While respecting your opinion:
1.) Kickbacks are budgeted as marketing costs and are assigned to specific jobs as opposed to general marketing costs which are spread among all customers.
2.) General marketing costs such as broadcasting, net, phone canvassing etc will not be reduced in any measureable way by kickbacks. The Google plugs or radio ads will still cost the same, meaning the kickback costs will add $500 or so to the cost of a specific job, be identifiable and assignable to that job, and also, a justification, ethical or not, as a way to pad that specific job. That cost must be made up some way or have the total marketing costs increase, leading to reduced profits or higher marketing costs, or some combination of both.
4.) If I was a project engineer for such a job and/or I was responsible for that job's profitability, which in effect started out $500 in the hole, I'd feel a strong motivation to find a way to add $500 worth of profitability to that job in any # of ways from padding/creating adders to skimping on materials, to hedging perhaps bloated factors or safety etc, etc. in ways solar ignorant customers can't even conceive much less understand. I don't like it or excuse it, but I do recognize it as possible reality. Some think that unethical. Some think not. Either way, it can happen and is driven by the profit motive. Often, the methods remain hidden and thus fear of consequences reduced or eliminated, increasing the likelihood of such actions.
3.) Kickback costs may be spread among all customers, but are easily identifiable and assignable to specific jobs and thus easy to recover from those same specific jobs. This is usually easier to do because the customer is often "presold" by the referring "friend" and less likely or unfavorably predisposed to get other bids. Great for the vendor. One possible outcome is that the price does not go up, but job quality suffers. There is little to prevent or offset such deterioration except the integrity of the vendor. If chances of being caught skimping on quality are slim to none, I'll bet on the profit motive as having a better chance of winning out. Call me cynical.
4.) Nice try but, I did not write, say or imply, nor do I believe that the lowest priced vendor will be the one with a zero marketing budget. Such an idea makes little sense to me. IMO, If connected at all, prices and marketing budgets are f(market conditions, management savvy, luck, hard work). One is only peripherally connected to the other, if at all.
5.) I'd suggest your statement : "If a company can tack on an extra $500 because you aren't paying attention they will..." is one that, IMO, is at least as cynical as mine. I agree with you that the kickback costs will be made up any way they can. I've been saying that from the beginning. Perhaps the difference in our two statements is more in the wording than the substance. What you call tacking on an extra $500 because someone is not paying attention, I call screwing the naïve who think they got a deal. I see little difference in the meaning or substance of our statements except the choice of words. If so, calling some of us cynical seems a bit like the pot calling the kettle black.
Selling solar doesn't appear all that much different in some ways from other businesses I've been associated with. I didn't make the rules, and I don't like all of them, but that's how I see the game run, with apologies to vendors who take offense to my opinions.
1.) Kickbacks are budgeted as marketing costs and are assigned to specific jobs as opposed to general marketing costs which are spread among all customers.
2.) General marketing costs such as broadcasting, net, phone canvassing etc will not be reduced in any measureable way by kickbacks. The Google plugs or radio ads will still cost the same, meaning the kickback costs will add $500 or so to the cost of a specific job, be identifiable and assignable to that job, and also, a justification, ethical or not, as a way to pad that specific job. That cost must be made up some way or have the total marketing costs increase, leading to reduced profits or higher marketing costs, or some combination of both.
4.) If I was a project engineer for such a job and/or I was responsible for that job's profitability, which in effect started out $500 in the hole, I'd feel a strong motivation to find a way to add $500 worth of profitability to that job in any # of ways from padding/creating adders to skimping on materials, to hedging perhaps bloated factors or safety etc, etc. in ways solar ignorant customers can't even conceive much less understand. I don't like it or excuse it, but I do recognize it as possible reality. Some think that unethical. Some think not. Either way, it can happen and is driven by the profit motive. Often, the methods remain hidden and thus fear of consequences reduced or eliminated, increasing the likelihood of such actions.
3.) Kickback costs may be spread among all customers, but are easily identifiable and assignable to specific jobs and thus easy to recover from those same specific jobs. This is usually easier to do because the customer is often "presold" by the referring "friend" and less likely or unfavorably predisposed to get other bids. Great for the vendor. One possible outcome is that the price does not go up, but job quality suffers. There is little to prevent or offset such deterioration except the integrity of the vendor. If chances of being caught skimping on quality are slim to none, I'll bet on the profit motive as having a better chance of winning out. Call me cynical.
4.) Nice try but, I did not write, say or imply, nor do I believe that the lowest priced vendor will be the one with a zero marketing budget. Such an idea makes little sense to me. IMO, If connected at all, prices and marketing budgets are f(market conditions, management savvy, luck, hard work). One is only peripherally connected to the other, if at all.
5.) I'd suggest your statement : "If a company can tack on an extra $500 because you aren't paying attention they will..." is one that, IMO, is at least as cynical as mine. I agree with you that the kickback costs will be made up any way they can. I've been saying that from the beginning. Perhaps the difference in our two statements is more in the wording than the substance. What you call tacking on an extra $500 because someone is not paying attention, I call screwing the naïve who think they got a deal. I see little difference in the meaning or substance of our statements except the choice of words. If so, calling some of us cynical seems a bit like the pot calling the kettle black.
Selling solar doesn't appear all that much different in some ways from other businesses I've been associated with. I didn't make the rules, and I don't like all of them, but that's how I see the game run, with apologies to vendors who take offense to my opinions.
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