E-Tail or Retail: When to buy online, and when from a bricks-and-mortar store

Credit when credit is due

One of the great paradoxes of online shopping is that people still say “I don’t like giving my credit card details online”. Thing is though, online shopping via card is much safer than, say, direct deposit from your main bank account.

Yes, the Russian Mafia can get a hold of your details and go on a spree. But you know what? Banks anticipate that. When this writer goes crazy at Christmas and makes six purchases in two hours from four different stores, he gets a call from ANZ. They’re just checking everything is okay.

Credit cards are also great for cash-flow. Many offer an “interest free” period, which means you won’t be charged interest for, in some cases, up to 60 days. If you pay off your card at the end of the month, the only costs you’ll pay are the annual membership fee and interest on any balance that carries over from the previous month.

If you’re making a big purchase, say a new entertainment package worth $5000, consider getting a personal loan from your bank. If you’re employed, odds are they’ll finance the loan, and while the repayments will be higher than the minimum repayment on a credit card, the interest rate is usually 5-10 percent lower.

PayPal is also a good method for paying online. It’s a broker between you and the seller, so the dodgy guy on eBay offering a new Sony Vaio Z-series for $400 can’t make off with your cash when he sends you a box full of cut-up phone directories.

Credit needs to be used sensibly and judiciously though. Remember, the banks ain’t giving you $10K of cash because they like you. They want you to max out the card quickly and then repay the minimum amounts – that maximises their profits. The risk they take is you being good with money and only spending what you can afford, and never leaving a balance on the card. Then the joke’s on them. And also the retailers who have to pay a clip to the bank every time a card gets swiped.

And have you had a go with the contactless system yet, like Visa PayWave? That thing is witchcraft…

The value of the demo

Look, we don’t want to be judged as hugely cynical here, but one of the arguments for buying at a bricks-and-mortar store is that they can demo the product to you.

Well, putting aside questions of whether your TV will look, in your home, anything like it does in a wall of nearly identical TVs, consider this:

Why not go to the store, get the demo, and then just go off and buy the product online anyway? And don’t forget: for every one demo you get in non-ideal circumstances at the shop, there are hundreds of online reviews, both written and video, for you to get some kind of collective idea of how good the thing is.

Oh yeah: none of what we’re saying applies to $10,000+ audiophile equipment. You’re not going to get a discount online for that stuff anyway, and auditions are vital because expensive amps look the same on paper but sure don’t sound the same.