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On Oct 17, 4:00 pm, "Joe Haubenreich"
wrote: Buying habits strongly reflect regional preferences. Few anglers are really analytical thinkers -- may 15% at most. For the most part, fishermen keep their ears and eyes open to learn what other people are using to catch fish and then buy those lures for themselves. They are trend followers. For that reason, when a particular soft plastic bait, spinnerbait, jig or crankbait is reported to have caught a big fish or many fish, that particular lure is swept off the racks by eager buyers. You will do well to recruit some of the leading guides and tournament anglers in your area -- the trend-setters, innovators, and early adopters -- as your store's Prostaff. Provide them with discounts on their purchases, perhaps, or provide some other incentive. In return, they can advise you on what is "hot" locally. They may also be trend-setters, although that is a difficult thing to predict. I suggest you buy a copy of Malcolm Gladwell's books _The Tipping Point - How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference_ and _Blink - The Power of Thinking Without Thinking_. I could name some excellent soft plastics that I am confident would catch as many or more bass than any soft plastic in the tackle shops around you. If you stock them and your customers buy and use them, they would be delighted. For example, GoTo Baits (http://gotobaits.com/) offer soft plastics with excellent quality, better than average productivity, much better durability, and vastly better value than Yamamoto or other big-name brands. But if you were to buy them and put them on your racks, since they have no name recognition in your local market, they might just gather dust. If you, your clerks, and your Prostaff use and promote them as high-performance, high-value lures that local bass haven't grown accustomed to, and that will give the few anglers who know about them an edge, then you can drive sales. And the fact that you would carry something that few other shops in your region do would be a good marketing point. I go in a lot of small mom & pop tackle shops, and I can tell immediately which ones stock products desired by tournament anglers and people looking for an edge on the water. The shop owners stock plenty of the big name brands, but they also lay in some "special" lines for their regulars and visitors in the know. And that's how they position them, too.... If someone walks in and knows exactly what they want and see it on the Zoom or Berkley wall, then everyone is happy.... But if someone comes in and asks for advice, the clerk or shop owner can say "here's what most people are throwing, but the secret weapon of some of our best anglers is this right here...." Even though I've seen that pitch fifty times, it still works on me when I walk into a tackle shop by an unfamiliar lake. It did two weeks ago on Guntersville. I went in to buy some plastic frogs (having unwisely used up all my Watermelon Red GoTo Bait frogs in practice), and I found some that resembled the patterns I wanted. The shop owner commented that those were indeed popular, but that he and his son (who guide on the lake) preferred another brand. Guess which ones I walked out of the store with? So.... here is what I think bass anglers will expect you to carry your sto 5" and 7" stick baits like the Yamamoto Senko Frogs 3-inch Teaser Tubes 3", 3-1/2" to 3-3/4", and 4" Tubes 4", 7", 10" Worms Finesse worms Drop-shot baits, like the Wiggle lure* Crawfish (large and small) Jerk baits/shad bait like the Zoom Fluke 2-1/2" and 3-1/2" fat, curly-tail grubs 4-inch craw worms Creature baits like Water Wizards, lizards, Brush Hogs, Sweet Beaver Some national names you will want to consider: Lunker City, Zoom, Yamamoto.. most of the ones you can find on the BPS Website. *Consider stocking the entire SpecTastic line of products, too.... your customers will thank you for it. Joe -- Secret Weapon Lures Tackle systems engineered for innovative anglers --------------------------------------------------------:~ 0"))) Subscribe to our mail list for intel briefings and chances to win free tackle every month athttp://secretweaponlures.com Better designs = better performance = better results "Sprattoo" wrote in message oups.com... Sorry to post so much right away, but I am pretty new to many of the hot soft plastics out there, and the new shop... and our bass pro catalog seems to be filled with choices that I was never able to order before. If you all could pick your top 3 favorite soft plastics for next spring what would it be? Make and model? We are practically interrogating all our bass customers for some help in ordering plastics next spring, and i don't want to just fill the shelves with cheap junk. I have one or two customers will to help so far, but I would like a little education before relying on a couple of guys. I like the looks of some of the yamamoto samples i have seen, but also heard they fall apart easily after just a few pitches or a couple of fish. Have heard good stuff about wacky rigging Yums, but only from one or two guys. Any help in the bass field would be appreciated. Can anyone suggest a good site or two to help educate me? Over the past few years i have all but set aside my baitcaster for my flyrod. Would like to pick it back up next year. Lloyd Mhttp://www.mainetackle.com Glad mentioned Goto Baits. I was going to sugegst maybe asking Randy to do a line of private label for you. |
#2
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On Oct 17, 8:49 pm, Bob La Londe wrote:
On Oct 17, 4:00 pm, "Joe Haubenreich" wrote: Buying habits strongly reflect regional preferences. Few anglers are really analytical thinkers -- may 15% at most. For the most part, fishermen keep their ears and eyes open to learn what other people are using to catch fish and then buy those lures for themselves. They are trend followers. For that reason, when a particular soft plastic bait, spinnerbait, jig or crankbait is reported to have caught a big fish or many fish, that particular lure is swept off the racks by eager buyers. You will do well to recruit some of the leading guides and tournament anglers in your area -- the trend-setters, innovators, and early adopters -- as your store's Prostaff. Provide them with discounts on their purchases, perhaps, or provide some other incentive. In return, they can advise you on what is "hot" locally. They may also be trend-setters, although that is a difficult thing to predict. I suggest you buy a copy of Malcolm Gladwell's books _The Tipping Point - How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference_ and _Blink - The Power of Thinking Without Thinking_. I could name some excellent soft plastics that I am confident would catch as many or more bass than any soft plastic in the tackle shops around you. If you stock them and your customers buy and use them, they would be delighted. For example, GoTo Baits (http://gotobaits.com/) offer soft plastics with excellent quality, better than average productivity, much better durability, and vastly better value than Yamamoto or other big-name brands. But if you were to buy them and put them on your racks, since they have no name recognition in your local market, they might just gather dust. If you, your clerks, and your Prostaff use and promote them as high-performance, high-value lures that local bass haven't grown accustomed to, and that will give the few anglers who know about them an edge, then you can drive sales. And the fact that you would carry something that few other shops in your region do would be a good marketing point. I go in a lot of small mom & pop tackle shops, and I can tell immediately which ones stock products desired by tournament anglers and people looking for an edge on the water. The shop owners stock plenty of the big name brands, but they also lay in some "special" lines for their regulars and visitors in the know. And that's how they position them, too.... If someone walks in and knows exactly what they want and see it on the Zoom or Berkley wall, then everyone is happy.... But if someone comes in and asks for advice, the clerk or shop owner can say "here's what most people are throwing, but the secret weapon of some of our best anglers is this right here...." Even though I've seen that pitch fifty times, it still works on me when I walk into a tackle shop by an unfamiliar lake. It did two weeks ago on Guntersville. I went in to buy some plastic frogs (having unwisely used up all my Watermelon Red GoTo Bait frogs in practice), and I found some that resembled the patterns I wanted. The shop owner commented that those were indeed popular, but that he and his son (who guide on the lake) preferred another brand. Guess which ones I walked out of the store with? So.... here is what I think bass anglers will expect you to carry your sto 5" and 7" stick baits like the Yamamoto Senko Frogs 3-inch Teaser Tubes 3", 3-1/2" to 3-3/4", and 4" Tubes 4", 7", 10" Worms Finesse worms Drop-shot baits, like the Wiggle lure* Crawfish (large and small) Jerk baits/shad bait like the Zoom Fluke 2-1/2" and 3-1/2" fat, curly-tail grubs 4-inch craw worms Creature baits like Water Wizards, lizards, Brush Hogs, Sweet Beaver Some national names you will want to consider: Lunker City, Zoom, Yamamoto.. most of the ones you can find on the BPS Website. *Consider stocking the entire SpecTastic line of products, too.... your customers will thank you for it. Joe -- Secret Weapon Lures Tackle systems engineered for innovative anglers --------------------------------------------------------:~ 0"))) Subscribe to our mail list for intel briefings and chances to win free tackle every month athttp://secretweaponlures.com Better designs = better performance = better results "Sprattoo" wrote in message roups.com... Sorry to post so much right away, but I am pretty new to many of the hot soft plastics out there, and the new shop... and our bass pro catalog seems to be filled with choices that I was never able to order before. If you all could pick your top 3 favorite soft plastics for next spring what would it be? Make and model? We are practically interrogating all our bass customers for some help in ordering plastics next spring, and i don't want to just fill the shelves with cheap junk. I have one or two customers will to help so far, but I would like a little education before relying on a couple of guys. I like the looks of some of the yamamoto samples i have seen, but also heard they fall apart easily after just a few pitches or a couple of fish. Have heard good stuff about wacky rigging Yums, but only from one or two guys. Any help in the bass field would be appreciated. Can anyone suggest a good site or two to help educate me? Over the past few years i have all but set aside my baitcaster for my flyrod. Would like to pick it back up next year. Lloyd Mhttp://www.mainetackle.com Glad mentioned Goto Baits. I was going to sugegst maybe asking Randy to do a line of private label for you. Just as an update to everyone from this thread..... We have picked up one more local bass guy to help with spring selection, and I hopefully have some SW 's on the way to the house... with a catalog. Thanks again to everyone for their thoughts on this. I have printed all responses and have taped it to the inside of our orders drawer for the next Bass order. |
#3
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I would like to add a suggestion abouyt displaying the SWL baits. I think
you should display lots of single baits in the middle of a section. Then place extra blades and extra skirts next to them on one side, and a moderate selection of mini kits on the toehr side seperated bya couple pro kits. This will help to sell the accessory parts as well as make it apparent to atleast the intelligent anglers what the SWL system is. It will also make it easier for you to show it and explain it to others. While SWL makes a decent skirt I would include a selection of the Z-Man skirts on the wall right next to the SWL spinnerbaits. -- Bob La Londe www.YumaBassMan.com -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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