diamondnewbieny
Brilliant_Rock
- Joined
- Oct 3, 2018
- Messages
- 596
https://www.forbes.com/sites/rachel...-328m-back-in-august-whats-next/#5176ee6f1407
Interesting excerpts:
“Lederman chuckles. “If I had an option to choose between 150,000 stones photographed at 30x [magnification], and staring at one stone and looking at a piece of paper [a gemological report], this is a better shopping experience,” he answers wholeheartedly. “There’s no doubt between selection, value and transparency, we’re offering the best.””
““Our technologies are something that they value, along with the JamesAllen.com brand,” Lederman says of Signet. ””
““I want you to be knowledgeable,” he says of the JamesAllen.com customer: “Go online, do your homework, research me, ask your friends, go to my website, look around.” He says the typical JamesAllen.com shopper researches a ring for 6-12 weeks, and visits the website from an average of five different devices. “
The article says the average spent on a diamond is about $6,000. I was guessing that this is the target market .... I know $6,000 is a lot to a lot of people, but I don’t feel like it goes that far in the diamond world. Probably those with higher budgets were already going elsewhere, I’m guessing ... except for the occasional savvy shopper and those looking for fancy shapes. I suspect their average sale will go to about $3,000, a level where people are willing to be more careless.
Either way, it looks like Signet is moving away not just from the original JA transparent and research-friendly website but from the original JA concept.
This reminds me of my employer, who decided that salary expense was too high, and so they cut a few $100,000 a year jobs ... of people who used to bring in $10M or more. You don’t have to be a genius to see how silly that is.
https://www.businesswire.com/news/h...m-Raises-140-Million-Growth-Equity-Investment
”We are very excited to be investing in JamesAllen.com to help them offer not only incredible value in bridal jewelry, but to become the jeweler for life for savvy consumers, millennial couples and jewelry connoisseurs everywhere,” added Spetzler.”
“ ... allowing retailers, manufacturers and consumers to transact digitally without the high expenses and time delays associated with traditional brick & mortar alternatives.”
Time delays will now be caused by the need to contact customer service.
Annnnd ... if the changes are not enough to make you shop somewhere else, Signet is the new owner.
https://money.cnn.com/2017/02/28/investing/signet-shares-plummet/index.html?iid=EL
I bet someone else comes along, maybe Lederman again, and sets up a new version of JA that is like the old version. There is now a hole in the internet diamond vendor market that someone is bound to fill. I mean, I think we PSers can still be happy with the remaining vendors, but we are used to having more choice.
It it ain’t broke, don’t fix it!
While I don’t doubt JA hasn’t been doing as well this year as years past, one income statement doesn’t tell an entire story. Last December we had to write off $250k in leasehold improvements when we moved one of our medium sized branches.I can appreciate that @YoungPapa came here to offer some additional insight. Unfortunately it just doesn't make sense. Slice, dice and try to sell it as you wish but at the end it's bullying tactics. Preying on the weak to boost profit margins.
I have moral issues with this type of methodology and can't support JA with my own money, nor with recommendations that others support them.
https://www.signetjewelers.com/inve...-Quarter-and-Fiscal-2019-Results/default.aspx
https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/SIG/financials?p=SIG
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The diamond dealers don't care where the diamonds get sold, it's to provide exclusivity to JA as the virtual seller for diamond dealers.
I feel like "buy with your eyes" is such a trap.
Agreed. “Buy with your eyes” may be okay if you are looking at it in person, but countless videos & pics on JA, BN, etc. as well as personal pics posted on PS clearly show that you cannot “buy with your eyes” online. WAYYYY too many variables change what you see on a computer screen vs. in person.
I feel like "buy with your eyes" is such a trap. My eyes are lying liars that lie.
BlueNile used to sell with just reports and no pictures. That wasn't good, either. Consumers really need both. Jewelers love to tell people "don't buy online; you don't know what you're getting." This decision makes this closer to reality. Unfortunately, other sites might decide to go this route if it's lucrative for JA.
While I don’t doubt JA hasn’t been doing as well this year as years past, one income statement doesn’t tell an entire story. Last December we had to write off $250k in leasehold improvements when we moved one of our medium sized branches.
OR, you can open a window, put this in the address bar: https://ion.r2net.com/Sets/Diamond/6448481/cert.jpg
Except, instead of “6448481”, you put in the sku of the diamond you’re looking at.
Thanks @Lynniiee !!!!![]()
Agreed. “Buy with your eyes” may be okay if you are looking at it in person, but countless videos & pics on JA, BN, etc. as well as personal pics posted on PS clearly show that you cannot “buy with your eyes” online. WAYYYY too many variables change what you see on a computer screen vs. in person.
This will not be lucrative for them.I feel like "buy with your eyes" is such a trap. My eyes are lying liars that lie.
BlueNile used to sell with just reports and no pictures. That wasn't good, either. Consumers really need both. Jewelers love to tell people "don't buy online; you don't know what you're getting." This decision makes this closer to reality. Unfortunately, other sites might decide to go this route if it's lucrative for JA.
In case some aren’t following the other thread (about how to find a JA stone’s lab report), I’m cross-posting an update about that here as well for awareness:
FYI everyone ... it seems JA has disabled this ‘back door’ to view lab reports, as I just tried it with two random diamonds and got the below message. This makes me just really dislike them even more; it’s super shady going to such lengths to actually hide information about their products, not to mention telling customers different reasons for it.
We’re not talking about trade secrets here ... it’s not like JA is on the cusp of curing cancer, and we’re competition trying to figure out their secret. And it’s not like shoppers are trying to commit fraud by viewing the lab reports for diamonds JA supposedly wants to sell. I guess they just don’t want to sell them bad enough.
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Unfortunately, not surprising. Within "minutes" a solution is introduced to bypass JA's new restriction of the day -- in a thread where JA was active.
Sometimes silence is golden. Hard to be reactive when you don't hear anything.![]()
JA gave PSers the middle finger.We’re not talking about trade secrets here ... it’s not like JA is on the cusp of curing cancer, and we’re competition trying to figure out their secret. And it’s not like shoppers are trying to commit fraud by viewing the lab reports for diamonds JA supposedly wants to sell. I guess they just don’t want to sell them bad enough.
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JA gave PSers the middle finger.![]()
Lederman: “If I had an option to choose between 150,000 stones photographed at 30x [magnification], and staring at one stone and looking at a piece of paper"
I can appreciate that @YoungPapa came here to offer some additional insight. Unfortunately it just doesn't make sense. Slice, dice and try to sell it as you wish but at the end it's bullying tactics. Preying on the weak to boost profit margins.
I have moral issues with this type of methodology and can't support JA with my own money, nor with recommendations that others support them.
https://www.signetjewelers.com/inve...-Quarter-and-Fiscal-2019-Results/default.aspx
https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/SIG/financials?p=SIG
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