I have two seperate thoughts on this, one as a fish person one as an observation about related businesses.
The other major hobby I participate in is wargaming, which means playing with toy soldiers now (which you can see on these forums,
http://www.slitherine.com/forum/viewforum.php?f=163). Local game stores used to exist somewhat more broadly than they do now and they are having similar business problems to LFSes. Basically the internet is killing niche specialty shops IMO.
I still buy what I can at my local store (Game Parlour in Chantilly VA), but in many ways that is making a donation to them vs. buying from Amazon. Why? Because Game Parlour is effectively my "game club" and provides space for me play games with my friends and recruit other players. The local LFS don't have these side/secondary benefits...
I think pretty broadly we are seeing a trend in which commodity goods that you don't really need to "see" before buying is rapidly moving to the internet. Someone mentioned computer parts, well New Egg and Tiger Direct which have just about everything you could ever want. That said Fry's is still a going concern in some parts of hte country and we have Micro-center in VA/MD which is reasonably solid.
LFSes are not immune to this trend and it is going to be very difficult for them to compete with the internet. It is NOT just a price problem, though that is serious.
Which brings me to my view as a fish person. Wendy and I are both relatively new to keeping fish and thus largely missed the days when there were abundant good LFSes. So what we see is the state they are in now and honestly they have serious issues.
- They are not competitive on price.
- They are not competitive on selection, I can go online read various forums for reviews of a half dozen filters/pumps/whatever and buy one from Fosters and Smith, Big Als, Marine Depot, whatever. No local fish store carries more than a couple of brands and some things are simply unavailable. I have Eheim 1262s as return pumps in my sumps, where could I possibly get this locally? I decided I wanted Eheim cannister filters for my 55g, there was no way to source them locally.
- Wendy and I at one point were shopping for lights and went to numerous local stores. The selection for T5 HO lights was terrible and none were even set-up. We were willing to pay a premium to get a sense of what we wanted but we couldn't even do that. So we did pay a premium - online to Catalina Aquarium to get a 4 bulb fixture (for less than we would have paid for a two bulb fixture at an LFS) that let us experiment and figure out what we wanted. Many LFS I walk into lack even a reasonable selection of T5 HO bulbs, let alone fixtures.
- In general LFSes lack good knowledgeable sales people that are willing to spend time with serious customers. As you all know we have two new 110g tanks. We started looking for tanks/stands at local stores of all sorts but only about half the stores really seemed to want to sell us set-ups. So we went online.
- Local stores in general can't/won't or at the very least won't advertise that they can GET the fish you want. We bought 30 tropheus bulu/cherry spot in the ECC group buy. I have no confidence that I could get that number of quality tropheus in any way shape or form at an LFS in the area. The number of honestly terrible looking cichlids I have seen at VA/MD LFSes is pretty depressing.
Those are the specific problems, broadly I see the LFSes as being squeezed from the top and the bottom.
From the bottom, the big box stores are widely available, brightly light and for the most part more inviting than the LFSes for the person wanting a first time simple basic set-up. They are also more price competitive. We first dove in to cichlids without too much advice or thought, honestly we would have been just as well off going to a big box store as an LFS given the quality of advice we got.
From the top, the LFSes can't stock the variety/numbers of fish that the more serious hobbyish needs so they turn to the internet. They can't stock the variety of equipment so they turn to the internet. The quality of advice is generally lower than what you can get at a club and/or the internet so what role do LFSes play? The only thing you can't easily get on the internet is large tanks.
At the highest end even the extreme shipping charges of moving tanks (and stands) tends to wash out for custom stuff. What is worth noting is that Wendy and I would have been more than willing to work with (and pay a fairly significant fee) for an LFS that would work with custom/semi-custom stuff for us if they would a)arrange the details with the manufacturer, b)take possession of the stuff when shipped and c) then deliver it to us and get it into our house.
There are LFSes in the area that will do this, they are mostly marine places. One marine place wouldn't take us seriously that freshwater people really did want what is basically a marine set-up. Another did take us seriously but their custom maker was prohibitively expensive. That same place told us it was impossible to get starfire fronted tanks from Marineland while another was happy to place an order for one for us - but they couldn't get stands in any color we actually wanted...
The place we wound up buying from is effectively and LFS in another state that does three things that are interesting. They make their own tanks. They have a cabinet maker on contract that makes semi-custom stands and they will take out of state orders and ship.
Here is what I need from and LFS that would get my business in a serious way:
- Ability to get fish that I want. I would actually pay for an LFS to basically receive my shipment from Dave's, hold them for the few days or a week, acclimate them and then have me pick them up on a Saturday. Wendy and I are pretty busy and have in fact paid the Saturday premium so we don't have to take time off work to wait for fish.
- Ability to get equipment I want AND expert advice on setting up something beyond a simple aquarium. Delivery, which I am willing to pay for btw, is a nice bonus. We recently set-up two drilled 110s with sumps and wound up converting them over to Herbie set-ups. After a fair amount of fiddling and frustration we have them quiet, stable and are pretty happy with them...
- However, I would have paid a premium for a local store that I thought I could really trust to have helped through that process. I am not sure I have a store in the area like that, maybe some of the marine places. When I walk into your store suggesting I am willing to spend north of $3k on tanks, stands and equipment you should have a reasonable protocol for dealing with that, offering advice and trying to seal the deal. This seems to be rare for LFS....having your sales people, in non-marine specialized stores, obviously only interested in marine set-ups and having no real interest in selling that stuff to freshwater customers is not a recipe for success. Not following up, offering suggestions, etc is equally dubious. If the store is busy, which non were when we went in, offer to call back...If we ask for a quote on a custom tank at least consider that we might be serious and follow-up...
Too many LFS just can't figure out a value proposition that exceeds the internet, so they try to compete with the internet which is impossible.