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Thoughts on cabinet friction from a professional grader.
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<p>[QUOTE="baseball21, post: 3525794, member: 76863"]Depends, there's far to many variables for one answer here. While I can think of one situation where if the biggest submitter walked away they might be in trouble I can also know that at least two of the companies could lose their biggest and be just fine. </p><p><br /></p><p>If we completely ignore company differences for this example such as a lower grade in A may still sell for more than a higher grade in B the real question becomes how common are those complaints. If the TPG is being absurdly tight and hearing that from customers all over the place of varying levels then yes it is time to take a look and reevaluate. If it's just one person upset or a small minority the problem likely isn't with the TPG and they would be better off in the long run holding their reputation than grading fast and loose to make one person happy.</p><p><br /></p><p>Depending on the TPGs in question in the scenario it isn't that easy for someone to necessarily just cut all ties with them anyway. if their customer base favors one over the other they will lose business making the switch. A lot of times those are empty threats unless there really is an insanely tight grading period in which case the critic is valid. </p><p><br /></p><p>Long winded response I know, but to answer the question in some cases it is no big deal, in others it's valid, and there are instances where yes it could potentially be an issue.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="baseball21, post: 3525794, member: 76863"]Depends, there's far to many variables for one answer here. While I can think of one situation where if the biggest submitter walked away they might be in trouble I can also know that at least two of the companies could lose their biggest and be just fine. If we completely ignore company differences for this example such as a lower grade in A may still sell for more than a higher grade in B the real question becomes how common are those complaints. If the TPG is being absurdly tight and hearing that from customers all over the place of varying levels then yes it is time to take a look and reevaluate. If it's just one person upset or a small minority the problem likely isn't with the TPG and they would be better off in the long run holding their reputation than grading fast and loose to make one person happy. Depending on the TPGs in question in the scenario it isn't that easy for someone to necessarily just cut all ties with them anyway. if their customer base favors one over the other they will lose business making the switch. A lot of times those are empty threats unless there really is an insanely tight grading period in which case the critic is valid. Long winded response I know, but to answer the question in some cases it is no big deal, in others it's valid, and there are instances where yes it could potentially be an issue.[/QUOTE]
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Thoughts on cabinet friction from a professional grader.
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