Yeah. I worked at a corporately owned vet's office for a while, and we had to HIDE frontline and heartguard when the corporate babysitter came around. Thing was, they wouldn't let us order more if X packages were on the shelves, even if we told them that it was in high demand, and we knew for a fact that it would sell out from the appointments later in the week alone. Strange stuff. You'd think, in that case, they'd listen, since it would mean more profit to turn over more product more frequently, but they were only concerned with the day to day.
I spent the first 17 years of my life living in New York City with petstores close to my apartment that kept horrible conditions. (When most of the staff has never seen a tree-covered hill, let alone a frog in its natural habitat, you know you're in for a treat.)Then I spent the next decade in a small town with a petstore that, for the most part, cared and researched and made an effort, (although I will say that, if you want a pet mouse in the hudson valley, be advised that ALL mice you'll find are former lab animals or their offspring; learned that one the hard way).
Now I'm somewhere in between. I've spotted the places that seem to care, but I've also been exposed to chains for the first time ever, (I'd always avoided them, how's that for bias) and have flashed back a little to my previous city experiences.
Last chain I was in, there was a really sweet old man, telling me how friendly and active the tomato frogs, but he had no idea what he was talking about. Said they'd max out at 2 inches. (I just didn't have the heart to correct him. He really liked them, and he was nice, and I was only passing through. I had errands to run.)