stratamania
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But Bosch does do stuff for Audi...
Also the OP said everyone wants a Mercedes, I don't I want an Aston Martin...
Also the OP said everyone wants a Mercedes, I don't I want an Aston Martin...
Day-mun said:It has been said before, but I'll say it again: the problem with comparing guitar parts to these things is that they are not these things.
Cagey said:Bosch does stuff for a lotta people. They're productive little rascals. I have a generous mittenful of their tools here. Fine stuff.
Day-mun said:Day-mun said:It has been said before, but I'll say it again: the problem with comparing guitar parts to these things is that they are not these things.
Cagey said:Bosch might be a poor analogy with a $335B market cap. Since it's a privately held concern I have no way of knowing, but I suspect Warmoth might be a $10M company. Probably less. Hell, Fender's market cap is only $369M, so they're roughly a thousand times smaller than Bosch. How much smaller than Fender is Warmoth?
Bagman67 said:Now I'm hungry for some fried chicken. Dang it.
Cagey said:I'm not sure he's being "cheap". In fact, I think he said something somewhere upthread about not caring about cost. The argument seems to be more about why Warmoth doesn't provide obscure features, given that they have a lotta talent available and make fine parts from scratch.
Orpheo said:<redacted by admin>
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stratamania said:I would think compound radius is a solution to an actual problem. Let's say you have a traditional strat and like the comfort but the notes choke out when bending on higher frets unless you raise the action higher than you would like.
Then you pick up a friends Les Paul, which doesn't choke out as badly but doesn't have the ease of chording that the strat had. Compound radius is the solution to a real world problem that actually existed and does exist.
You then in the early days of your company introduce this solution as part of your marketing. You become successful with that and a number of other options but at a certain point a business will be successful and further options will just simply not be profitable.
In some businesses it's the law of diminishing returns. Some products that have a greater potential market may rely on the latest thing. The guitar industry less so. I don't think one is right or wrong as such but you have to be profitable in the market you operate in.
It's simple economics, I could spend just as an example $10,000 on R & D because a handful of customers say they want a better mousetrap. Let's say I then release it at a price of $500 and a profit of $100 and only two people actually buy and it flops. Where is that company headed ? Worse while doing this it has sacrificed production time and lost revenue on it's known to be profitable lines.
Henry Ford, once said you could have any colour you like, as long as it was black or words to that effect. Ford today have more options but they are still going to sell their current line, in the meantime what they are developing they will want to be winners out of the gate as much as possible.
At the end of the day it's supply, demand, profit and loss. If innovation matches into that model for a company in a particular sector they may do it, if not they will keep doing what is proven and profitable.
Now for the customer you have a choice of many suppliers, and if none of them offer what you seek you could yourself invest and start a company to offer the innovation you think will succeed. Perhaps it may but if there isn't a market it may flop.
Not much of the above really has anything to do with Warmoth, it's just general comment.
TonyFlyingSquirrel said:There are very few things that have actually created demand by those that could supply it, as far as the past 35 years is concerned.
TonyFlyingSquirrel said:Innovation isn't something that happens every day, but rather here and there every decade or more.
This is why the core essence of the electric guitar has gone widely unchanged for so long.