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#1 |
Have My Own Room
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Maybe an example would help, There are Davidoff authorized merchants and there are stores that carry Davidoff cigars but are not Davidoff authorized merchants.
Cases can be made for both sides of the fence for retail. From the consumer standpoint it would come down to known care/quality the shops provide and the price from each. |
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#2 |
Still Watching My Back
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Gee, seemed like an innocent question(?). Non-cuban (don't want to go to jail).
Strictly legal (again, don't want to go to jail). It has recently come to my attention that some manufacturers sell their products through authorized retailers (e.g., Davidoff). Just wondering, how this impacts (helps/hurts) the manufacturer, retailer, and customer. Any additional info you could provide about the typical supply chain for cigars would be most educational. My particular interest is in the pricing structure for cigars. I see many retailers who advertise very close to MSRP (and these coincidently) may be more apt to be "authorized" retailers, and then I see others (seem to be much bigger operations in most cases) that advertise at a much lower price point, and in many cases, are not "authorized" by specific manufacturers. Bottom line: I know almost nothing about all this, and more knowledge is always a good thing, right? |
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#3 | |
YNWA
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![]() Quote:
__________________
Be more concerned with your character than your reputation, because your character is what you really are, while your reputation is merely what others think you are. -John Wooden |
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