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In these tough times all of us have to watch just about every dollar we spend. There’s hardly an industry these days that’s immune from layoffs, salary reductions or leave without pay. In many small communities even police forces are being reduced in size so we all have to be a little cautious about the money we spend because the job and income we have today may not be there next week.
Sooner or later that need for caution is even going to extend to the money we spend on our cigars and more and more of us are going to be looking for something a little less expensive than what we currently have stashed away in our humidors.
So what is out there that might cost a little less, is the quality of discount cigars really as good as the people who sell them would have us believe and should we really be forcing cigar makers to drop their prices?
Well the reality is that if you want a quality smoke then you’re still going to have to pay a reasonable price. Producing tobacco for the quality cigar market is labor intensive and there’s just no escaping that fact. If you’re looking at the premium market then the cost of tobacco is even more expensive because of extended curing, fermenting and resting times.
And it’s not just the filler that is more expensive in a quality or premium grade cigar. The leaves used for the wrapper are treated differently too and, as I’ve pointed out elsewhere, many of the cheaper cigars don’t use anything like the same wrapper leaves as the better quality cigars do.
So stepping down to a discount cigar can mean quite a step down in quality and if you can handle that then perhaps that is the way for you to go. If you are going to make that step down in price then perhaps the best place to shop is online.
There are some great deals to be had if you’re prepared to shop around and spend time searching for the best price. But remember, when you shop online you can’t actually touch the cigars or smell them either and there’s no guarantee that the cigars shown in the photos on some of the online discount sites are the same as what will turn up when the delivery man calls.
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So, if the little guy can't stand tall in today's market may very well be due to the fact that he can't sustain his business on less profit because he can't control the farmers and rollers that work for someone else. The same principle applies in America's economy: it's the big boys who control the markets not the little guy. It's the big boys who can take the crops away from the little guys if and when they choose to. If they want to make it difficult for the little guy they have no problem doing it.
Again, I do enjoy some of the boutique brands just like anyone else. If the economy stifles demand, it's the little guy with the big margin that's going to lose, not the big guy. And while cigar smokers demand more brands and flavors that the little guy provides, in the end they will smoke what they can afford. If the big guys don't want to add those tobaccos to their arsenal and keep prices in check, that's when we'll all lose a little variety.
Also, while these guys may be nice people, I don't feel too sorry for some 30 year old kid who had a great idea to blend a different taste, call the big retailers to promote it and then become instant cigar gods with a huge margin behind it. These folks can find other avenues to make a buck too, cigars aren't the only way to get rich.
So the next time you see some overweight young dude in a hawaiin shirt, or a motorcycle fanatic with tatoos all over their body or a couple guys who you wouldn't want to see walking through your neighborhood without a police escort shaking hands with a bunch of guys around a cigar shop, stop and think about who gets hurt when the time comes that we have a few less brands of cigars to choose from the next time we want to indulge in an uneccessary luxury habit we like to call cigars.
And since I can still see the last paragraph from the article while I type this, remember this as well: there will ALWAYS be someone around when the good times come back to dive into the cigar business again and start the whole process over again. We won't be without our boutique brands for long, and when they do come back, maybe it's US, the consumer, who sets the prices and NOT the dirty, grungy, overweight kid who was smart enough to call CI to set the price for their product line.
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