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  • - Bob Morris

    Re: [RC] Free enterprise - Truman Prevatt



    Slightly different business model. All the fast food joints locate next
    to each other since in that business location is prime.

    But I guess I would have to ask if multiday rides are the second fast
    growing area in endurance riding, why the hell does the BOD want to
    stifle that growth. The reason it is growing is there is a demand and we
    should be welcoming new rides instead of trying to figure out how to
    stifle the growth.  The AERC should get out of the business for trying
    to manage the economics of endurance riding and leave that to the
    consumer of endurance riding. That way the cream will rise to the top,
    multidays will grow and flourish and ride managers will be accountable
    to who they should be accountable- the riders not some "politburo" set
    up by the AERC to determine which choices we have . Quite frankly as a
    rider sitting back he in FL I would like to have a choice of which
    multiday ride I want to go do in July. As an AERC member I demand that
    choice.

    Truman

    PS: On the three day issue, if it ain't broke, don't fix it.


    Randy and Cheryl Winter wrote:

     >    What about McDonald's that also owns Boston Market franchises.
     > They end
     > up right next to each other because they appeal to different people and
     > offer a different menu.  Is it not the same with the different types of
     > rides?  Do multidays appeal to a different person than single days and
     > therefore both can exist next to each other?  My only questions are, are
     > there enough customers to go around and are multidays just a series of
     > single days which makes it easier for the rider to do their one or two
     > days?
     > Would different offerings create more customers who would be more
     > comfortable at each venue or kill both financially.
     >
     > Randy Winter
     > Colorado
     >






    Replies
    [RC] Free enterprise, Randy and Cheryl Winter