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Direct competitors to part or all of Dick Smith Electronics' business as it is today:I have to agree, any battery a bit unusual, no more transistor/resistor/capacitor, they are like a cheap harvey norman or retravision store
Can not for the hell of me understand what the management thought..doomed to failure indeed yet there is a niche market there that jaycar took
Harvey Norman, Myer, David Jones, K-Mart, Big W, Target, Retravision, JB Hi-Fi, Good Guys, every mobile phone retailer including Telstra and the other big companies, every computer shop from small one man operators to the large companies, every overseas equivalent of these retailers who ships internationally, numerous sellers on Ebay.
Direct competitors to Dick Smith Electronics as it was 20 years ago:
None as such. Jaycar was then a small operation and not a national chain. The only other significant national operator was Tandy, which did sell some actual electronics but was focused primarily on selling its own house brand consumer items (particularly audio systems, kids toys, landline phones, computers etc - all under their own house brands). DSE then was what Jaycar is now, and Tandy was half way in between. Both used to produce annual catalogues, with DSE's filled largely with technical data and components whilst Tandy's was filled with assorted gadgets, hi-fi systems and the like. Tandy used to literally give away batteries once a month in order to get people into their stores.
Then came the big changes. DSE went head to head with other retailers and left the actual electronic components business to Jaycar. Meanwhile Tandy disappeared altogether, having been gobbled up by Woolworths and merged into DSE.
Why anyone would want to relinquish a virtual monopoly on a small but adequate niche market in order to go head to head with so many big name retailers I just don't know. Jaycar seems to have filled the gap quite well however.