Author Topic: Love it! Great Idea! ---> "Made In America' Store"  (Read 526 times)

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Christians4LessGvt

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Love it! Great Idea! ---> "Made In America' Store"
« on: June 25, 2011, 02:59:00 PM »

 
"Made In America" Store Capitalizes On Patriotism

by Daniel Robison

June 22, 2011


 
Tourists visit the Made in America store in Elma, N.Y., on their way to scenic landmarks.
"Makes me think of when I was young and everything was American. And that's the way it should be,"
shopper Gloria Giesa says.

Tourists visit the Made in America store in Elma, N.Y., on their way to scenic landmarks.

"Makes me think of when I was young and everything was American. And that's the way it should be,"
shopper Gloria Giesa says.

Dozens of tour buses have added the tiny town of Elma, N.Y., as a stop this year. On their way to
scenic sites like Niagara Falls, these tourists are squeezing in a visit to the Made in America store.

Shop owner Mark Andol climbs aboard a bus and tells the riders that shopping here is a patriotic act.

"When you walk through them doors, I guarantee when you're shopping ? the homework's been done ?
it's 100 percent made-in-America products. Made in this country by American workers, and the money stays
in our economy. So, enjoy yourself,
" he says.

Customers pour into the spacious building, which used to be a Ford dealership. American flags and patriotic
quotes adorn the walls.

Gloria Giesa of Vaselboro, Maine, says she always looks for "Made in the USA" labels when shopping.
But this store saves her the trouble.

"Makes me think of when I was young and everything was American. And that's the way it should be,"
she says.

But Giesa admits she doesn't always go with American products.

"You buy the best deal you can find. That's what it's all about. [For] some people, every penny counts.
And if you can save 50 cents, that's a lot," she says.

Andol sees the store as a way for American vendors to gain traction in a retail environment where they've
been priced out by overseas competition.

A Personal Battle

For him, it's a personal battle. A few years ago, his welding company nearly went out of business after
losing major contracts to foreign manufacturers. He laid off nearly half of his 70-person workforce.

 
Customers are eager to shop the store's 3,000 American-made products.

Customers are eager to shop the store's 3,000 American-made products.

"These people want to work. You have no work for them. Yet it's going overseas and you think, 'Jeez,
these people want to put food on their table. They're willing to work.' There just wasn't enough work
to keep them," Andol says.

In the beginning, Andol admits, opening the store was more of an idea than a business plan.
It stocked just 50 items.

Now, customers are snapping up its medley of more than 3,000 products. You won't find everything.
There are no can openers, coffee makers or just about anything electronic. Prices are competitive.
Jeans for $30, and $14 will buy a T-shirt that says, "China is a long drive to work."

Store manager Rob Weylan says, "50-cent toilet paper. American-made toilet paper. Fifty cents a roll.
We're better than the dollar store."

Weylan makes sure each product is 100 percent American, right down to the glue in the packaging.
Vendors have to say where every component of their product is made and sign letters of authenticity.

Checking The Goods

This is necessary, Weylan says, because loopholes in Federal Trade Commission rules allow many items
to be labeled "Made the USA" when it's only half-true or better. Weylan says he spends hours verifying
manufacturer's claims.

"If, for some reason, something were to slip through the cracks, we take the product out of the store, burn it,
or whatever we do to it, because they lied to us," he says.

So far, principle hasn't turned into a profit. Any money the store has made has gone into acquiring new products.
Sales have doubled from this time last year, thanks to word of mouth and visits by out-of-towners.

Franchisees are already planning to open more Made in America stores, envisioning it as the next Wal-Mart ?
without the foreign goods.

http://www.npr.org/2011/06/22/137301881/made-in-america-store-capitalizes-on-patriotism?ps=cprs
"Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!" - Ronald Reagan - June 12, 1987

Xavier_Onassis

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Re: Love it! Great Idea! ---> "Made In America' Store"
« Reply #1 on: June 25, 2011, 03:07:13 PM »
Franchisees are already planning to open more Made in America stores, envisioning it as the next Wal-Mart ?
without the foreign goods.

=================================
It may be a good idea, but if it does not turn a profit, it won't be one for long.

I remember from the 1950's that there was a lot of crap made in America as well as good stuff. But the truly crappy crap in the '50's was Japanese. Stuff like clothespins and cheap toys and tools in particular.
"Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana."

Christians4LessGvt

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Re: Love it! Great Idea! ---> "Made In America' Store"
« Reply #2 on: June 25, 2011, 06:01:39 PM »
It may be a good idea, but if it does not turn a profit, it won't be one for long.

really?

but i guess if they unionize or donate heavy...or both
maybe they can get a bailout from the Washington Mafia
even if they dont turn a profit  ;)
"Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!" - Ronald Reagan - June 12, 1987

Xavier_Onassis

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Re: Love it! Great Idea! ---> "Made In America' Store"
« Reply #3 on: June 25, 2011, 06:22:07 PM »
I really doubt that there is any chance that this will happen.

They will make a profit, and perhaps expand,or fail to do so and then change or die.

Perhaps they could simply sell products made in North America.
They could sell  Canadian maple syrup and Mexican salsa, for example.
"Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana."