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by potatolicious
5346 days ago
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There's another factor though - in a down economy luxury goods and services tend to get squeezed. Prices will drop, margins will decrease. What the Groupon model wants to do is throw a 50% discount on top of that. When times are good, margins on luxury services may be enough to let this slide as a marketing expense. What about when times are bad? |
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Or getting back to Yoga, it’s hard to offer 50% off your price for Lululemon clothes if you’re already discounting your prices to match the economy. But if you have a Yopga studio, your rent has already been paid. If you only have 10 people booked for a class that can hold 20, a coupon deal for ten more people may seem attractive.
Especially if Groupon fronted you the money for the attendees out of the capital they’re raised.
(Still not endorsing Groupon the company, just trying to be “fair and balanced” and make sure we’re looking at all of the factors in play.)