
For some people, returning an unwanted item in person
is a hassle, not only in the time it takes, but perhaps
in having to explain the reasons for the return — or
persuade the retailer to accept it. Most Internet retailers
have satisfactory return policies. Undercurrent subscriber
David Steinberg (Portland, OR) has returned several
items purchased from scuba.com, and says he’s been
issued “either an online certificate for credit or money
back, no questions or hassle, all handled electronically,
where possible.” The biggest hassle is having to pack
things up and ship them, though UPS and FEDEX will,
for an additional fee, pickup parcels at most homes.
Generally, the consumer pays the freight for all returned
goods.
Unlimited Online Information and Selection
Internet purchasers love surfing the web, comparing
the products and features side by side. “It’s easier to look
at a wider selection on Internet sites,” says Denton Byer,
“and you can get some unbiased comparisons that are
manufacturer-neutral. I ended up selling half the gear
I bought through my shop, because it wasn’t the right
gear for me. Not knowing what else was available was a
big reason for this. When I’m ready to buy a product, I
already know exactly what I want. The only decision left
is where to buy it, and that gets determined by who has
the best pricing.”
Many local dive stores carry only two or three major
brands of BCD’s, regulators, etc., and clearly can’t stock
all sizes or gear. Some divers order a couple sizes over
the web to try on. Undercurrent subscriber Chet Hedden
(Tucson, AZ) told us he ordered six BCDs from an
Internet retailer, determined which one suited him best,
and returned the other five for refunds.
Speciality Items
Tech divers are becoming big Internet shoppers. They
comprise a small market so their equipment is often not
available locally. Raleigh, NC, tech diver Paul Winter
noted that 120 cu ft HP steel tanks couldn’t be obtained
through any local shop “without putting cash up front
and waiting for items that would in all likelihood not
show up for six months.” Dive Rite Express customer
George Rousseau pointed out, “In Long Beach, CA,
where I live only a few stores carry tech diving brands
like Halcyon and DiveRite, so I have to purchase online.”
Mark Scheele purchased a Shark Shield online because
local shops in New Mexico didn’t carry them.
Undercurrent subscriber David Steinberg, like several
respondents, won’t purchase life support equipment
online. He says, “I believe this is best left to the local dive
shops and am willing to pay extra for the face-to-face business
on such critical things.” But he does go to the web
for “common, noncritical, cheaper items, such as roller
bags, gloves, fins, etc.”
Conclusion
Clearly, the Internet is serious competition for reasons
beyond price. In the next installments we will look
at whether Internet shoppers get faulty or discontinued
gear, how warranties hold up, how some dive stores are
successfully competing while others aren’t, how the industry’s
policies help or hinder the typical diver, and what
this may mean for the future of sport diving.