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Business India

A Few Tricks of Trade…

The traditional trade outlet is a high volume, fast turnover location. Since the business operates on credit and wafer thin margins (the volumes make up for it !), there typically are many “short cuts” that a not so scrupulous shop owner can resort to, in order to get rich quick.

Common among these are
1) Underweighing
2) Adulteration
3) Over pricing
4) Mis calculation !
5) No pukka bills

Disclaimer : I have been at the receiving end of one of these lately – hence the personal angle to this post !

1) Underweighing – typically happens when one is out to purchase a loose commodity – typically sugar, rice or pulses. A simple adjustment of the weighing scale and voila ! The retailer makes a healthy premium on every such sale.

Consider the hypothetical example below – will remind you of a junior school maths problem.

A dealer buys sugar at Rs 37 per kg. He sells it for Rs 40 per kg. His weighing scale however measures out 990 g for each sale of 1 kg. What is the incremental profit made by this dealer on each such sale.

Current profit : Rs 3 per kg – 8% on CP
CP of 990 gm : Rs 36.63
Hence, incremental profit on each sale : 37 paise
Which translates to : 37 paise / 3 rupee – an astounding 12% higher than the original profit margin.
On a CP basis, his profit works out to 9.2% on 990 gm, versus 8.1% on 1000 gm – again a healthy difference of 1.1%  – considering that his average margin on FMCG products would not be more than 7-8%.

And do you really think you will ever notice this difference in weight ??

So how do you address this – simple – buy known brands. All manufacturers have to comply with a very stringent Weights and Measures act, which penalizes them in case of any discrepancy between declared product weight and actual.They also have consumer care and helpline forums where grievances can be aired and redressed.

2) Adulteration – Carried out with the same intention as the one above – except that it is harder to detect, and may have health consequences. Essentially, a cheaper substitute is added to the original article, to bring down the overall cost of the item. This game works very well till the costs of the replacement article are in check. The day these increase, another substitute is found.

3) Over pricing – this is where I got ripped off. I was shopping with my mother at Qutub Plaza (DLF Phase 1)  We walked into a store promising home delivery etc of foods. beverages, pulses etc.
We purchased three items there – all commodities. Mum also remarked that the rates seemed higher than usual, but the guy pointed us to the MRP sticker. There was no way we could argue beyond a point with that. However, we asked him to give us a bill for this purchase so that we could track prices.

On comparing these with similar weights in a nearby supermarket, we discovered that we had been over – charged by at least 35-40% on each article! Imagine the kind of money made on the side, which is not declared and not paid tax for. A sureshot way to go from nothing to everything in no time at all !

Moral of the story – Trust your instinct – Don’t pay the price printed on a sticker, because that could have been printed anywhere ! Only go by the price printed on the packaging – because there are fewer chances of that being tampered with.

This is where Modern Trade’s arrival will help consumers.
Standard product availability, at fixed prices, sold with printed receipts..combined with promotions to create consumer value ..arent’ these what consumers want ?