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Author Topic: How do so many Amiga shops survive?  (Read 615 times)

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Offline midway

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Re: How do so many Amiga shops survive?
« Reply #14 on: December 20, 2014, 04:26:02 PM »
Quote from: Oldsmobile_Mike;780225
amigastore.eu has a retail presence.  Although I think they probably do most of their business in non-Amiga stuff.  Sorry, I can't read Italian but there's some pictures on this link!  ;)

http://amigastore.eu/es/contactenos


Ablo espanol?

Google translate is quiet helpful!
 

Online amigakit

Re: How do so many Amiga shops survive?
« Reply #15 on: December 20, 2014, 04:26:19 PM »
We have three full time members of staff.
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Offline Everblue

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Re: How do so many Amiga shops survive?
« Reply #16 on: December 20, 2014, 04:47:43 PM »
It is a pity none of these computer shops have classic Amigas for sale. Is it not worth it to resell used refurbished Amiga HW?

Nonetheless I have to applaud Amigakit for creating a nearly non existing market by investing in new software.
« Last Edit: December 20, 2014, 04:49:55 PM by Everblue »
 

Offline wrath of khanTopic starter

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Re: How do so many Amiga shops survive?
« Reply #17 on: December 20, 2014, 05:48:04 PM »
Quote from: amigakit;780257
It is not easy at all surviving in the Amiga market.  It is a very small marketplace and we are very fortunate that we have some very loyal customers who keep us going through good times and bad, of which we are immensely grateful for their support.

We run this business with dedicated full time staff and we do not do anything else except the Amiga business, so we are reliant on the revenue to pay our for our offices, staff and overheads.  Any profit we make gets re-invested to make new Amiga products so that we have something new to sell in future years.

During the last year or two, it has become a lot tougher to stay profitable due to increased competition in the tiny Amiga market- there are a lot of part time new Amiga "dealers" that have started selling similar products to us. We respond by developing new Amiga software and add-ons, peripheral hardware that will hopefully distinguish us from people who do this in their spare time for some extra cash. We have found over the last 10 years that there have been lots of dealers start-up, sell the more profitable products, then fold.  Our inventory is mixed, containing products with reasonable margin and many with minimal margin. However, we recognised that it is better to stock both types of product to deliver a wider range and service to the Amiga community.

The biggest benefit of working in this community is that it is our passion outside of work too and it is thrilling to see new exciting products delivered and made available for Classic Amigas such as the A1200.

@ral-clan



We have a real office unit with a walk-in customer counter with almost a 4000 square foot area.   Local business taxes for the building are very high for this commercial space as you can imagine.   We have dedicated service area with benches where we repair Amiga's and a warehouse where we stock pile Amiga parts.

We generally have to buy 3 years of stock of main product lines because it makes sense to manufacture in a larger quantity to keep prices for customers down.  It is not generally possible to operate Just In Time stock control in the Amiga market as we are dealing with obsolete hardware.  This all results in capital being tied up for many years before it is sold to customers.
Interesting. You guys are a real asset to the Amiga community.
It seems you had just run out of stock of the aca030 so i purchased it elsewhere. I did buy an easynet pcmcia card from ye though.

I will require more stuff in the new year and i will direct my business to ye.
I have my eye on a cdtv pad and the wireless gamepad device...and a cd drive etc.

I shall have to get my a500 to ye for repairs and a sprucing up at some point too.

Its quite something to have 3 fulltime employees in an amiga business in this day and age.

Where does the majority of your business come from? Classic systems or Ng systems? I'm guessing classic.
 

Online amigakit

Re: How do so many Amiga shops survive?
« Reply #18 on: December 20, 2014, 05:51:53 PM »
@wrath of khan

I appreciate your orders- thanks.

Your are correct: most of our business comes from Classic.

NG customers usually buy the system from us then go to a local PC shop and spend their money there for peripherals, so it is a small proportion of our sales.

Classic customers use our services for repairs, upgrades and software.
www.AmigaKit.com - Amiga Reseller | Manufacturer | Developer

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Offline wrath of khanTopic starter

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Re: How do so many Amiga shops survive?
« Reply #19 on: December 20, 2014, 09:44:01 PM »
Quote from: amigakit;780275
@wrath of khan

I appreciate your orders- thanks.

Your are correct: most of our business comes from Classic.

NG customers usually buy the system from us then go to a local PC shop and spend their money there for peripherals, so it is a small proportion of our sales.

Classic customers use our services for repairs, upgrades and software.
Good to know.
 

Offline carvedeye

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Re: How do so many Amiga shops survive?
« Reply #20 on: December 20, 2014, 09:58:25 PM »
Amigakit you rock :)
A1200T: M1230XA 50Mhz 68030 w/64mb,DVDRom, 80gb hdd, Realtek LAN Card, Mediator LT4 + Radeon 9250 128mb(used for fast ram), Spider USB Card, Voodoo 3 3000 OS 3.9 +bb 1-3
 

Offline chris

Re: How do so many Amiga shops survive?
« Reply #21 on: December 22, 2014, 11:49:38 AM »
Quote from: Rob;780230
Power Computing are still going


Yep, I can see them from where I'm sitting! :D
"Miracles we do at once, the impossible takes a little longer" - AJS on Hyperion
Avatar picture is Tabitha by Eric W Schwartz
 

Offline Oldsmobile_Mike

Re: How do so many Amiga shops survive?
« Reply #22 on: December 22, 2014, 04:40:03 PM »
@amigakit - thanks for sharing the details of your business!  Agreed with everyone else it must be hard.  If I was closer I'd definitely pay you a visit! :D
Amiga 500: 2MB Chip|16MB Fast|30MHz 68030+68882|3.9|Indivision ECS|GVP A500HD+|Mechware card reader + 8GB CF|Cocolino|SCSI DVD-RAM
Amiga 2000: 2MB Chip|136MB Fast|50MHz 68060|3.9|Indivision ECS + GVP Spectrum|Mechware card reader + 8GB CF|AD516|X-Surf 100|RapidRoad|Cocolino|SCSI CD-RW
 Amiga videos and other misc. stuff at https://www.youtube.com/CompTechMike/videos
 

Offline motrucker

Re: How do so many Amiga shops survive?
« Reply #23 on: December 22, 2014, 07:28:46 PM »
I deal with Amigakit, and think they are quite good. I still miss Software Hut though, since I had gotten to know Joe, and a few of his staff. They used to have great BBQs!  That's where I met Dave Haynie. It was loads of fun on the old days.
A2000 GVP 40MHz \'030, 21Mb RAM SD/FF, 2 floppies, internal CD-ROM drive, micromys v3 w/laser mouse
A1000 Microbotics Starboard II w/2Mb 1080, & external floppy (AIRdrive)
C-128 w/1571, 1750, & Final Cartridge III+
 

Online amigakit

Re: How do so many Amiga shops survive?
« Reply #24 on: December 22, 2014, 07:40:46 PM »
@carvedeye @Oldsmobile_Mike

Thanks :)


@motrucker
I have family in Maryland, perhaps we should do an East Coast Amiga BBQ too :)
www.AmigaKit.com - Amiga Reseller | Manufacturer | Developer

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Offline don27dog

Re: How do so many Amiga shops survive?
« Reply #25 on: December 25, 2014, 03:21:00 AM »
Nothing but great experiences from AmigaKit but it is kinda of strange traveling back to my parents this week for the holidays and driving by the old locations of our local amiga shops. Brought back a lot of great memories of Christmas pasts back in the late 80's and early 90's. Those were some exciting times!
Amiga 4000D Cyberstorm PPC 150Mhz, 68060 50 Mhz, 128Meg Ram, IndivisionAGA, Deneb USB Controller, Zorram 256, Os3.9/Os4.0 Classic
Amiga 3000T Warp Engine 4040, Elbox FastATA Controller, Progressive Perpherals ProRam3000 64Meg, Mediator, VoodooIII, Os3.9
 

Offline Doraemon

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Re: How do so many Amiga shops survive?
« Reply #26 on: February 09, 2015, 07:13:08 PM »
Quote from: midway;780264
Ablo espanol?

Google translate is quiet helpful!


You can use the english url http://amigastore.eu/en/ (If you click in the "EN" button works to) and you will go to the english store.
The shop its full manual translated to eng.

I bought a lot of times and allways all was ok. I have my amigafuture subscription with amigastore too.

Reegards from Barcelona
 

Offline commatari

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Re: How do so many Amiga shops survive?
« Reply #27 on: February 10, 2015, 02:06:36 PM »
When I interned at Raymond Computer (1997-1998), to stay afloat we sold IBM PCs in addition to Commodore/Amiga computers. But once in a while we could still make a sale on an Amiga. One day I remember a customer buying a 2000 in a tower configuration.

Random fact: We had a Mattel Aquarius on display by the counter.
 

Offline motrucker

Re: How do so many Amiga shops survive?
« Reply #28 from previous page: February 10, 2015, 04:07:10 PM »
Quote from: amigakit;780399
@motrucker
I have family in Maryland, perhaps we should do an East Coast Amiga BBQ too :)

Sounds like a good idea. Some of the Washington/Baltimore people have gotten together on their own. I would be game, and I'll bet some others around here would be too.
A2000 GVP 40MHz \'030, 21Mb RAM SD/FF, 2 floppies, internal CD-ROM drive, micromys v3 w/laser mouse
A1000 Microbotics Starboard II w/2Mb 1080, & external floppy (AIRdrive)
C-128 w/1571, 1750, & Final Cartridge III+