Thomas Davie
Bluelight Crew
Superior mods - I’m not naming the company and these numbers aren’t dick waving; they are an expression of poorly controlled OCD.
Oct 17/2018 - $57 Cdn - 100%
Dec/2019 - $52 Cdn - 91.2% Done under the guise of first sales 12 Holidaze (haha get it?)
Early 2020 - $42 Cdn 73.7%
March/April 2020 $29 Cdn 50.9%
July 2020 $21 - 36.8%
October 2020 $15 - 26.3%
The first sales was done under the guise of a holiday. Price changes were temporary for the month of December, 2019 and returned to $57 Cdn. Then Covid hit and store traffic was shut down. This company had mail order/courier services from day 1 and still sells to patients and other provinces. And massive (as in millions of square feet) amounts of production came online. Products weren’t selling and were being returned to provincial distributors, and from there back to the producers to be destroyed/converted. There was recognition that, for some people, money would be tight.
2019 was a year of shock as Cdn companies started to realize that a license to grow wasn’t a license to print money. 2020 is a year of reaction (and legalization of anything other than weed or edible oils). Money bleeds as companies introduce new products.
The realization that you have to offer good quality cannabis at a reasonable price has resulted in a large number of pre packaged (cause that’s all we get) sizes; 1.0, 3.5, 5.0, 7.0, 10.0, 14.0, 15.0, 25.0 and 30.0 g with variable price points.
Because it’s legal, most provinces/territories have online stores. I’ve cruised British Columbia, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia online stores and have taken glances at online stores in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Newfoundland/Labrador. Haven’t looked at Prince Edward Island or Nunavut territories.
Brief observation is that prices are falling in every place in the country; in some more than others.
Tom
edit: I’m specifically not mentioning the company or amount. Although they *are* real world prices and all for the same unnamed amount. So called value added pricing is spreading across the whole country. Since direct email communication with customers is allowed it’s now becoming common to get email notifications of ‘online pop up 24 hours deals’.
Oct 17/2018 - $57 Cdn - 100%
Dec/2019 - $52 Cdn - 91.2% Done under the guise of first sales 12 Holidaze (haha get it?)
Early 2020 - $42 Cdn 73.7%
March/April 2020 $29 Cdn 50.9%
July 2020 $21 - 36.8%
October 2020 $15 - 26.3%
The first sales was done under the guise of a holiday. Price changes were temporary for the month of December, 2019 and returned to $57 Cdn. Then Covid hit and store traffic was shut down. This company had mail order/courier services from day 1 and still sells to patients and other provinces. And massive (as in millions of square feet) amounts of production came online. Products weren’t selling and were being returned to provincial distributors, and from there back to the producers to be destroyed/converted. There was recognition that, for some people, money would be tight.
2019 was a year of shock as Cdn companies started to realize that a license to grow wasn’t a license to print money. 2020 is a year of reaction (and legalization of anything other than weed or edible oils). Money bleeds as companies introduce new products.
The realization that you have to offer good quality cannabis at a reasonable price has resulted in a large number of pre packaged (cause that’s all we get) sizes; 1.0, 3.5, 5.0, 7.0, 10.0, 14.0, 15.0, 25.0 and 30.0 g with variable price points.
Because it’s legal, most provinces/territories have online stores. I’ve cruised British Columbia, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia online stores and have taken glances at online stores in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Newfoundland/Labrador. Haven’t looked at Prince Edward Island or Nunavut territories.
Brief observation is that prices are falling in every place in the country; in some more than others.
Tom
edit: I’m specifically not mentioning the company or amount. Although they *are* real world prices and all for the same unnamed amount. So called value added pricing is spreading across the whole country. Since direct email communication with customers is allowed it’s now becoming common to get email notifications of ‘online pop up 24 hours deals’.
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