David, you are totally misunderstanding what I am saying. No place in the article did we say mfr.s had to go the direct model. We are only asking that firms like Geek and Schiit who are doing it (and have decided to do it by their own free will) are doing a service to the industry. In other words today's Schiit Lyr buyer is tomorrow's Stax/Aurelic/etc. buyer.
Also, we never said the traditional model is "already dead"; we are saying that it is dying at least in terms of customer base.
Lee-So you are only advocating this process for cheap audio products?
Here is some key language from the article.
And yes the dealer doesn’t fare that well in this situation. This is frankly a modern end run around the dealer. The dealer loses a $10.00 sale for the $4.00 that goes directly to LH. However, we need to put this into perspective. I don’t think the dealer will ever die. It’s one thing to buy a DAC from LH Labs for a few hundred dollars, but a $20,000 Da Vinci DAC is another story. If the Geek Pulse is shipped and it doesn’t work, LH will fix or replace it within warranty because their reputation is at stake. And it won’t cost much for shipping or repairs. There are many more complications that arise when buying expensive and highly specialized items. I’m not sure I would buy a Porsche sight unseen or un-driven. When it comes to higher end products, we simply need more assurance. We need that test drive when so much money is at stake. We need that audition in the chair at the local dealer. We need immediate and comforting attention – and service – from the dealer if that expensive DAC goes on the fritz. When the stakes are very high, we need the confidence of having a local dealer on our side.
For entry level products most likely up to $1,000 if I had to guess.
Lee, I thought that we clarified this point in one of the above exchanges and we continued the discussion with high end in mind. You're also making statements about high end audio industry and its state of affairs yet you're saying that we're misunderstanding your article, what are we missing. The title makes a very bold statement, his it a question now? Did Gary and others also misunderstand what you're alluding to? Just look at how much time he spent replying to your article. The model you're describing is based on social media hype and the naiveté of masses. Its not industry specific and will never be a substitute for professional businesses. Its a sham! You're Selling a non-existent product at an imaginary price to sheep and calling them investors, are you kidding? This isn't a new phenomenon, its been going on for years in different formats all around the world. I want to see what happens when enough sheep get sheared and government steps in with regulations. Actually rather not, we already have too much government!
You don't have any proof of a shrinking customer base, we've been and still going through a horrible economic downturn worldwide and its hurting everyone. You're also ignoring the emerging markets in Asia, there's great expansion there but not everyone's competent to take advantage of it. Many will lose out while others will prosper, nature of the free market and nothing new. Not everyone can or should succeed! While the US high end shows might be dwindling some of the European ones like Munich and Milan are expanding. Its tough times and more competition but there's not evidence that high end is dying.
david
Gary, no need for personal attacks as we are being civil here and yes I was a McKinsey consultant. Let's clear up a few things:
1. "Sunlight is the best disinfectant." It's my job as an audio writer to provide insights into the industry. My goal here is to talk to the advantages of the new business model of direct to consumer by way of breaking down what happened with the Geek campaign. If you feel I have shared too much data on high end audio pricing and cost then that is a shame because we are trying to help the industry. The Customer is not stupid though. They know that better prices are had when two middlemen are cut out.
2. All the expenses you included above went into our calculations. I am not writing a McKinsey Quarterly article here (although I've done that as well) as my audience is that of audiophiles and music lovers. We simplified the chart to wrap a readable narrative around it. We obtained all of these expenses for our value chain research. From that we created some typical numbers found in the high end business. We did the same with direct to consumer sources. In our $1.00 cost of goods, these expenses are included minus warranty and marketing which we decided to break out separately. We were conservative along the way. We stand by our analyses, indeed we have proposed on WBF here to use if you like more conservative numbers like Vess suggested. The resulting huge differential is still supportive of our theme.
3. We are not saying that distributors or dealers do not add value (they do!) or even have an easy time (often they are challenged!). We are saying that I don't need two middlemen to buy a $300 DAC...or even a $1,000 DAC.
4. You are not giving any benefit from the extra volume (economies of scale anyone?) when the industry gets more customers because they can buy in at a lower price. Joe College can now buy a nice sounding DAC for $300 at Geek instead of $600 at the local dealer. Isn't this a good thing for Genesis? Not every Joe College will buy good or better speakers but some will get hooked on the high end sound an wind up at a dealer that sells Genesis.
Your entire hypothesis seems to be based on LH and what they might or might not do in the future. Where are you getting your data from to say that there's a price barrier. If a sales model is right and work, it should work for the $20k DAC as well as a $1k model. I'm sorry Lee the only fact I see here is your excitement of Crowd Financing and interest in getting a LH product on the cheap.
david
No personal attack. I am saying that as a former McKinsey consultant you should know better than to deliver an incomplete report.
The two middlemen provide the market access, and represent the customers' ability to access the product. When you cut the middlemen out, then there is no more opportunity for the customer to touch and hear the product. You claim to provide insights into the industry, but the insight needs to be fair and balanced.
I know that there is a new business model and there are products that would work with such a new business model..... but again, the article doesn't make it clear enough and hence confuses and mislead.
In every business I've looked at, the accounting is separated out into direct costs and overheads. Direct cost relate to the actual volume of business being done represent the cost of goods (or cost of sales). Overheads are usually fixed like rent.
How do you assign rent directly to product costs if volume manufactured and sold can vary month by month? Research and development?
Not if every dealer in the country closes down before Joe College graduates.
Where do you draw the line? I don't see direct sales companies like Amazon taking less margin than a retail store. You move the costs around - you don't eliminate stores.
"Death of a Sales Model" was indeed a provocative title from one of our editors. Standard practice for the audio business. It seems to have worked.
"How do you assign rent directly to product costs if volume manufactured and sold can vary month by month? Research and development?"
3. In a value chain analysis, it is customary to aggregate fixed and variable costs for presentation which is what we have done here. McKinsey consultants often simplify detailed analysis to get to a "so what?" takeaway or recommendation for senior executives with limited time.
You need to read the article more closely. There is a big difference between a direct to consumer DAC for $1,000 and a $1,000 DAC from the dealer.
P.S. It's not just LH/Geek, it's a wide variety of companies including Schiit, emotiva, iFi, etc.
Peter,
If I ran a company why wouldn't I want to have that funded by customers instead of an expensive bank line? This just seems like smart business operation to me.
Peter,
Technically this is a new business model. There are books written on crowd funding as a new business model.
Microstrip, why do feel an article designed to get the industry to accept new ways of acquiring new customers will damage the industry?
Lee - that is an interesting report. Unfortunately, the numbers are totally off, which makes it kind of useless. I would expect more accuracy at collecting data from an ex-McKinsey guy.
So....... as a McKinsey consultant you'd tell a senior executive thinking of going into high-end audio manufacturing that there is a 50% nett profit margin to be made![]()
Lee,
The article picked examples from the high-end audio to explain the sales chain and presents a way of marketing that as you say in a late discrete paragraph can not be applied to the high-end. IMHO, the article fails to show a clear distinction between audio, hifi and high-end. I have got the feeling that LH Geek is driven by very clever marketing, not by consumers ... I may be wrong, but also I got the feeling that all their marketing is not at all audiophile friendly.
IMHO the abusive use of audiophile jargon and the confusion created by LH, having a double face in this business, also upset people from the high-end. There is a permanent suggestion in their marketing about "audiophile" leaks in their products and it seems they want to go on in this direction.
And sorry I can not take seriously an affirmation such "As I tell my friends, in digital audio, timing is everything!" - unless you tell me you used it strictly as an economist, not as an audiophile.BTW, the sensationalist style, tittles and subtitles did not help.
Just my opinion as a reader.
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