Thanks for the forgiveness lol..
How can distributers get away with not paying, and to the point that it nearly bankrupts a company?
Are there not warning signs that can be seen before things get to the point that it shuts a company down?
It's called 'business' .... and yes, I know what you are gonna come back with but I'm afraid the word business changes meaning dependent upon the circumstances in which it finds itself.
I mean, when the mafia
had to whack some poor schmuck, they would invariably justify it as a business call, and so, the word is quite loose in terms of its meaning.
One mob justify assassinations, another mob justify non payment, two sides of the same business coin really ....
As for warning signs?
Of course there were, especially when there is a recession going on, and also coupled with a specific [paintball] downturn in your own market independent of any wider recession.
The problem is, when do you draw the line?
Is it not better to get money paid 90 days late than to decline their business and have no money on time?
It's a tough time all round at the moment for everybody involved in the paintball industry but things ain't made any easier when idiots like this molyneux come on board strutting his stuff.
The paintball industry started off [and developed] in the hands of private individuals such as Billy and Adam Gardner [Smart Parts], Dave Youngblood [Dye] and Richmond Italia [Procaps] and it's no accident these companies grew under that ownership regime.
I will concede these guys also had the best of times in that their companies growth wasn't all due to the way they ran these companies because paintball at that time, was on the front end of a massive growth curve and anybody with half a brain could have made money; nevertheless, all those guys love this sport [and still do] and it seems that type of ownership is now what's needed to save our industry.
It's ironic really to see this turnaround in fortunes but we are stuck with it now and have to react accordingly and appropriately; if we do not, and allow bottom line buffoons such as molyneux to have too much of a say in the way our industry evolves, or rather devolves, then things look rather gloomy for the next 5 years or so.