Bolster
Well-known member
My wife is a marketing genius and manufacturer. (That's how I'm able to afford some tools, BTW...thanks, wife!) The other day I was explaining the lamentable downward quality often discussed here in many top-line truck branded tools, and at the same time, the surprising upward trend in quality at low-end places like HF. (When I started the HF Pass/Fail thread I expected to see about equal numbers of Pass and Fail, or maybe more Fail than Pass...yet the Passes clearly dominate.)
She schooled me in "Bonehead Economics 001," and I thought it was interesting, so I'll share what she said. YOU have the ability to agree or disagree. (Being married to the marketing genius, I do not have that freedom...therefore I agree.
) But here's what she said:
The marketplace forces mediocrity on all manufacturers, a "pressure toward mediocrity." The middle-of-the-road, the so-so, the good-enough, the medium-quality, the passing grade. As manufacturers naturally gravitate toward that middle, which is where the money is (the most payoff for least amount of investment), that opens up opportunity at the bottom (think HF or Hundai of years past) and it opens up opportunity at the top for new mfgr's going after the discerning or "botique" shopper (maybe Toptul or other new mfg'r) where the competition is not as heavy.
She said a few mfgr's always buck the trend by staying quality (think Snap-on, or Tiffany), but not many. Most quality brands will sell out after their reputations have been made...sort of like college professors who work as little as possible, once they get tenure.
She says this story has played out a million times in the marketplace, and that my observations about tool quality pretty much applies to most manufactured categories of products.
What say you?
She schooled me in "Bonehead Economics 001," and I thought it was interesting, so I'll share what she said. YOU have the ability to agree or disagree. (Being married to the marketing genius, I do not have that freedom...therefore I agree.
) But here's what she said: The marketplace forces mediocrity on all manufacturers, a "pressure toward mediocrity." The middle-of-the-road, the so-so, the good-enough, the medium-quality, the passing grade. As manufacturers naturally gravitate toward that middle, which is where the money is (the most payoff for least amount of investment), that opens up opportunity at the bottom (think HF or Hundai of years past) and it opens up opportunity at the top for new mfgr's going after the discerning or "botique" shopper (maybe Toptul or other new mfg'r) where the competition is not as heavy.
She said a few mfgr's always buck the trend by staying quality (think Snap-on, or Tiffany), but not many. Most quality brands will sell out after their reputations have been made...sort of like college professors who work as little as possible, once they get tenure.
She says this story has played out a million times in the marketplace, and that my observations about tool quality pretty much applies to most manufactured categories of products.
What say you?
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