Why decline in audio stores USA?

Kingnoob

Kingnoob

Audioholic Samurai
Seems to be a decline in the country…only by me is a few stores. Nothing that good. Sears went out of business and a lot of others.
 
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mono-bloc

mono-bloc

Senior Audioholic
It's the same the world over, The specialist audio stores are a declining business. The reason being the ease of on-line purchases
via e-bay, or Amazon and the dealers who have established on-line stores. Who retail the same brands but at a lower price range,
and offering free freight
 
H

highfigh

Seriously, I have no life.
Seems to be a decline in the country…only by me is a few stores. Nothing that good. Sears went out of business and a lot of others.
People decided that price was more important than local dealers, online sellers offered better prices, done.

Catalog sellers were the low price PITA before the internet for stores but once it became 'click it and ship it', it was only a matter of time. The only stores that are surviving are the ones who offer something different or more, like installation. Some have physical locations, many don't because a store costs a lot to rent/own and operate, an office is much less expensive.
 
m. zillch

m. zillch

Junior Audioholic
The vast majority of people now buy audio gear primarily based on hype/buzz, word of mouth, and price. They'll swear on a stack of bibles though that their decisions were based on "sound quality differences" but they are typically relying on the claims of others regarding the sound quality differences. [And the formulation of these claims by their "experts" is often/usually dubious in its methodology.] This makes demo rooms in stores essentially obsolete to them.
 
j_garcia

j_garcia

Audioholic Jedi
Home theater and even a good music setup is not a priority to the average person anymore. Yet they aren't going to the theater as much either, so streaming and digital audio on their phone was enough to sway those average people from spending money, despite these formats being more or less inferior. The cost of everything is up and big box places where those average people were getting gear don't sell GOOD gear, in general. It puts the work on the user to seek out quality gear, if they are even interested, so some just don't feel the need to put the effort in. If people aren't buying gear, or are buying gear online, the stores can't survive.
 
H

Hobbit

Audioholic Chief
People decided that price was more important than local dealers, online sellers offered better prices, done.
That's only part of it. The other part, and arguably a stronger point, is you can research what you want online, order what you want, and have it in a couple days. Back in the day we went to the brick-and-mortar store and bought what they had in stock.

The other option was to order through catalogs. As a cyclist back in the 80s and 90s I was always ordering from Nashbar or Performance because the local bike shops didn't keep what I wanted, the high end gear, on the shelf. If you had them special ordered the part, it would take a lot longer to get and cost $$$ more.

Nowadays, I can also check to see if the local stores have what I want on their website before making the trip to the store. You can even order it and pick it up. Personally, I do try purchase locally.
 
GO-NAD!

GO-NAD!

Audioholic Warlord
The market for quality HT & audio system equipment has been steadily shrinking over the last few years and, with the higher overhead costs for B&M dealers, they're the first to suffer.
 

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