I actually feel there are fewer people needed to action this plan than you think, and those that are needed are already motivated to act. This motivation isn't based on 'for the good of the game', which would surely dictate that it would never happen, but on simple survival. I feel that the first manufacturer to offer the correct margins on product and price protection, will make bank. I don't even care of the product is groundbreaking, it just needs to be able to sustain a healthy margin throughout the chain of business.Missy certainly has some credible answers but every single possible answer is inevitably predicated upon industry co-operation .... and there weeee haaaaave it !!!!!
The solution and the insurmountable problem innnnnn one!!!
What Missy suggests is most certainly coherent enough but it is rendered rhetorical bullsh!t by an industry devoid of commonsense and direction.
Missy, I think we both might agree that any recovery must include Kee, and at the moment, they seem to be generating considerable momentum in acquisition mode.I actually feel there are fewer people needed to action this plan than you think, and those that are needed are already motivated to act. This motivation isn't based on 'for the good of the game', which would surely dictate that it would never happen, but on simple survival. I feel that the first manufacturer to offer the correct margins on product and price protection, will make bank. I don't even care of the product is groundbreaking, it just needs to be able to sustain a healthy margin throughout the chain of business.
I also feel that people are already looking for answers to the issue, and looking in the wrong places, ie. a totally different caliber of ball and a re-invention of the way we play. What's the point of that if the industry margins stay the same? There's just another load of stuff to sell without making sufficient profit to grow a business properly.
I missed the part where there was a viable program to attract 15-20% more new business. Where was that plan? I also missed the part where a 'decision' was made in any direction, who made that?So it's decided that rather than investing in attracting 15-20% more new business it's better to rehash the margins to sustain a failing industry...
Possibly 30% to be made on 50 cal somewhere and acronyms resposible for 2% alone.
I think Gino may need to recapitalise if he wants to take on Kee and I don't believe he's got the necessary resources to do that but the latter of your two suggestions has, as you have mentioned elsewhere, been talked about for sometime now, and is the only viable market counterpart to Kee I can think of ... it remains to be seen whether Tippmann and / or Procaps realise their respective destinies are so inextricably linked.Let's see how Gino Posterivo does with Valken, they are the closest challengers right now. Alternatively a merge between Procaps and Tippmann would generate a pretty dangerous company.
Investment in sites to attract new customers ,I'm not saying this is viable (although Im yet to hear an argument against ) ,is it ?. You suggest that this is the realm of forward thinking site owners and later add .I missed the part where there was a viable program to attract 15-20% more new business.Where was that plan?
I was referring to this thread only.I also missed the part where a 'decision' was made in any direction, who made that?
Sure I understand the need to stabilise what already exists and I feel I'm now flogging the point but surely the idea of variable margins in the first place is to attract more customers ,if you don't attract the customers ...'Rehashing' margins is misleading. Look at ANY industry, and in order for it to be healthy, there has to be margin up the distribution chain. This industry is in decline, less stuff is being sold, and that stuff is being sold at lower prices. There is no margin up the distribution chain, so the stores struggle to stay open. Of course it would be nice for 20% more people to start buying gear, but it's also unlikely, and a long way off.