mattyboy wrote:
TDO, I think you're missing my points, but you did hit the nail right on the head at the end of your post when you said the website is good for the consumer.
And here was me thinking it was you who was missing the point
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You're spot on there: it's good for the consumer, and things that are good for consumers will be popular - so you'll need to be on it.
Not wanting to be too blunt, but If your prices are too high, then you'll be losing business anyway. If people really do focus solely on price (which i disagree that they do) then you'll still lose business when customers call around for quotes and find that you're more expensive.
I can't see where I said that customers focus solely on price - indeed I've been saying completely the opposite, but I was just trying to seperate the two aspects (price and quality) for simplicity's sake.
What I've been saying that if you have two identical firms on your listings then from the consumer's point of view it's a no-brainer - they'll clearly choose the cheaper one.
We both agree that it's good for consumers, but what's good for consumers is bad for business since it will drive down prices - that's one of the reasons that prices for consumer goods have come down over the last few years, because the internet has made price comparisons easier, which exerts downward pressure on prices. Now I'm not saying that I'm anti-consumer to the extent that I don't like people comparing prices, but what I'm saying is that to the narrow profit-motivated perspective of a firm considering using your service then unless they are the cheapest then they would have to think twice about paying to use your service, at least at the full price.
Your response to this seems to be that a dearer firm that did not want to use your service would in any case lose business when consumers are phoning round for quotes, which may be correct, but this is not as convenient as your own service for comparing prices, thus to that extent if I'm not competing on price then targetting people who are likely to phone is better than targetting them via your website.
In any case, if you are resorting to the argument that people will phone anyway and to that extent dearer businesses not using your service will lose trade anyway then to that extent isn't over-complimentary about the efficacy of your own business model, so you're hoist by your own petard.
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To address the other points very briefly - 'executive' vehicles are not just indicated by an icon, when you click on the taxi firm name we can put as much *specific* information about a fleet as you wish - so the customer really can see what they're getting.
Well I'll give you an example to illustrate what I've been saying about pricing and also bring in the quality aspect.
For example, I tried the journey Newark to Bristol, and the system produced three firms, let's call them A, B and C.
A - 320
B - 400
C - 416
The firms are all designated 'luxury', so to the extent that those designations can be relied upon, then they are all the same.
Thus if I was a consumer, it's a no-brainer - A is the clear leader and nearly £100 cheaper for the return journey.
To that extent, if I was firms B and C then I would wonder if it was worth using your service just to be shown as a dear service.
Looking at the further information, it seems that firm A also offers 'executive' Mercs at no extra cost.
Firm B offers 'executive Mercedes' at 50% extra. So in actual fact, comparing firm A with B would actually mean comparing A at £320 with B at £600.
So what does your designation 'luxury' actually mean? Are 'executive' and 'luxury' the same thing, in which case designating A and B as luxury is misleading, because B is in fact luxury only at extra cost?
Indeed, I'm further confused because if you look at car magazine the executive class is the one up from the family class, and the luxury class is the one up from the executive class, so to that extent the designations on your site seem to turn this upside down and to that extent is misleading.
Turning to firm C, all it says is that the vehicles are all luxury. This could just mean the same as firm A, in which case firm A is still the clear leader, but if it means luxury in the usual sense then it could mean that it's an S-class Merc instead of an E-class (say), so to that extent it could be the best of the three after all. On the other hand, it could just be running top of the range ten year old Granadas or whatever, in which case that's again a very different thing.
That's also without actually looking at their own websites, which I'm sure would confuse the matter still further.
Thus to that extent your site is a classic example of why I always take these things with a pinch of salt - the information provided simply isn't reliable enough to use without further investigation.