So as there are poor wages, internet competition, lack of technical knowledge and not a lot of motivation in the industry, this is why you have lethargic sales people in some shops.
Most of the Sales people I ever dealt with were either part time musicians who ran there own project studio which seemed to be mostly software based and worked part time in a shop to earn a little extra cash with minimal knowledge of hardware or were simply students with no real experience of the gear they were selling other than to earn commision,the latter the more of a pain in the ass,due to simply wanting to box shift to meet targets,Infact I saw once on the desk of a shop I was buying from a monthly sales target figure for the staff which exceeded 40 grand per person,which is a lot of gear to sell in a month if you ask me so certainly theres a pressure So the Thrill of being surrounded by all that lovely gear soon wears off I suspect
most if not all never had real hands on experience of the synths I wished to purchase,Certainly some of the retailers have their own hands on manufacturer trained specialists in store now like some of the Roland Planet centres,for me when I purchased the Oasys it was if like I asked them to tell me how to demo the cockpit of a space shuttle noone could really give me any real convincing info or know much about it. it was like.."Huh s**t help someone wants us to sell them an Oasys what do we do" infact the guy I dealt with actually had to ask the manager if it was ok for me to play on the in store model because of the "Do not touch" sign on top of the keys??? two of the sales guy were debating over who was going to get the commision off the sale because I originally got moved to another keyboard guy !!!Something that I found rather unprofessional
Suits me to order over the phone or the net,simply because I'm hands on with most hardware and know what I want to purchase before buying and I don't get fed a load of bull about needing something else by some commision hungry student.Plus the cost of having something posted is far less than the cost of fuel to get to the nearest shop and find they don't actually have it in stock even though they tell you it was over the phone!
its sad that the shopping experience of music shops is gone,I met a few decent guys along the way who were happy to talk gear without pressure to buy,but sad to say the internet has revolutionised the need to demo something and remove the need to go to a shop and much of that is the way in which many retailers treated customers,but even so some internet retailers still treat customers with content,As I have found out after purchasing a synth advertised as new sealed in the box that clearly wasn't,but still played full price and slagging off other reatilers for their shoddy service and it took some 3 weeks to resolve but only after I got my credit card company involved did they issue me with a brand new replacement and then even tried to Charge a restocking fee for the model I returned
So don't think that because your cutting out the middle man your getting a better level of service.At one time you probably had limited avenues to buy but now its a free for all,that only the best will survive in the internet age and i am more than happy to shop online for the best deal there are only two online retailers in the UK I will ever buy from.