(12-10-2020, 03:50 PM)Marko Wrote: I know all that stuff. When I posted I was not wondering about the magic of free shipping but rather the precise mechanics of the allocation of the burden. Its obvious that the mark up includes a shipping cost factor. So everybody is paying for the shipping but those people who don't qualify for free shipping either because they don't meet the spend threshold or they're outside the US pay even more if you break down the price into aggregate cost of merchandise + shipping cost. So if I buy from a US based vendor who never offers free shipping outside of CONUS then I am in effect subsidizing US based customers' shipping and merchandise costs. Its the way the market works given the competition.
Kind of. If you don't meet the free shipping threshold, you'll pay for shipping, but the company who sells the item will have priced it knowing that people will mostly be paying for shipping so the subsidy is generally low. Let's say your free shipping threshold is $100. The bulk of your business is $20 items so you know it'll take five of those or some combination of those $20 items along with something more expensive for customers to qualify for free shipping. You know shipping for those five items is going to cost you $10 so you factor in $2 per item which means your real selling price is $18.
Now, if you're hitting your goal margins at $18, then you're good. The customer is paying real shipping costs and you are getting your required profit. But what if your costs are such that you actually need to sell these at $19 to hit your margin goals? Now you have two options. You can charge the customer $21 instead to bake shipping in again. But this now puts you over $20 so you have to consider whether $21 is the right price point. Can the market bear it? Are people turned off by the extra dollar since people like round numbers? Does the number 21 just look ugly in your store? Maybe $20 was the right price point you decide. So now the other option is for you to just eat that extra $1 per order of lost profits. Now you're losing $5 of profit on those $100+ orders, but you decide it's worth it in order to hit that $20 price point.
To make up for this, maybe you charge actual shipping on items under $100. Say your average order volume for orders under $100 is $40 made up of two of those $20 items. Actual shipping is $10 so the customer pays $50 out the door. However, they're still covering $1 worth of added shipping costs baked into each item so they're sort of paying $12 in shipping. Of course, you can also say that they're still paying $10 in shipping and now you get $2 extra in profits. Six of one, half dozen of the other. International shipping is a similar game. And so is wholesale since the retailer will be selling it at the shipping-factored-in price of $20 even though it doesn't include shipping anymore.
This can sort of be looked at as subsidizing other customers and I can see how some would consider this unfair. But it's no different than any other product. For example, something most people don't consider is that the open comb base plates of all my razors are more expensive to machine than the safety bar version. I could make OC razors more expensive, but it's not a good look. It looks like you're gouging, it makes pricing confusing, and the store suffers visually from varying price points. So I decided to keep the pricing the same. This means that the SB customers are subsidizing the OC customers. Or maybe it means that I'm subsidizing the OC customers by taking a lower margin. All depends on how you look at it.
Anyway, that's the game we're playing. Business is about overall margins. Some product or customer is always subsidizing another one.
Matsilainen,
Marko and
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