If his goal is to state cheaper tools, which can still be high quality, cost less money - I would agree with that.
He's talking snap-on MSRP, versus Amazon price. Zoro sells that same wrench set from gear wrench for $313, not $213 as he's listing. Grainger wants $244 for that OTC ball joint kit, Zoro $170, Summit Racing and JB Tools $165, amazon is $126. So part of this is just the power of amazon and tool discounting sites/markets. In the interest of transparency I've seen that snap-on wrench set on sale for ~2k. Discount to discount, he has a little less to work with. Still you're going to get way more on Amazon no matter how it's sliced.
I have a bunch of the tools he's listing, probably 75% of them, that's basically how you have to buy if you want to do all makes/models. Nobody has $250k starting out. If you have 250 bucks to spend you need to get the most tools (usable tools) out of that money as possible There's no "saving money", it's just getting more tools for a given amount of money. Then you can parlay that money into more work/jobs you can take on, to make more money, to buy more tools, etc. All the options let you pivot easier mid-job to react to problems, which speeds you up and can bypass you coworkers, again funneling work your way.
Reminds me I still need an axle pusher/hub puller tool, still haven't found one I like.
If you ever do, please let us know what you came up with and how it worked for you .
I don't know what happened here, but I didn't say this in my reply to 2nd Gear Rubber. (TEXT IN RED)
To me, this kind of content is an ad for Amazon above all else. I already pay for Prime, so not a lot of news to me.