Tag Archives: Economy

March, 2009 Price Increases

After many discussions with manufacturers, vendors, reps, and personnel, the time has come to implement a small price increase to all white goods appliance products we sell.

Due to extraordinary material cost increases, all appliance manufacturers implemented several price increases during the past two years.

Feder’s Distributors has successfully remained the low-price leader and has shown few, if any price increases during this time (and during our 42 year history). However, due to our current challenging economic times, we have decided to pass a portion of these cost increases on to you, our customers.

Although the majority of all of the manufacturers’ increases occurred during the past two years, Feder’s Distributors purchased enough product to last us through the end of February. Unfortunately, that supply has been depleted and the new costs will take effect on March 2.

Our customers will not notice a major price increase in our every day, basic apartment-grade items. However, items that offer added benefits will incur approximately 5-15% increases.

But to be clear, Feder’s Distributors still strives to be the low-price leader (among many other positive attributes), and will ALWAYS match any advertised price. But, please pay attention to the bottom-line: we always have the items in stock, and if you need it delivered, we get it to you within one business day, for less than anyone else!

Please let us know if you have any questions or concerns and we’ll be sure to address them for you. Call us anytime during our normal business hours, email us day or night, or Twitter @mhfeder, and I’ll get right back to you.

Thank you so much for your loyalty!

Wish We Could Still Sell American

When my father went into business for himself more than forty years ago, the adage was “buy American”. As time passed and into the early 1990s, it changed to “better and cheaper overseas”.

In the beginning, he only sold American made products. Fedders air conditioners, Maytag appliances, GE everything, Carrier, Modern Maid, O’Keiff & Merritt, all were produced within the States. Within only the past 10 years or so, most of the American manufacturers started outsourcing, and importing from countries like China, Korea, India, etc. The dollar began to weaken, and over time, as Thomas L Friedman likes to say, the World Got Flat.

To make a long story short, consumer confidence fell to it’s lowest point EVER today (38 in October–the lowest prior point was 43.2 in December, 1974), good workers are being laid-off from major companies like Whirlpool (5,000 worldwide, 1,000 within the US), all of the manufacturers are claiming major losses, including Whirlpool (-17%Q3), Electrolux (-2.4%Q3), and LG (-93%Q3!). Retailers, the same (Home Depot, Lowes, Best Buy). The housing and mortgage crisis has instigated a $840 billion dollar (why they still call it $700, is beyond me) government “bailout” or “rescue”. GM is asking the government for $10 billion of free-money while they discuss a merger with Chrysler.

With all this bad news, you’d think that business would really put their customers first. At least, that’s my hope. When I joined my dad in this venture about 8 years ago, I was always interested in satisfying every single customer who put enough faith and confidence in our company to deliver something that would allow their tenants to enjoy a nice family meal like a new stove, or a refrigerator. We would always try to bend over backwards to accommodate the needs of a client. We built relationships, put out a hand to shake it with confidence that we were offering the best deal, not always monetarily, but also in service and expertise. Ease of doing business and showing up when we say we were going to show up.

Bureaucracy is now prevalent in Korea, China, and the others. The value of customer first, has been lost. I was disappointed in the fact I had to search for the right person to speak/deal with when I had to call a certain Korean company, even though we purchased several million dollars worth of inventory from them last year. How is it we met the boss once more than five years ago, dealt with the order desk by fax since, and never heard from the sales manager ever again? Forget it if we have a question for them nowadays, we’d be lucky if we EVER heard back. We were even purchasing from two out of three of their product divisions, but have never heard from the sales manager from the other division until a lowly sales rep was hired just over a year ago and called on us. Although we’ve been buying from that division for more than 6 years, they suddenly tried to change our pricing structure to a higher-cost classification and demanded that we show almost 40 of their products on our floor.

After complaining about this to our lowly sales rep, we were APPROVED at the best price-level and had our responsibility for the items on the floor removed. However, it took another month to push a PO through this approval process, until I finally decided that we’d be better off not doing one ounce of business with this division again, canceling the PO, and telling the lowly sales rep I wasn’t going to buy another product from them. He blew it off and said that he understands our frustration.

I wish we were still able to buy American. As Thomas L Friedman discusses in his book I mentioned, America is struggling to find enough engineers to create the next great appliance, or the next great gadget. It’s sad. Especially if this is the way business is going to be conducted in the future!

Dramatic Decreases in Appliance Consumption Since 2000

According to the Association of Appliance Manufacturers (AAHM) , there have been dramatic decreases in energy consumption of most major kitchen appliances during the past eight years.
Energy consumption of washing machines has decreased 63%, while their capacity has increased 8%. Dishwasher energy consumption has dropped almost 30% and their water consumption has dropped 29%. Refrigerator energy consumption has decreased 30% since 2000. The AAHM claims that refrigerators now use less electricity than a 60-watt light bulb that’s left on for the entire day.