I want to put together a new tool set of sockets and wrenches and can not decide between Wright or Proto. I am kind of stuck on either of these brands, does anyone have any compelling reason to go one way or the other?
I grew up with Proto (Dad was a mechanic), and have lots of their tools. Today I prefer Wright.
One thing that would concern me with Proto is it's owned by Stanley Works. Their track record of taking major brands offshore has become notorious. If they took most of MAC tools,Blackhawk,Husky offshore why would Proto be any differant. Stanley could ruin a anvil with a rubber mallet.
I've been meaning to write something about this for a while. When choosing a company to patronize, there's lot of talk about country of origin and price, as if those were the only two things to consider. They're important, don't get me wrong, but there's something else that weighs on my mind these days, and it has to do with corporate behavior.
The trend today is for companies to manage for the greatest possible return to their shareholders. No longer does a company seek a reasonable rate of return, but instead seeks the very greatest rate of return at the expense of everything else: employees, the environment, our balance of trade, customer satisfaction, and long term product quality. Stanley, as pointed out, is a master of this: they'll go to where the return is greatest, damn everything else. As chronicled on many threads here, other tool companies have done the same.
Think about all the companies that have abandoned their loyal workforces, sometimes bankrupting whole towns, just to get a better return by offshoring. In most cases it's not because they're losing money - it's because they want to make even MORE money.
It really amounts to whoring out the good name of a company just so their investors can get a little extra. The customer, the person who is in possession of a 'lifetime' warranty with the not unreasonable expectation that a replacement or repair will be as least as good as what they spent their money on, is forgotten. The the employees who labored for them, the ones who put the quality into the products that made their name? Expendable.
When I make purchasing decisions, be it for a tool or any other product, I look at the company very closely. I've become disenchanted with the large corporations whose decisions won't be made on what's best for the customer (me) or the country in which they're headquartered, but on what's best for their handlers. I prefer smaller companies that aren't part of a faceless conglomerate, and if they're family owned so much the better.
My experience is that family run companies generally make decisions that are better for their customers, their employees, and the communities in which they live. They tend to look at profitability with the idea of making "enough" - not "the very most". Many of them actively resist takeovers by larger corporations, preferring instead to keep making good products and meeting the needs of their customers instead of their bankers.
That's why I prefer to do business with Wright. They're family owned, very proud of it, and go out of their way to celebrate the fact. Proto? A conglomerate themselves, responsible for acquiring and liquidating their competition (P&C, anyone?) and now themselves part of a vast conglomerate that does profit maximization on a huge scale.
When deciding which company - Proto or Wright - to buy product from, I ask myself: which is more likely to behave in ways that are good for their community and their country? From which am I likely to get a warranty of the kind I expect? Which one wouldn't throw their own mother under the train if they thought it would make them a half-percent better gross margin?
That's why I buy Wright. Of course, it helps that their tools are of superb quality, but I also think they're better for this country. Don't get me wrong, I still buy Proto on occasion, because they make a large number of products that Wright doesn't. I limit those purchases only to those products I can't get from Wright.