Eustace wrote:I'll give the commission angle some further thought. But there is something about this that puzzles me.
Put yourself in the shoes of a site-owner. If we assume an average monthly take of £30.00 per machine, then 20% is somewhere between £72.00 to £216.00, depending on the number of machines.
Do people really jump at that? I just don't see how you can sell it, and even then many machines will take significantly lower than the average.
Maybe at 40-50% commission, it starts to look like serious money as long as you have sited multiple machines at the same location, but this is over the course of an entire year, so the monthly or quarterly payments are still going to be chicken feed. For instance, 50% commission on £30.00 average take with three machines works out at £540.00 p.a. or £45.00 p.m.
Wouldn't a small business owner just pay the overhead and put their own machine in???? Maybe the reason they don't is because they don't want the added overhead and they see it as free money? I can understand it in a garage or office or dentist's waiting room, and the like, because those people just won't want the hassle of self-managing it, but if I owned a shop or cinema or something similar involving retail, I'd wonder whether the money going into the machine could be going into my till, and maybe from there I'd reach the conclusion that 50% isn't enough! Why not 100%? Yes, it would involve an initial investment, but if you're a retailer anyway, then it's just a diversified part of your business, and if vending works so well, then why not?
Sorry if I'm not seeing something obvious.
Its often back pocket money Eustace. That said, you need to keep records of comissions paid for obvious reasons.
Anything above 20% would make tower vending less of a choice for an operator. Taking into account, machine damage; losses, product losses and other business costs, you have to have a good margin and sell lots of tubs.
Thanks,
Paul