wildbill23c
Well-known member
I'm not sure how Sears is in the rest of the country but the one closest to me in Boise, Idaho is located in the mall. I refuse to go there because of the huge lack of parking, then they open so late in the day that I'm not going to wait till noon to go shop at a crowded mall. Add to that the employees just don't seem to care whether anyone shops there or not, just try and find someone for assistance if you need it...nope they all go run and hide.
I haven't bought any tools for many years from Sears. I bought a new lawn tractor 4 years ago and I wish I would have shopped elsewhere...an actual dealer for this type of equipment not another big box store with the same cheap **** as Lowes, Home Depot, etc. Just different paint jobs
.
As soon as Craftsman tools started showing up in K-Mart, and Ace Hardware I knew the end of Sears/Craftsman was near.
Montgomery Wards still exists http://www.wards.com/. Its 100% online now though, absolutely no stores you can walk into and shop.
I'm 32 and I still remember the Sears & Roebuck catalogs and the Montgomery Wards catalogs especially around the holidays, dang things were about the size of a phone book LOL. The times of old are long gone, and these companies are forced out of business due to their poor business practices. The last time I was at Sears (when I bought the lawn tractor) there were literally 2 isles of tools. Appliances, and clothing were the majority of the store, then a small corner section for the lawn/garden tools. I remember as a kid there were isles upon isles of tools from hand tools to the big stationary power tools.
The Radio Shack here in town closed its doors 2 years ago, they had become a place that nobody went anymore as well because it used to be a store where all the Ham Radio guys would go for parts, radios, etc. Then Radio Shack stopped carrying that stuff, so what does that leave people to do? They had to shop elsewhere.
I haven't been into a K-mart for probably 5 years or more, but its just like other variety stores I would assume. I know in Arizona they had some regular K-marts, and they had Super K-marts which were K-mart plus a grocery store, here in Idaho its just the regular dull and boring K-mart.
With my extremely limited budget it means I shop at Harbor Freight most of the time because for the stuff I do, the tools there work fine for me. Now if I were a professional mechanic, contractor, etc. darn right I'd be shopping at Sears, Snap-on, Mac, etc. The down turn of the economy has closed down many businesses. People don't have the money to go out and buy expensive stuff anymore, especially stuff they don't need like the latest and greatest tool sets
. I still drool over that stuff, but I've learned to just keep walking...yep its really hard to do LOL.
I haven't bought any tools for many years from Sears. I bought a new lawn tractor 4 years ago and I wish I would have shopped elsewhere...an actual dealer for this type of equipment not another big box store with the same cheap **** as Lowes, Home Depot, etc. Just different paint jobs
As soon as Craftsman tools started showing up in K-Mart, and Ace Hardware I knew the end of Sears/Craftsman was near.
Montgomery Wards still exists http://www.wards.com/. Its 100% online now though, absolutely no stores you can walk into and shop.
I'm 32 and I still remember the Sears & Roebuck catalogs and the Montgomery Wards catalogs especially around the holidays, dang things were about the size of a phone book LOL. The times of old are long gone, and these companies are forced out of business due to their poor business practices. The last time I was at Sears (when I bought the lawn tractor) there were literally 2 isles of tools. Appliances, and clothing were the majority of the store, then a small corner section for the lawn/garden tools. I remember as a kid there were isles upon isles of tools from hand tools to the big stationary power tools.
The Radio Shack here in town closed its doors 2 years ago, they had become a place that nobody went anymore as well because it used to be a store where all the Ham Radio guys would go for parts, radios, etc. Then Radio Shack stopped carrying that stuff, so what does that leave people to do? They had to shop elsewhere.
I haven't been into a K-mart for probably 5 years or more, but its just like other variety stores I would assume. I know in Arizona they had some regular K-marts, and they had Super K-marts which were K-mart plus a grocery store, here in Idaho its just the regular dull and boring K-mart.
With my extremely limited budget it means I shop at Harbor Freight most of the time because for the stuff I do, the tools there work fine for me. Now if I were a professional mechanic, contractor, etc. darn right I'd be shopping at Sears, Snap-on, Mac, etc. The down turn of the economy has closed down many businesses. People don't have the money to go out and buy expensive stuff anymore, especially stuff they don't need like the latest and greatest tool sets
