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Riding your OD to Canadian Optical Franchise Dominance in 10 Easy Steps
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I worked in chain stores (owned by the evil empire) where the OD had no incentive to help sell glasses. Some of the ODs were great and understood the game I had to play as the manager of the store, and others couldn't be bothered. I broke my back to keep their appointment books full regardless of if they were helping me or not because I wanted a shot to sell to as many people as I could. But it was much tougher when the doc says here is their Rx and doesn't give any recommendations from the chair. So as a former manager for chain stores I would welcome a doc with buy in who wanted to make the store profitable.
Specsthrifters looks like they have gone WAY too far in that respect though. Still have to agree with optical 24/7...
Last edited by NAICITPO; 03-24-2023, 01:06 PM.
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Originally posted by optio View Post
"Let's be clear, these companies did absolutely nothing wrong; they legitimately qualified for this scheme.
"If you qualified in an instant, you continued to receive the subsidy for six months, regardless of whether you're trading returned to normal or not."
Seems like you should be mad at the Australian Government :unsure:
Originally posted by optio View PostThe Canadian product thus IS NOT the result of the invisible hand of a free market. Those OCTs (that they don't charge for) was paid for by tax-dollars intended for Australian businesses struggling with the pandemic. The Canadian product is thus being unfairly subsidized by overseas Covid-relief money sheltered in the tax haven of Guernsey. Furthermore, given that they are headquartered in Guernsey, then all their profits (not just those from the Jobseeker program) get booked at advantageous tax rates.
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Honestly, I think some of this could fall under the umbrella of antitrust.
They discuss a number of things but here is a bottom line.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
- Antitrust laws were designed to protect and promote competition within all sectors of the economy.
I don't think funding a Canadian expansion with 90 million Australian tax dollars helps promote competition here.
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Originally posted by eastgtaod View PostHonestly, I think some of this could fall under the umbrella of antitrust.
They discuss a number of things but here is a bottom line.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
- Antitrust laws were designed to protect and promote competition within all sectors of the economy.
I don't think funding a Canadian expansion with 90 million Australian tax dollars helps promote competition here.
Have some pride in what you do and compete against them and beat them. The sky is not falling, you will be able to compete against them. Online glasses are the death of B&M shops... tele-exams are the death of optometry clinics... Luxottica is a monopoly... VSP is a monopoly... and yet we are all still here and have jobs and make a comfortable living.
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Originally posted by NAICITPO View PostWhat smell test? They followed the law that was set out by the Australian government. Australia thought about having a clawback provision but decided against it. That is 100% on the Australian government. End of story.
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