(This post was last modified: 12-15-2021, 08:00 PM by Moriarty.)
Many interesting points,
Marko. I still think that if customers are not making a serious and sincere effort to support local businesses now, then they will not do so in future unless you give them more reason to. Some sort of personal connection, or a loyalty reward programme, maybe. “I see you live nearby - I’ve got new products coming in and I want to invite you to an exclusive preview to try the products and get a discount or have a chance to buy before they go on general sale”. Or “You have placed 5 orders with me in the last two years so I want to offer you 10% off for your future orders to show appreciation for supporting my business”. Or just send them a Christmas card.
As an aside, I think the “fair trade” phenomenon is about creating additional
perceived value in a product, which can justify a higher price for some customers. Customers (not all) might feel the coffee they are buying is worth more because it makes them feel good to support the poor workers who make it. They do not get that added benefit from other coffee, which may be physically identical. Other customers will just value the coffee purely by how it tastes.
I think this is really the same as the “buy local” argument, but supporting the world’s poor instead of local business people. If I have limited money,
can you give me factual reasons why I should pay a premium to a local shaving supplier instead of paying a premium for a coffee brand that gives it to a poor worker in Kenya? It just comes down to which one I want to help more, doesn’t it?
Also I think the “hand-made” concept is a similar idea at heart - another intangible added value. Many customers are willing to pay more for a hand-made rather than mass-produced product, even though mass production usually means higher quality, more consistency, and lower price due to more efficient production. The added value for the customer buying “hand-made” might be that the variations in the product are not defects to them but rather they make it more unique and personal; or they feel good to support an artisan and their skills; or they (falsely?) attribute a higher quality to something that is made by a skilled human rather than a machine. Looking at it the other way, though, they are paying a premium for inefficient production and maybe lower quality.
I suspect the answer in each case is down to individual customer choice and personal values, as well as some influence from the marketing. The marketing is the part that businesses can control.