ebikemom
Well-Known Member
Hi all,
I was just reading an article in the NYT this morning about online stores that sell all sorts of products as drop-shippers--they don't have an actual warehouse, but order the items from another seller when they get an order. Some may order from China... others buy retail from another online seller and then re-sell at a higher retail price. This was all interesting because it was news to me.
Then I thought about ebikes--I wonder how many online stores are drop-shippers? What does this sort of store do for a customer that would make it advantageous to buy from the drop-shipper rather than directly from the manufacturer? How does a buyer know whether or not a storefront online is a store with personnel who can help them on the ground, or a person who then orders from someone else and ships to them? What value does a drop-shipper add, or not, to the process?
I know next to nothing about this topic--just curious to learn more.
I was just reading an article in the NYT this morning about online stores that sell all sorts of products as drop-shippers--they don't have an actual warehouse, but order the items from another seller when they get an order. Some may order from China... others buy retail from another online seller and then re-sell at a higher retail price. This was all interesting because it was news to me.
Then I thought about ebikes--I wonder how many online stores are drop-shippers? What does this sort of store do for a customer that would make it advantageous to buy from the drop-shipper rather than directly from the manufacturer? How does a buyer know whether or not a storefront online is a store with personnel who can help them on the ground, or a person who then orders from someone else and ships to them? What value does a drop-shipper add, or not, to the process?
I know next to nothing about this topic--just curious to learn more.