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 Message Boards » » Hipster's Guide to Birmingham Page [1]  
Samwise16
All American
12710 Posts
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Obviously this is a little [old] since it's from January but I thought I would share...

http://www.freethinkbham.com/?p=601

Quote :
"Where to Shop
Unfortunately, if you want to clothes shop with the counter-culture (read consumer-culture) in Birmingham, you’ll just have to drive out to the ‘burbs and go to Urban Outfitters. But really, where else are you gonna get all your hipster essentials? There’s no American Apparel here. Urban Outfitters allows you to look like you shop at American Apparel… assuming the sweat and tears of Chinese children didn’t stain your clothes."



The comments also bring the LOLs

10/3/2010 11:43:36 PM

Ernie
All American
45943 Posts
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So tired of reading about hipsters

10/3/2010 11:48:49 PM

ThePeter
TWW CHAMPION
37709 Posts
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Quote :
"After you’ve scoped out Bottletree, Parkside and Speakeasy and it’s getting to be midnight, you’ll definitely want to head to the Plaza (or Upside Down Plaza) around 5-Points. This will be your true Birmingham grime-ball, hipster-meets-circus-freak, windowless, get fucked-up and feel at home experience. Everyone’s smoking. Everyone’s playing pool/foosball/darts and everyone’s pumping the jukebox full of their favorite ironic late-night jams. Learn to love the Plaza."


Sounds like JackPot

Quote :
"Another place that could be hit or miss as far as hipsterdom is concerned, but is probably good to check out in the pre-midnight hours of the night is Speakeasy. They have some pool-tables, darts and usually play some decent music. By “decent” I mean 80’s metal, early hardcore and classic punk, but not in an ironic way, the owner is just from that era. "


10/3/2010 11:51:30 PM

vinylbandit
All American
48079 Posts
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so plaza is jackpot and speakeasy is slim's when mikey was running it

got it

also, bottletree is a fucking amazing venue...probably the best artist hospitality of any midsize club in north america

10/3/2010 11:53:24 PM

ThePeter
TWW CHAMPION
37709 Posts
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Quote :
"Unfortunately, if you want to clothes shop with the counter-culture (read consumer-culture) in Birmingham, you’ll just have to drive out to the ‘burbs and go to Urban Outfitters. But really, where else are you gonna get all your hipster essentials? There’s no American Apparel here. Urban Outfitters allows you to look like you shop at American Apparel… assuming the sweat and tears of Chinese children didn’t stain your clothes. "


Haha

10/3/2010 11:57:59 PM

Kodiak
All American
7067 Posts
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I realize this thread is about those who are hipsters.... which I am not. Hear me out, maybe I can offer some insight.

I am in outside sales, which is currently salary+commission, but will move into straight commission starting at the beginning of July 2010. I have been in this position since July 2009. I have competition from several direct manufacturing sales reps, large distributors, and local distributors. Here are the advantages and disadvantages of each:

Direct Advantages: Immediate knowledge of new technology, no middle man mark up, one shipping bill (paid by manufacturer or buyer of goods), access to larger range of non-commodity items, control inventory, have access to many distributors that can effectively sell their goods which increases market share, and set prices of commodity they manufacture.

Direct disadvantages: Typically have 1-3 sales reps per region (i.e. southeast, mid-atlantic, northeast, etc.) limiting the number of accounts they can successfully manage/cold-call, lack physical customer service or physical technical service available to or affordable for smaller users or altogether, are sometimes not trustworthy because they will go in behind their distributors that sell their commodity to one account in large quantities (i.e. they missed a big account, and have found out about it through a distributor selling their particular product) which leads to the distributor not selling their product anymore, have too many distributors selling the product ultimately driving the set price down through deviations, possibly rely on distributors to actually sell the product, and competition from other direct sources.

Large distributor advantages: have access to other commodities that go hand in hand with other manufacturers (poor example- grocery stores sell milk as well as cereal), get direct pricing, many locations regionally or nationally easing the shipping burden of buyers with multiple locations, personal service either customer or technical, many sales reps that are able to cover a broader territory, access to multiple manufacturers of the same commodity allowing to keep prices in check, service programs that smaller companies can't offer and direct providers can't match in price or value, and experts of many many commodities as opposed to one or a few.

Large distributor disadvantages: smaller local distributors creating price wars (think Michael Scott Paper Co vs Dunder-Mifflin), direct mfg's going in behind and stealing business, limited access to all of the mfg's (you won't find Harris Teeter name brands in Food Lion and visa versa), can't truly set prices because it's based on both supply and demand, territory management, and tough growth prospects in slower economies (this is true for direct as well really)

Local distributor advantages: Typically a good ol' boy setting where the seller and the buyer know each other for years (this does happen at all levels, but mostly at the local level), local folks are right down the street and can be used in emergencies, if the local guy buys at high enough volumes then there is no shipping charge to the end user, and access to both direct mfg's and large distributors.

Local distributor disadvantages: easily beaten in price, array of commodities, array of technology, lack of trained staff, low cash flow, etc etc etc.

This is what I have noticed in my six months, I am sure there are plenty more that need mentioning. The way I am setting myself apart as a sales person is this: I go after the big accounts right now while I am new. The big accounts, if I land them, will take care of me while I am new and building a customer base. The money made off of those allows me to focus free time on smaller accounts that get me higher margins. I build up big accounts, I would like to have 5-10 of these, then get 20-30 medium accounts. If I lose 1 or 2 big accounts, the 20-30 medium accounts keep me afloat while I go after new big accounts. I don't really waste time on small accounts simply because they basically pay for breakfast or something really small.

I will say this, if you can't get a big account in the first 6-8 months (assuming you have cash flow that you can ride this long) you could be in a world of trouble. If you can get one, it will really make going after the others a lot more enjoyable and less stressful. It's simply just very exhausting wasting any time on anything other than big accounts in the very beginning. You work just as hard on the medium sized accounts and see 1/3 to 1/36 of the money in my situation.

If you have any other questions, you can PM me. I hope this helps in the slightest!

10/4/2010 12:20:36 AM

0EPII1
All American
42535 Posts
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Birmingham, UK is pretty cool... lots of hot chicks there as well.

10/4/2010 3:32:08 AM

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