Source:
https://www.podbean.com/eau/pb-trqtm-1aa3343
Dr. Beckett discusses what collectors call “cash grabs” in the sports card hobby and why the term is subjective, often depending on whether something feels gimmicky, low-effort, or overpriced versus a real innovation. He contrasts short-term profit plays with building long-term trust, argues that profitable companies should reinvest, and cites examples such as Fanatics debut patches, Topps Now, PSA upcharges, LCS pricing above SRP based on replacement cost, and even stadium concessions as “captive audience” pricing. Beckett emphasizes market forces, reputation, and consumer choice—buy, boycott, grade elsewhere, or not at all—while warning against judging intent too quickly and noting that sustained customer resistance and competition can correct pricing and product excesses.
00:54 Defining Cash Grab
03:29 Pricing Power And Ethics
05:05 Reputation And Bad Actors
05:55 Who Sets Fair Price
08:04 LCS Pricing And Comps
09:58 Expected Value And SRP
10:56 PSA Upcharges And Fees
11:58 Optimizing Not Maximizing