loco61
Well-known member
so when can i buy/pre order my son a shirtTop work. [emoji106]
Sent from my SM-A510F using Tapatalk
so when can i buy/pre order my son a shirtTop work. [emoji106]
so when can i buy/pre order my son a shirt
Sent from my SM-A510F using Tapatalk
I wonder whether Nike have had the same difficulty supplying England, Chelsea, Tottenham or Man City shirts ...
What a strange comment (not Andy Naylor) see Weststander's note.
Completely different circumstances. You cannot compare Chelsea/England kit sales to ours.
So Barber has written another essay of spin which can be summarised in 5 words.
The club underestimated the demand.
Simple as that really. Who'd have thought it? The bloke really is a tit sometimes when a bit of criticism comes their way. Yes - we can all see that sales have exceeded expectations, but to be tied into a deal and a situation where we have had no kits on sale for 3 of the first 4 months of our first Premier League campaign is an absolutely shambolic situation, with only seemingly a small batch to arrive before Christmas.
It may not be through lack of trying or individual blame, but the holistic situation is an disgrace, however many sentences he puts together about record sales and exceptional drmand.
Sent from my SM-G920F using Tapatalk
I think Barber has done a brilliant job, but I'm inclined to agree. They underestimated demand. Simple as that.
We seem to harp on about how blessed we are to have Nike as a kit supplier and how, without them, we'd never sell as many kits to the thousands of kids who won't wear anything but Nike (even though their parents buy the bloody thing so it makes NO DIFFERENCE). We're so LUCKY we have a (kind of) unique FOURTY FIVE POUND shirt which didn't come from pro direct soccer. And how, because of these BLESSINGS we've got to suffer the consequences and that nobody is to blame, we're just victims of our own success.
Well I would say that whoever is in charge of the tat in the club shop and whoever estimates how much shit we should order and whoever decided that the bloody arms on the away shirt were a good idea needs to perhaps do a bit of a better job.
Every element of the club is top notch, but the whole shopping experience is borderline worse than when we were in League 1.
Stop it. You're supposed to ignore the inevitable spikes owing to growing fanbase, the success of last year and the Premier League boom, and instead focus on record "footfall", sales, turnovers etc.I think Barber has done a brilliant job, but I'm inclined to agree. They underestimated demand. Simple as that.
We seem to harp on about how blessed we are to have Nike as a kit supplier and how, without them, we'd never sell as many kits to the thousands of kids who won't wear anything but Nike (even though their parents buy the bloody thing so it makes NO DIFFERENCE). We're so LUCKY we have a (kind of) unique FOURTY FIVE POUND shirt which didn't come from pro direct soccer. And how, because of these BLESSINGS we've got to suffer the consequences and that nobody is to blame, we're just victims of our own success.
Well I would say that whoever is in charge of the tat in the club shop and whoever estimates how much shit we should order and whoever decided that the bloody arms on the away shirt were a good idea needs to perhaps do a bit of a better job.
Every element of the club is top notch, but the whole shopping experience is borderline worse than when we were in League 1.
So Barber has written another essay of spin which can be summarised in 5 words.
The club underestimated the demand.
Simple as that really. Who'd have thought it? The bloke really is a tit sometimes when a bit of criticism comes their way. Yes - we can all see that sales have exceeded expectations, but to be tied into a deal and a situation where we have had no kits on sale for 3 of the first 4 months of our first Premier League campaign is an absolutely shambolic situation, with only seemingly a small batch to arrive before Christmas.
It may not be through lack of trying or individual blame, but the holistic situation is an disgrace, however many sentences he puts together about record sales and exceptional drmand.
Sent from my SM-G920F using Tapatalk
I can't remember Barber apologising for anything other than Seagulls Player being shit (supplier to blame, of course)Very much this.
There are clubs in the PL who are of a similar size to ourselves, clubs who have been promoted to the PL who are of a similar size to ourselves. Although its our first time at this level in a long time, we haven't re-invented the wheel here. We get crowds of circa 30k, I can't imagine we are so UNIQUE as to be completely clueless as to the demand for shirts after having been promoted. But apparently, we are.
Why not just fess up and say "apologies, we got our numbers completely wrong". Won't help anyone get their shirts any quicker now, but its preferable to all this fobbing off with the apparently incalculable, unprecedented, off-the-scale, world-record demand for BHA shirts that has caught them seemingly completely unawares.
Any sense and / or decency, and they'd proceed as follows:
1. Do whatever it takes to get the stock issue resolved, so there's shirts to sell before Christmas.
2. Announce that the current shirt* will now be retained for season 2018/19.
*exact specification of shoulder badges to be confirmed in May...
Is it me, or is there a new precedent of shirts being valid for only one season?
This is clearly a huge contributory factor of the club being scared of over supply, but Barber doesn't mention this.
All right everyone, stop it now, they underestimated demand, give them a break. They obviously got someone to do an analysis of expected sales, and they didn't get it right, its not an exact science. There doesn't seem to be much more they can do other than what they have done already.