Competitive Review · Prepared by Gold Standard

Trends: Priced High, Stocked Thin

A product-by-product comparison of Trends (Long Island City) against 69 other cannabis dispensaries across Queens — and its three Long Island City neighbors specifically — to explain why customers aren’t coming back.

Store: Trends · 2721 44th Dr, Long Island City, NY 11101 Benchmark: 69 Queens dispensaries Reviewed: July 14, 2026
The headline
+14.8%
Priced above the market
Average premium over the Queens median on the 157 products where Trends competes head-to-head. Trends is higher on 85% of them.
90
Times Trends is the most expensive
On 90 of 157 comparable products, Trends is the single most expensive store in all of Queens. It’s the cheapest on just 8.
237
Products carried — 56th of 70
The typical Queens store stocks 414. Trends carries about 43% fewer, placing it in the bottom fifth for selection.
Finding 1 · Pricing

Almost everything costs more at Trends

Across every major category, Trends sits above the borough median. The gap is widest on the small, repeat-purchase items — joints, disposables and edibles — exactly the products that bring customers back.

Trends average price Queens median price Bar label = Trends’ premium over the market

How far above market?

Of 157 comparable products…

Most overpriced items

ProductTrendsMarketOver
Finding 2 · Assortment

Customers can’t find what they came for

Trends carries 237 products. The typical Queens dispensary carries 414, and the deepest carry 1,000–2,000. A thin shelf means more customers leave empty-handed — or never bother coming back.

Number of distinct products carried · Trends vs. Queens benchmarks

Where the shelf is thinnest — category coverage

Distinct products available somewhere in Queens vs. what Trends stocks.

CategoryAvailable in QueensTrends carriesCoverage
Finding 3 · The Long Island City block

Trends’ three closest competitors — and how it stacks up

Three other dispensaries share Trends’ ZIP code (11101) in Long Island City — the stores a customer can most easily walk to instead. Where their shelves overlap with Trends, Trends is almost always the more expensive choice, and two of the three carry a comparable or deeper selection.

Long Island City competitorProducts carriedOverlapping itemsTrends pricier onAvg. gap

“Overlapping items” = products both stores carry, where prices can be compared directly. Just A Little Higher stocks a nearly separate catalog, so direct price overlap is minimal — but with 210 products it still competes hard for the same foot traffic.

Finding 4 · The retention crisis, in Trends’ own data

The bucket is leaking faster than it fills

Alpine IQ tracks every customer’s lifecycle. The picture is stark: more than half the customer base has stopped coming, and most people who do buy never make a second trip. This is the churn that the pricing and assortment gaps are feeding.

Where the customer base stands today

Every customer, by lifecycle stage (Alpine IQ)

Bar width = share of customers · label = customers and lapsed/active revenue

The one-and-done cliff

Of 1,504 buyers this period, how many came back for an Nth visit

80% of buyers purchased exactly once. Only 1 in 5 ever returned.
6.7%
Loyalty members active
Only 6.71% of loyalty members made a purchase in the period — the program isn’t pulling people back through the door.
398 vs 272
Opt-outs are outrunning opt-ins
More members left the loyalty list (398) than joined it (272). The retention tool itself is losing ground.
82
Customers won back this period
Proof reactivation can work — but a rounding error against 4,663 Gone. And it’s fighting uphill: even the current 15% win-back coupon still prices Trends above the LIC neighbors (see the coupon math), so the offer barely reaches parity before it expires.
Finding 5 · Connecting the dots

The overpriced products are exactly the ones customers buy most

This is the heart of it. Trends’ core shoppers — 25-44 year-olds, 70% of the base — buy prerolls and vapes above everything else. Those are the same categories Trends marks up hardest over the market. The store is taxing its most popular, habit-forming products, so first-time buyers try once, feel overcharged, and defect to the cheaper shops a block away.

What customers buy most
PrerollsVape cartsDisposablesFlower (older buyers)Edibles

Category mix is led by prerolls and vapes across every age group; flower’s share grows with age. Core buyer is 25-44 (70% of customers), with basket size rising from $41 (18-24) to $79 (45-54).

Where Trends charges the most over market
Prerolls +33%Disposables +19%Infused joints +17%Edibles +15%Carts/Pods +14%

The steepest premiums land squarely on the highest-volume, most repeat-driving categories — the exact products that should earn a second visit are the ones priced to lose it.

Who the customers are — and how loyal they stick

AgeCustomersShareAvg. basketLoyalty members

The 25-44 band drives the business but also churns hardest — and it’s the most price-sensitive. Winning it back is where the retention gains are.

The diagnosis · What we found

Synopsis: why customers aren’t coming back

Finding

Trends is a high-price outlier

+14.8% above the Queens median on average, higher on 85% of comparable products, and the single most expensive store in the borough on 90 of them. Nothing about the location or catalog justifies a premium — neighbors undercut it.

Finding

The shelf is too thin

237 products vs. a 414 median, 56th of 70 stores. Whole categories are barely represented — only 32 flower SKUs, 19 pre-rolls. A customer who wants a specific strain or format usually can’t get it here.

Finding

The premium lands on repeat-buy items

Prerolls (+33%), disposables (+19%) and edibles (+15%) carry the biggest markups — and Alpine IQ shows those are exactly the categories customers buy most. The trips that should build loyalty are the ones lost on price.

Finding

4 of 5 buyers never return

80% of this period’s buyers purchased just once. Only 1 in 5 came back for a second visit — the drop-off between visit 1 and visit 2 is where the business is bleeding.

Finding

Half the customer base is gone

4,663 customers (52%) are classified “Gone,” representing ~$729K in lapsed revenue. The loyalty program isn’t catching them — opt-outs (398) now outrun opt-ins (272).

Finding

Competitors are a block away

Three cheaper or deeper dispensaries share Trends’ ZIP. NYC Bud carries more for less; Nice Yield undercuts by ~13%. Defecting is effortless for a Trends customer today.

The plan · How to win customers back

Win-back playbook

Four moves, in priority order — each tied directly to what the data shows is broken. The first two stop the leak; the last two refill the bucket.

1
Stop the leak · Pricing

Reprice the hero repeat-buy categories to market

Bring prerolls, vapes and edibles down to at least the Queens median. These are simultaneously the most-bought categories and the most overpriced (+15% to +33%). This is the single fastest lever — it removes the “I got overcharged” reason a first-time buyer doesn’t return.

~83 items priced >10% over market · targets the 80% who buy once
2
Stop the leak · First-visit bridge

Trigger an automatic second-purchase offer

The drop-off is between visit 1 and visit 2. Use Alpine IQ to fire an automated, market-priced offer within days of a first purchase — on the customer’s own category (preroll/vape). And fix the loyalty bleed: opt-outs (398) now exceed opt-ins (272), so the current messaging is pushing people away.

1,207 one-time buyers this period are the immediate audience
3
Refill · Win-back campaign

Reactivate the 4,663 “Gone” customers

There’s ~$729K of lapsed revenue sitting in the Gone segment, and reactivation already works (82 won back with almost no effort). Run a targeted win-back to Gone and Highly-Absent customers with a genuinely competitive offer on their favorite category — framed as “we’ve lowered our prices.”

$729K lapsed value · 82 already won back proves it converts
4
Refill · Assortment & the LIC block

Deepen selection and own the neighborhood

Trends stocks a fraction of the market in its best-selling categories (19 prerolls, 34 carts, 44 disposables, 32 flower). Expand toward the ~414 median so the 25-44 core finds the formats it wants — and specifically match NYC Bud and undercut Nice Yield to win back the LIC foot traffic before competing borough-wide.

Deepest gaps + highest purchase frequency + closest competitors = first priorities
Going further · Beyond welcome & win-back

The email program isn’t the problem — the offer math is

Trends already runs welcome and win-back flows and sends deals twice a week at a high match rate. Reach and frequency aren’t the constraint. The constraint is that a percentage-off coupon can’t out-discount a base-price gap: when the shelf price sits 15–33% above the shop down the block, the coupon only pulls Trends back toward even — and the moment it expires, Trends is the expensive option again.

39%
Even after a 15% coupon, Trends is still priced above the market on 61 of 157 comparable items. After a 20% coupon, still above on 25%.
The median overpriced item needs ~13% off just to reach market — so a 15% coupon lands barely under market for a few days, then snaps back to full premium. Against Nice Yield, which is ~13% cheaper every day with no coupon, your win-back offer merely matches their everyday shelf price.
Repeat-buy exampleShelf−15%−20%Competitor
red = still more expensive than the market even after the discount

What actually moves the needle — the non-email levers

Price perception

Reset the shelf price on Key Value Items

Pick 10–15 hero SKUs (house preroll, top vape, an eighth of flower) and price them at or below market every day — not as a coupon. Shoppers judge “is this place expensive” on a handful of known items; win those and the premium elsewhere stops mattering. This is what a coupon can never do: change the everyday price they see.

Neutralize the block

Price-match the three LIC neighbors

NYC Bud, Nice Yield and Just A Little Higher are a short walk away and cheaper or deeper. A visible “we match any Long Island City dispensary” removes the single easiest reason to defect and turns the biggest weakness into a trust signal — permanently, not for 30 days.

Win the pre-visit

Fix your prices where shoppers pre-check

Many shoppers price-check before they walk in — mostly via Google (your listing, your website menu, and Google Shopping results). If Trends shows higher prices there than the neighbors, the customer is lost at the search stage, before any email or coupon can reach them. Audit how Trends’ hero prices appear online and get them competitive.

Frequency & basket

Bundles, multi-buy & auto-refill

Build the habit of choosing Trends, not a one-time redemption: pair preroll + edible, bundle the vape with the lighter that’s already your top add-on, run buy-3 preroll deals, and offer auto-refill for habitual vape/preroll buyers so the repeat purchase is locked in.

In-store conversion

Budtenders & cleaner POS enrollment

Opt-outs (398) outrunning opt-ins (272) is a red flag that people are enrolled poorly at the register, then bail. Fix enrollment quality at POS and lean on budtender recommendations — the highest-converting “campaign” in the store, and it costs nothing to send.

Turn Actives into growth

Launch a referral loop

A member-gets-member program turns your ~2,981 Active customers into an acquisition channel — and referred customers retain better than discount-chasers, so it compounds instead of eroding margin.

Bottom line: keep the email flows running — they’re fine. But the second visit is won or lost on the everyday price a customer sees on the shelf and on the aggregators, not on how many deals hit their inbox. Fix the price gap and the campaigns you already have start converting.

Digital reach · The top-of-funnel at-bats

Where the traffic comes from — and where the next customers are

Retention fixes keep the customers Trends already earns. This is the other side: how many new shoppers even reach the door digitally, and where to find more of them. The numbers show a store that is already found — strong local map-pack presence and healthy traffic — but leaning almost entirely on free traffic, paying for at least one worthless source, and, most importantly, not converting the shoppers it reaches. The digital problem isn’t getting seen; it’s getting chosen.

1 · Search footprint — a thin, shrinking moat

Keywords each site ranks for

Organic keyword footprint (SearchAtlas keyword gap)

NYC Bud ranks for 3× as many keywords as Trends — and newer Nice Yield is already climbing.

The high-intent searches Trends is missing

Big NYC dispensary terms competitors rank for and Trends doesn’t — of 1,468 total keyword opportunities

Search termMonthly searchesWho ranks (not Trends)

Caveat: NYC Bud ranks for the generic “NYC dispensary” terms largely because “NYC” is in its brand and domain name — those are hard for Trends to win. The winnable-and-worthwhile targets are the borough and near-me terms below, where ranking is earned by content and authority, not a brand name.

Winning “Long Island City” isn’t winning traffic

Trends ranks well for its LIC terms — but that’s a tiny pool of searches (just 9 keywords, ~30–170/mo each). The real volume sits in the broader borough and near-me “dispensary” terms, where Trends barely appears and NYC Bud has built authority.

Trends ranks here — but almost nobody searches it
LIC keywordSearches/moTrends
lic dispensary880#4
long island city dispensary110#7
long island city stores170#36
trends long island city30#1
The volume is here — and Trends is absent
Broader keywordSearches/moTrends
nyc dispensary18,100
brooklyn dispensary2,900
long island dispensary2,400#45
queens dispensary1,000

So “rank for Long Island City” is already done and doesn’t move the needle. The growth target is the borough / near-me terms — but that’s a content-and-authority build over months. Given Trends is already found and already not converting, this ranks behind fixing price and retention.

But locally · Trends is already being found

Trends wins the local map pack for “dispensary”

The organic breadth gap is real — but the highest-intent local search is a strength, not a weakness. Across a geo-grid of “dispensary” searches around Long Island City, Trends ranks in the map pack almost everywhere, on a stellar 4.9★ / 977-review profile. Discovery at the local level isn’t the problem. Being found isn’t converting into visits and repeat visits — which points straight back to price, not traffic.

3.3
avg. local rank for “dispensary”
72%Good (top 3)
21%Medium
7%Bad
0%Not ranking

2 · Current at-bats — 28 days of website traffic

Sessions by channel

6,253 sessions · ~223/day · Jun 16–Jul 13 (Google Analytics)

Free / owned Paid that works Wasted / junk
81%
of traffic is free or owned — direct, organic search and Alpine IQ email/SMS. New-customer acquisition is barely funded; the site mostly re-catches people who already know Trends.
Google Ads works
The paid-search campaign drove 409 quality sessions with a 77% engagement rate and ~2m46s average visit — the strongest of any paid source. This is the one paid lever clearly pulling real visitors.
8% is junk
“trafficheap.cc” sent 501 sessions (8%) with a suspicious 99.6% engagement rate and zero conversions — the signature of bought/bot traffic, and money going nowhere. (Meta’s contribution is small in raw sessions and hard to read in last-click analytics — it likely produces more than GA credits it, so measure it properly rather than judge it on attribution alone.)

3 · If we need more traffic, where should it come from?

Trends is paying for the wrong channels and skipping the ones where in-market cannabis shoppers actually search. Reallocate toward high-intent, cannabis-legal discovery — in priority order.

Longer play

Broaden organic reach to the terms with real volume

Trends already owns its LIC terms — but those are ~30–900 searches/mo, so they barely move traffic. The volume is in the borough / near-me “dispensary” terms (Brooklyn 2,900, Long Island 2,400, Queens 1,000, “dispensary near me”) where NYC Bud built authority and Trends is absent. Winning these takes content and links, not a brand name — worthwhile, but a months-long build that ranks behind fixing price, since more traffic to an overpriced store just means more one-and-done.

Already winning

Protect the local-pack lead — and convert it

The heatmap shows Trends already ranks in the map pack almost everywhere for “dispensary” (avg 3.3, 72% top-3, 4.9★ / 977 reviews). Keep the reviews and profile fresh to hold it — but recognize what it means: the walk-in-ready searcher is already finding Trends and not converting. Don’t spend to get found; spend to get chosen (i.e., fix price).

Scale what works

Expand the Google Ads paid-search campaign

It’s the paid channel clearly pulling real, engaged visitors (77% engagement, ~2m46s visits). Cannabis faces heavy ad restrictions, so a compliant shop/brand search campaign is rare and valuable — put more budget behind the one that already performs.

Stop the bleed

Cut the “cheap traffic” source

trafficheap.cc is ~8% of traffic that never converts — the classic signature of purchased/bot traffic. Stop paying for it and move the budget to local SEO, Google Business Profile and Google Ads, where the visitors are real and in-market.

Compounding

Referrals & reviews as an organic engine

Turn the ~2,981 Active customers into reviewers and referrers. Reviews lift the map-pack ranking (feeding the GBP lever) and referred customers retain better — durable growth that doesn’t depend on ad platforms that restrict cannabis.

The through-line: Trends is already found — it wins the local map pack and pulls solid traffic. So the digital priority isn’t just more at-bats; it’s converting the ones it already gets (which loops back to price), broadening the organic footprint on winnable local terms, scaling the Google Ads campaign that works, and cutting the purchased junk traffic. Getting seen is handled; getting chosen is the job.

Pricing & assortment analysis based on the provided Queens price-comparison dataset (11,950 product rows across 70 dispensaries); “comparable” = products Trends carries that at least three other Queens stores also carry (157 items), with premiums measured against the median competitor price per product. Customer lifecycle, loyalty, and demographic figures are drawn from Trends’ Alpine IQ retail analytics (current reporting period). Search footprint and keyword opportunities are from a SearchAtlas keyword-gap analysis vs. the four competitors; website traffic is from Google Analytics (Traffic Acquisition, last 28 days, Jun 16–Jul 13, 2026). Lifecycle stage counts reflect the standing customer base; one-and-done and frequency figures reflect buyers within the current period. Listed prices are compared before in-store promotions, loyalty discounts, or bundles — worth confirming with the client before treating exact percentages as final.