Jameshow
Veteran
Don't post that I'm traumatized!😳🤣🤣🤣
Don't post that I'm traumatized!😳🤣🤣🤣
How is is harder? Concealed cabling maybe but otherwise everything else is accessible.
I think perhaps the LBS industry is coming towards the end of a transition.
Years ago the LBS was where we bought our bikes, as a kid, my LBS had 40-50 bikes in his double fronted shop. When new bike time came, you'd rock up, choose one, if he had the right size in stock you could either walk away with the display model, or he would order it for collection the following week, you'd ride it for a while and take it back for a refettle. The world was a lot less instant. The shop was about 65% bikes 15% parts and the rest workshop. The shop carried a selection of cassettes, derailleurs, pedals, as well as smaller parts and a bit of clothing and lids
Nowadays the workshop is well over 50% of the shop, he sells very few new bikes, but has a selection of second hand bikes that he's acquired and refurbed everything from the odd classic to BSOs. They carry very few parts, even down to a limited array of tubes. It seems repairs are the name of the game and where the money is made with parts being ordered in for prebooked repairs. This shop will work on anything and help anyone out. If your buy a bike online they'll gladly assemble it for you, at their standard workshop rate. If you bring your own new or used parts, they'll gladly build them into your bike. Muddy dirty bike/parts, they'll deal with that, all at the workshop rate. Some folks will pay it, some folks will moan, some folks wont pay. As the song goes "some folks loves ham hocks and some folks loves pork chops, And some folks loves vegetable soup"
I think this is where the future lies for LBS and they seem to be doing pretty well - and it smells like a bike shop.
I've heard similar here: the sales used to support the workshop, now it's the other way around. We are a bit different because we're part of a large (theoretically) church based charity which has deep roots in south German culture. We are unusual in Germany for selling used bikes, and the only reason we can is that most of our labour comes "free" as part of a scheme run by the Job Centre; most shops only deal with new bikes.
Most local shops won't repair older bikes or new online bought bikes, because, again, it's not economically viable for them and liability issues. We will generally try and repair old bikes, but we are equally cautious about cheap online bikes and especially online bought Ebikes.
Our city centre shop will do "same day" repairs, but this operates under contract with the city in a city owned building, and in partnership with another charity; it's... complicated.
The workshop I work in has a long run time for reasons connected to our purpose as a place for training and teaching young people and how that fits into the legal system here: all bikes have to be checked by someone with a state recognised qualification, and so at the moment we only have two people who can check bikes.
Another legal quirk is that we can't fit components a customer brings in, again because of liability issues.
The LBS I mentioned essentially works on the same basis as a car garage / workshop, or even a plumber fixing a leak, essentially its the hourly rate +parts.
To extend that... surely the bike itself is a part, or collection of parts the customer has brought in.
My friends father is a car mechanic, years ago he wouldn't have fitted parts brought in by customers, unless there was a good a reason, essentially because he'd charge a % on parts fitted owing to him getting trade discount.
These days consumers can buy parts at pretty much the same price as he can, so if they bring them in, its less faff for him, he's just not bothered. He just charges his hourly rate and sundries where appropriate.