. . . authorized vs. unauthorized dealers
Selling dive gear on the Internet is big business and
many divers find plenty of reason to shop for gear online,
as we reported last month. The changes in buying habits
are creating a great upheaval in the way the dive business
— in fact, any business — is conducted.
From the inception of scuba, the industry’s business
model has been to drive business to local dive stores.
Some large manufacturers still cling to that model. In
fact, 37 percent of retailers surveyed by the trade journal Dive Center Business agreed with the statement that, “The
Internet is a major threat to our business.
Dive shops keep our industry alive,” Tom Phillipp,
product manager for Aqualung, told Undercurrent. By
providing air fills, training, local and overseas trips, and
rentals -- as well as sometimes sponsoring local clubs -- dive
shops recruit new divers and help to retain them by building
local loyalty.
Cynthia Georgeson, from Johnson Outdoors, parent of
Scubapro and Uwatec, told us that an authorized dealer
network ensures that consumers get genuine parts, factory
warranties, limited guarantees, technical expertise
and support, plus personal service and advice. She adds:
“Our dealers routinely check to ensure new products are
functioning properly, and perform final detailing,” such
as adjustments to regulators and BCDs. Regardless, at
least some e-tailers (e.g., scuba.com and diversdirect.com)
also preassemble gear before shipping.
Manufacturers support local shops by naming them
authorized sellers for their area. They receive product,
marketing support, and training, but some manufacturers
require that dealers sign agreements that restrict price
cuts. The strictest dealer agreements, such as those from
Aqualung and Scubapro, limit how much a dealer can
discount merchandise from the manufacturer’s suggested retail price (MSRP). It’s generally no more than 10 to
15 percent. If a shop cuts more off a price it can lose its
dealer agreements.
There are rumblings among retailers that this price
protection is not uniformly enforced. Phil Ellis, proprietor
of Dive Sports in Decatur, AL, was dropped this year
as an Aqualung America dealer for discounting “covered”
product for less than 90 percent of MSRP. Ellis, who
aired his grievances with Aqualung on an Internet message
board, claims he was forced to offer discounts to
compete with other dealers. He reported that a customer
came into his shop with a written quote from a nearby
competitor on a Suunto Vyper computer (distributed by
Aqualung) at 35 percent below MSRP.
Some dealers get around pricing protections by bundling
products that allow deeper discounts into packages,
such as a Sherwood regulator with an Aqualung BCD.
Authorized Dealers vs. Gray Marketers
Beyond restricting discounts, some manufacturers like
Scubapro and Aqualung prohibit mail order and online
sales. To get around the restrictions, some mail order and
Internet sellers — including so-called “gray market” operations
— purchase the controlled products from a dive
shop going out of business, from an overseas reseller, from
a manufacturer closeout, or perhaps from an authorized
dealer who buys more than he will sell and surreptitiously
ships it to an internet seller with a markup. Of the most
popular e-commerce websites, only a few are gray market
discounters. The most dominant is Leisure Pro.
Most scuba e-etailers, like www.scubatoys.com, www.diversdirect.com, www.scuba.com, www.diveriteexpress.com and even www.diversdiscount.com, have become
authorized dealers for the products they sell. They don’t discount as deeply as the gray marketers. However,
there’s no sales tax on Internet purchases and many can
undercut local dive shops (especially when they offer free
shipping – which some do on promotional “specials”).
E-tailers sometimes throw in “freebies” (gloves or a mesh
bag, for instance) to sweeten the purchase experience.
You may not see Aqualung or Scubapro products on these
sites, but you will find most other well-known brands.
Factory Warranties from Authorized Dealers
Another benefit manufacturers reserve for authorized
dealers (and their customers) is factory warranties on dive
gear. Often regulators and computers must be inspected
or overhauled annually by authorized seller/servicers
using factory-trained tech reps, to keep the warranty in force. Although many manufacturers offer free parts for
the life of the warranty, there are service charges for each
inspection and overhaul ($15 to $75, depending on the
work performed). For shops with their own technicians,
annual service provides income and an opportunity to sell
other items.
Some manufacturers restrict dealer price cuts
to no more than 10 to 15 percent; if a shop
cuts more it can lose its dealer agreements. |
If you buy your gear from an unauthorized dealer, the
warranty won’t be honored by the manufacturer or an
authorized shop. So, forget the free regulator parts. Jack
Kuhn of Harbor Dive Center (Sausalito, CA) says those
parts typically retail for $18-$22. It’s up to the technician
whether to replace any. And often, no new parts are necessary.
So the free-parts benefit may not mean much.
Scubapro warns customers: “Any Scubapro or Uwatec
equipment purchased from a non-authorized source will
not be covered by Scubapro Uwatec warranties. These
non-authorized sources include Internet and direct
marketing companies who obtain our products from
questionable sources and do not undergo the rigorous
training programs necessary for proper representation
of our gear.” When Marcia Smullen (Big Sur, CA) tried
to register a Scubapro regulator she purchased from
Leisure Pro, she received a form letter saying, “We have
no way of assuring the ultimate consumer that any item
purchased via this source has not been tampered with or
modified. Nor can we assume that our product has been
properly tested and inspected.”
Pretty strong language, but spokesperson Georgeson
told Undercurrent, “We are aware of product serial numbers
having been removed or defaced so they are no longer
readable, which is very risky for the diver. Scubapro relies on product serial numbers to track product service
and warranty records. Consumers and dealers rely on
product serial numbers to keep track of service upgrades
and alerts on products.” Georgeson adds: “We are also
aware of product counterfeiting, which is when a wellrespected
brand name is ‘stolen’ and put on a fake, lowerquality
product and sold as the genuine article.”
Frankly, however, can divers be persuaded by such
arguments, especially when the same issues don’t seem to
bother other manufacturers? Who tampers with regulators?
What guarantees are there that an authorized dealer
“properly tests” or that a nonauthorized dealer doesn’t.
What dive stores inform their customers of recalls or
e-mail problems. Many online dealers have sophisticated
email programs to reach their customers. And, if
Scubapro is concerned about safe products, why not
allow someone who bought it from a nonauthorized
dealer to register it, so Scubapro can get in touch
with her if there is a recall.
As for fakes, when we asked Scubapro if they
have seen any, Georgeson did cite one — a BC
ripoff by a California company in 1998, a story that
Undercurrent broke to the dive community. But we’ve
found no proof of others. Apparently, rogue manufacturers
in foreign nations aren’t producing knockoff scuba
products. It’s a small market and New York vendors don’t
peddle regulatators on the street.
To defend against online sellers, the manufacturing/
dive store cabal argues that a diver who shops at an
unauthorized dealer won’t have a warranty and won’t
get repairs. So the largest Internet dealer, Leisure Pro,
competes by offering its own warranty program. A buyer
sends the product to them for annual servicing or repair.
Like many dive stores, they service some products themselves
and send others out to independent repair facilities.
However, they’re not upfront about it. Several divers
have complained to us that they aren’t pleased to learn
after their purchase that the factory warranty is invalid
and Leisure Pro supplies the warranty. It means they have
to ship it back to LeisurePro and can’t carry it into their
local dive store.
Since so much effort is focused on warranties to keep
some brands exclusively in dive shops, one has to ask just
how valuable are warranties? We’ll cover that in the next
issue.
– Larry Clinton and Ben Davison