Will you keep your frugal spending habits once the recession is over?

You’ve read what I think about the “bad economy” already, and how we alter our spending habits based primarily on what the media has been telling us. Unemployment is at a record high, companies are issuing furloughs and salary cuts, and forget about the holiday bonuses. But let us each think for a moment about our individual lifestyle changes. What major spending habits have you changed since Wall Street stocks plummeted in Fall 2008? My argument is that the general public (meaning middle 75% or so of Americans) is mostly buying the same products and services that they were buying three or four years ago, but just at lower price points.

As you may know, I work in the music industry; in particular the recording and audio
services industry. The studio in which I work is one of the premiere studios in Georgia; we have very high profile clients, and with that comes higher price points. While our studio is doing well and we offer customer service, equipment, and expertise that cannot be matched anywhere else, we still see clients spending less and less.  OK, so in my line of work, a lot of the shift also has to do with technology – recording is much cheaper and more accessible to the individual with inventions like Pro Tools and digital recording. But the bottom line is that plenty of people – in advertising, marketing, film, music, etc. –are still recording, just at lower prices.  Businesses are taking the economic downturn as an opportunity to trim their expenses by going to a smaller studio or building their own in-house facility.  And the same rings true in industries across the board.

The REAL Question

I’d like to pose another, more important question now. When the economy recovers, what will happen? Will consumers return to buying goods and services at higher price points? When you get your fall bonus next year (hopefully), will you buy your Christmas presents at Crate & Barrel, like you did three years ago, or have you decided that your Seven for All Mankind jeans from Marshall’s are the same product as the ones at Bloomingdale’s for a third of the price? I am curious about the thought-processes of the masses of consumers and will be very interested to watch how our material society recovers as the economic situation does.

4 Responses to “Will you keep your frugal spending habits once the recession is over?”

  1. Ok, LOTS of issues here. Regarding audio recording, the garage band mentality has plummeted the pricing for studios like yours. every Tom, Dick and hairy Jane thinks they are a “studio” because the figured out how to (in most cases) unsuccessfully deem themselves a “recording studio” just because they found the on switch. Those same people have friends who can barely spell microphone think they are VO talent. It really cheapens the WHOLE pricing/ professional point. If I want professional recording, I know to come to you for EXPERTISE, that’s what keeps you AT your price point and keeps my quality at a high point!

    Next issue: The have’s and the have nots. The people with money will always buy a Rolls Royce and not “downgrade” to a Bentley. The people without money (the working poor i.e. the MIDDLE CLASS) will put off buying another car of any kind and repair that five year old Honda Accord. When the economy gets better, people still hold back and actually save in the event we have another economic meltdown which seems to happen in about a 10 year cycle of ebb and flow.

    Well, that’s my thought….

  2. I’ve taken about a 20% pay cut over the last two years as business slowed and we took measures to keep our company afloat. So what has changed for our household?

    We eat dinner out a lot less…it went from at least once a week and probably twice to now once a month. Gone are the days of going to Outback Steakhouse or Red Lobster (or any of the ‘chain’ restaurants that are oh so average but convenient with a small child) once a week. Now we pick a ’boutique’ restaurant in the Highlands or Midtown, get a sitter, and go out once a month.

    We will go out and eat more when times turn? Hell yes!!!

    We have also completely cut out going out to bars to hang out with friends. No need spending $30-$50 just to hang out and have a few drinks. We will go back doing this? Doubtful. Instead we now just throw a party at our house every week or two, save money, and actually have a better time with our friends.

    Its hard to tell though, I learned to live with less and guess what….I’m still happy!!

    I can say there are a lot of projects around the house (remodeling a bathroom, fixing cracks in the driveway, landscaping services, a new sofa (the combination of our 3-year old daughter drawing on it and cat scratching holes in it have done it in) that will be first on the list when things turn.

    Let’s just say I will continue to do my part to help the economy!!

    As far as how it impacts the music/recording industry…I’m one of those ‘Tom, Dick and hairy Jane’s’ that dumped a healthy amount of money into a home studio over the last couple of years. I know it isn’t going to sound like a top quality studio in Atlanta but with most music digested in the MP3 format does it really matter?

    If I was going to be putting out an album (vinyl) then no question I’m going into a top flight studio. But if these tracks are going to be sold on iTunes and Amazon I can record at home and then send off to a top mastering engineer. I like working at my own pace and having the luxury to spend 8 hours getting optimal mic positioning with the room I’m working in.

    Great topic Sam!
    Trey

    • It’s good to see some people are planning on keeping their consumption low. I think that’s going to be a general trend; the young professionals now are more conscience of their environment, saving, etc., and it will carry on after the recession. But I guess we’ll have to see…

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