Forum Moderators: buckworks
Positives
-Customers toying around with idea of used may consider new products.
-More traffic... more leads!
-Affiliate income?
Negetives
-Customers interested in new may decide to go used.
Now, if you're selling Porshe automotive parts, chances are that most Porshe owners are going to want new for their driveway pride and joy.
I could imagine, that you both could create affiliate programs, that give each of you a percentage of the sales referred to by the other. So you (and your competitor of course, too) would still participate from the turnovers generated by the referral and you would additionally generate more sales, as money-saver customers would buy as well as people that are uncomfortable with buying second-hand. This way you increase the longterm interest of each partner to share the traffic. A customers that switches from NEW-to-USED or vice versa still generates money.
By exchanging the affiliate percentage of your referred sales with your competitor you both reduce the risk that one of you is generating significantly more than the other from this partnership.
The advantage of this partnership would be that both of you would participate from the traffic the other creates. On the other hand you could also simply add second-hand products to your lineup you buy from your competitor and sell without a warranty. This way you (and he, too) could make sales to second-hand customers of your traffic stream, but you are losing the "I-buy-only-new" customers of his traffic stream.
In this scenario you would have control over the service you provide, but it would probably either be
a)very much administration work for you (exchanging stock lists along with condition of items, updating them as soon he makes sales etc.) or
b)worse than the service he could provide.
How important is the warranty aspect with your products? Are they higher or lower priced? Industrial or consumer products?