Revelinyourstoke
Member
13788178:tomPietrowski said:I think a big issue is the shops who think fitting a boot is just trying it on. If most shops instead did full fighting consumers would begin to realize what is possible from a boot and that skiing in discomfort or less then ideal boots is not how it should be. Resort shops do so well fixing up boots purchased elsewhere. If there could be more uniform type of fitting then all shops could move forward but unfortunatly shops get the idea that to make money they have to match online when instead they should be adding value to the products they sell
I agree with this to a point. For example the three boot fitters here are all either master fit or have been fitting for over 30 years. The issue is.. you have to get them in the shop to begin with. If they never walk in your door than there is no way to convince them and conduct an actual fit. I believe it is different working at a resort versus a box store out in town.
I think what Doug is getting at, and correct me here if I am wrong, is that the real issue is getting people into the shop. To do that there has to be a common understanding for even those who are skiing 5-10 days a year and know nothing about the industry, that boots need work and adjustments to fit properly. The question is, how do you do that? He used the Milk campaign which is solid because it led to a common consensus that milk is good for you and a necessity to even those who go don't drink it. How do we convert that same approach to skiers who know absolutely nothing?
Yeah resorts may be killing it, at least Whistler, but the mom and pop ski shops on access roads and in town are slowly dying. If they die, it only opens up more market space for large online retailers to grab the industry. It's going to slice the number of boot fitters in the industry and stagnate productivity and innovation. With increasing drive towards the web, even Whistler would start noticing people coming in for adjustments and not to purchase boots which would drive their revenues down. ill make the assumption that a vast amount of skiers at Whistler don't live near the mountain let alone in the area at all. So where are they purchasing their boots if the mom and pop box stores have shuttered windows?