Despite doubts from industry observers, two of the founders of the now defunct
"Sound Advice" hifi chain have purchased the company name from liquidators(who sold off the assets of Sound Advice's final owner "Tweeter Home Entertainment"), and these guys plan to re-launch the stores later this year with a store in Ft.Lauderdale,Florida and more to come.
Co-founders Peter Beshouri & Michael Blumberg(no, not the famous one) intend to have fewer and physically smaller stores. In an article July 23rd in "The Miami Herald" newspaper, an industry observer doubted whether there was still a market for high-priced dealers with "assisted selling", and that consumers weren't willing to pay that price anymore.
Beshouri seems defiantly opposed to changing Sound Advice's approach. Under Tweeter's ownership(but with Beshouri still running things), Sound Advice became mostly a television store(which de-emphaisized audio equipment), and they were selling mostly the same flat screen T.V.'s as Sears & Best Buy, but at drastically higher prices. Sound Advice's tactics(under Tweeter's ownership) included stating fictitiously high list prices to create the illusion that Sound Advice was discounting. In fact, the opposite was true: Sound Advice was exceeding manufacturer's suggested list price(mostly on T.V.'s) by a typical 15% ; a process generically known as "gouging".
If Mr. Beshouri thinks that a marketplace of suckers will sustain "Sound Advice" in the 21st century, he's got another thing coming. Today, a middle class or upper middle class consumer that is going to spend thousands of dollars on audio or video equipment can(and often does) read magazine or online test reviews, and these consumers will know the manufacturer's suggested price and if Mr.Beshouri and his company are engaging in unethical gouging.
Without a change in Sound Advice's mentaility, the revived company's fate will be the same as it was for the company's previous incarnation, and hopefully, mercifully quick.