Lee, as you know many members on WBF are in 'the business' in one way shape or form. collectively they have many, many years of experience mfrg, distributing, selling and reviewing high-end gear. based on this thread, from what i can tell none have agreed with you thus far.
don't take this the wrong way, but the manner in which you fervently defend your position doesnt come off as some guy that just wrote an article for discussion purposes but someone with a vested interest in CF. as a "marketing strategist" are you actively consulting with other mfrs on the concept of CF? I sell for a living in the services sector, I know when i'm being pitched and i feel like i'm getting the hard sell.
Rob,
I've been involved in high end audio for many years since my association with Chesky and Sound by Singer in the late 80s through the 90s. I have seen financial data for many high end companies so I am qualified to present a composite of how this works. I've also been trained by the firm that helped invent it. And you are wrong about no one agreeing with me. I have been contacted by several reviewers including John Atkinson that are supportive of my view. As with any industry there are benefits from not saying anything publicly on a controversial topic, especially when you may be dependent on that person getting you gear for review or in the case of a mfr relying on the traditional network for sales. Although several manufacturers have reached out to me and agreed. Several brand name audio consultants have also contacted me. So we feel pretty damn good.
I defend my article because there is much misunderstanding here and I want people who grew up on the traditional model to see the benefits of these newer models. The quibbling over the numbers has been shown to not change the extra cost to the Customer with having two middlemen added in-any way you slice it it comes to roughly 2X. You cannot change the facts of that, however inconvenient they may be.
The reason that there is pushback from folks in the industry here like dealers, distributors and reviewers is that they feel threatened. Reviewers are going to lose some influence here. Distributors and dealers are going to lose some business although I don't think it will be much from a profit standpoint. Dealers will lose influence. But I don't feel sorry for them because it is better off to have the Customer have more control like they do in other industries. Besides, there is not much they can do about it as change is here.
As a marketing strategist, my day job has me advising Fortune 500 firms on how these new digital trends and information sharing is making it better to go to what we call "customer centricity". I am attempting to share what I know about how this occurred in other industries like financial services and healthcare because I don't just want high end audio to "survive". I want high end audio to thrive. My belief is that we need more customers. Most of the people I talk to in the industry (and I know many of them) are very concerned about the aging of the audiophile segment. I think these new technologies are a way out or a solution to the industry's biggest problem.
So I will remain passionate about this because I have seen it work in other industries and because I care about high end audio.
Sharing the value chain numbers was the best way to start a "community-wide" conversation on what needs to be done.
P.S. I have no ownership or any personal or financial ties to anything in the crowd funding world outside of ordering a Geek Pulse.