My share of the Internet revenue last month was $32. Snappy throws us dealeRs a little bone here n there.
Is Snap-On's pricing based on anything? They seem much more expensive than other tools that are made in the US and it sounds like they don't have very good customer service. Their company is a throwback to pre-internet days with a splash of pyramid scheme. Why do they have such high prices and then do price breaks for people on their tools? What makes their tool boxes so expensive? How do mechanics pay for the expensive tools? Is it mostly an image thing? I am confused b their company, their marketing, the way they won't sell to regular people, why they run trucks?
The idea of having touring tool trucks is a good one. Where you can look up the schedule and location for their stops.
They seem much more expensive than other tools that are made in the US
What brands of tools are you talking about? Craftsman is nowhere near the quality and the industrial brands that do approach or meet SO quality operate on a different business model and don't run tool trucks- they are strongly oriented towards factories, mills, .gov, and so on. Before the internet, availability of the industrial brands was not very good. SK tools availability was hit or miss as well. Thankfully one can easily get Proto, Wright, SK, and Armstrong now but warrenty is still not the easiest thing to do.
and it sounds like they don't have very good customer service.
The popular GJ sentiment is not necessarily reality for most SO customers.
Their company is a throwback to pre-internet days with a splash of pyramid scheme.
First point is somewhat valid but there is nothing pyramid scheme about it IMHO.
Why do they have such high prices and then do price breaks for people on their tools?
Most retail goods have MSRP and street price. MSRP for some can be 2-3x as much as what most pay on the street. Snap On is not a whole lot different in that model. The franchisee is like any other retailer outlet in pricing stuff- they order it from SO at their rate and set the price for it on their truck. They choose whether or not to participate in the specials.
Remember, when you are buying off a tool truck you are buying from that franchisee, not SO themselves.
What makes their tool boxes so expensive?
Quality, durability, and made in the USA (and sometimes Canada). Plus don't take retail price as a true indicator of price.
How do mechanics pay for the expensive tools?
Either cash and carry or the mechanic can put it on truck credit
Is it mostly an image thing?
Around my shop, no.
I am confused b their company, their marketing,
I don't understand why the confusion, they are oriented towards the professional mechanic and carry the specialized tools a mechanic needs.
the way they won't sell to regular people,
Myth. They will sell to the non pro mechanic but their business model is strongly oriented towards the pro mechanic. It is what works for them and makes the customers by and large happy.
why they run trucks?
For the same reason things like ice cream trucks and food trucks and so on exists- convenience. The tool trucks come to the shop, you hop on for about 15 minutes and get your warranty exchanges done, check out new products, buy what you are needing, and a good tool truck driver will have lots of specialized and innovative tools to make aggravating jobs easier, so you grab it right there and get back to work. Most of the other shops in town that sell higher grade tools have a limited selection and close not long after I get off of work, so it's hard to get over to them with traffic and make it there before they close. They also don't carry much beyond the basic sockets/ratchets/wrenches, and what I need is beyond that.
That said, I don't shop exclusively tool truck brands, my box has a lot of proto/wright/armstrong/williams in it and some HF and Sunex and so on.
But the SO hate on here is just annoying. They provide a quality product and are convenient for the mechanic.
This is about like Kroil and they should feel insulted. Owning an overpriced wrench doesn't make one a genius, you got to wonder about basic math skills.When they extoll the virtues of SO here and elsewhere, some claim them to be brainwashed by SO marketing, which is insulting to men who have spent their adult lives using tools.
I agree there is room for improvement in SO process. That would be true in almost any market, today.
But, the Corp folks make decisions on things like, cost of customer acquisition, cost of goods, margins, overhead, etc. I doubt that very many of them have actually been on a truck, or worked using those tools the sell.
I used to work some NHRA races, where we had sponsors, snap on was one, where every SO attendee saw what we did with their tools, the importance of the tool function and why quality was important and to whom, the name recognition meant something. In the post mortems with SO, they were all but speechless about what they learned about "their" tools. But most SO guys never attend an event like this, so again the Corp folks never see the value.
There are customers and there are lost opportunities. Business, SO included, need to understand that simple principle.
In answer to your last question - the SO people top to bottom need to use their tools for 3-4 hours continuous use on some staged assembly. Then have those same folks "receive" a full tool box assortment of SO tools and have them unwrap and organize them in a large tool box and then assess or critique them as to why they did things a particular way. Lastly have those same SO folks, order from a list, that you have created, 30 or 40 disparate tools - from their website, so they can see what it takes to do so.
Is Snap-On's pricing based on anything? They seem much more expensive than other tools that are made in the US and it sounds like they don't have very good customer service. Their company is a throwback to pre-internet days with a splash of pyramid scheme. Why do they have such high prices and then do price breaks for people on their tools? What makes their tool boxes so expensive? How do mechanics pay for the expensive tools? Is it mostly an image thing? I am confused b their company, their marketing, the way they won't sell to regular people, why they run trucks?
The idea of having touring tool trucks is a good one. Where you can look up the schedule and location for their stops.
Its just a Tool Brand.. I don't get all the hurt feelings, Your not a lesser person if you don't have Brand X in your arsenal. I can't speak for Everyone obviously, but if I Personally don't get Good customer Service, I simply don't patronize the Brand/Retailer, and I move on. I can't help to think some of you guys are really distraught over other people's consumers choices, Its borderline silly to see the same Names and stories repeatedly defend "for" or "against" a specific brand.
Are you sure you guys even need tools?
I have a few snap wrenches, they are great but I don't need every hard line tool they make. When I tooled up they were 10x the cost of a cman, over 20 today and the quality of the cheap tool has skyrocketed.
I think they do great business but I would have to really think about it to pull over to put out a truck fire for one. They never done much for me and doubt they will in the future.
This is about like Kroil and they should feel insulted. Owning an overpriced wrench doesn't make one a genius, you got to wonder about basic math skills.
Here is my observation:
Folks with cheap tools don't give a **** about the work they put out.
Sberry you always preached about cheap tools but how many times have you bought the same tools over? How many tools have you left behind in a customer's rig/car that you didn't bother retrieve because its cheap? How many duplicates do you own (how do you justify owning twenty of the same Crapsman 9/16" wrench when you can only use two at a time at most?). Now do the math and tell me how much you've come ahead buying cheap tools.
Stop whinning and buy from there web site than. Im sure drivers have people waist there time all the time. This thread is a joke they are one of the few tool companies making 90% of there tools in the usa and some people still ***** about ****. Are they perfect no but they are making a high quality product made in the usa so deal with it. If your not happy about them shut your hole and dont buy from them.