I think this conversation is a symptom of of a bigger trend going on in the industry - commoditization of technology.
With the introduction of any new technology there’s a period where it’s only available or relevant to the few. Given that we’re all about selling non-essential items (well except when the guy’s TV dies the day before Superbowl), that means folks with a lot of money to spend on having the coolest ‘toys’. The volumes are low but the margins are high so it all works out. But technology has a habit of moving on and what was ‘bleeding edge’ and only for the very richest last year rapidly becomes par for the course this year. Also customers’ expectations of what they expect to have in their own home and at what cost to them move just as rapidly.
This is a long way of saying there needs to be a range of business models out there to servicee the range of customers that want some sort of Home Theater install. From the $1m totally custom, whole house system including robot servants (well maybe not the servants) to the guy in an apartment who is stretching to a big panel but doesn’t feel comfortable hanging it for himself. Of course the initial post implied that ‘Trunk Slammers’ represented a negative force in the industry - stealing your business with their minimal overheads and resources. I think the truth is that they have a place in the market, dealing with customers who would never have dealet with an installer in the past but who want something beyond a place to simply purchase AV kit.
I honestly believe these are incremental customers for the industry so the perceived cannabalization isn’t happening. Sure the market as a whole is shrinking currently but these ‘low end’ customers are new to that pool of customers. If the more established or larger players want to get some of these customers to make up of decreasing business at the higher end (or even just to grow their overall business), they have to recognize that they are a different type of customer with different expectations and pricing models they will support.
What it all boils down to is ‘different strokes for different folks’ in a business sense. Sure some of the Trunk Slammers are dodgy but I’m sure many of them are honest people trying to deliver a good service. The people who come from the the more up market ‘traditional installer’ world should either focus on delivering the ‘bleeding edge’ and marketing what they are good at better. Or they can learn from the smaller guys to understand how to run a part of their business to address that market segment and they economics it supports.
Wow sorry for such a long-winded post