ROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEX
17 July 2020, 10:44 PM | #1 |
"TRF" Member
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: China
Watch: IWC IW389001
Posts: 762
|
A Cautionary Story
Many years ago, in an interim job after I graduated, my boss told me a story from his past about branding and the market. He was high up in the UK branch of a well known and highly thought of audio brand. They were very popular with the well healed for their table top radios. When his boss left, instead of being promoted, his boss was replaced with an up and coming whizz kid. This new guy asked on arriving if anyone had good ides on how to add 50% sales annually. Being a specialist brand this was a hard ask due to the small specialist shops they generally were sold from. However my boss told him there is a way: ship the product in bulk to the department stores, and give them a discount. Great let's do it was the reply. However my boss advised a down side: if you do this the specialist stores will drop the brand as they will be unable to compete, and due to losing the specialised appeal, within 5 years the brand would be dead in the UK. Never mind, do it says the kid, only interested in his bonus.
5 Years later Grundig YachtBoy and the like were no longer popular, because the fan base and the specialist shops no longer created the interest. Rolex is banking on the non WIS collectors of exclusive pieces, and it is working. However in the long game, it has always helped Rolex when anyone asks a WIS of their opinion of the quality and worth. It will not help in years to come if the answer is "I don't know, haven't had one in my hand for years." |
17 July 2020, 10:52 PM | #2 |
Banned
Join Date: Jun 2019
Location: Netherlands
Posts: 515
|
Here we go again,
Rolex does the opposite thing as what Grundig did in you tale. Grundig dumped their product for the masses to buy and they lost interest. IWC did the same thing with their steel watches and at some point in time people lost their taste for that brand as well. Rolex produces more than enough watches, over 1Mio per year and everybody can see, feel and play with those watches and buy them........ at the grey dealership. At insane prices but, hey there they are. Also the shortage is just the populair sports models, you can walk in and order a Air-King and receive that watch in 2 months. Does the (artificial created) shortage put people off ??? Hell yeah, we all feel the same frustration. But as I always said, the problem is the flippers and greys, not Rolex |
17 July 2020, 10:56 PM | #3 |
"TRF" Member
Join Date: Dec 2013
Location: FL
Watch: platinum sub
Posts: 15,884
|
for all the griping people still are interested and buying rolex. i mean some have moved on for a bit. but they will be back.
__________________
If you wind it, they will run. 25 or 6 to 4. |
17 July 2020, 11:05 PM | #4 |
"TRF" Member
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: China
Watch: IWC IW389001
Posts: 762
|
|
17 July 2020, 11:16 PM | #5 |
"TRF" Member
Join Date: Nov 2017
Location: Europe
Posts: 5,643
|
I’m not sure how it’s quite a Rolex analogy ?
If Rolex started selling at Walmart then maybe. But if anything their brand cache has never been higher
__________________
“My tastes are simple; I am easily satisfied with the best.” ― Winston S. Churchill |
17 July 2020, 11:17 PM | #6 |
"TRF" Member
Join Date: Aug 2015
Location: Houston
Watch: SkyD, SD43, GMT2
Posts: 5,061
|
Rolex isn’t shipping watches in bulk to department stores. Even if they decided to they have lower end options to do this with, and higher end options to keep in boutiques and with AD’s. I don’t know the Grundig Yachtboy story other than what you’ve relayed here, but it sounds to me like they made a very bad business decision. Did they not have entry level options to sell at department stores and higher end options for the specialty stores?
Rolex is a business and they can’t succeed, neither can their AD’s, if they don’t appeal to more and more buyers. There are only so many WIS’s and they are only going to buy so many watches. If you want to see innovation and quality drop, and prices go up, limiting who can buy to a certain quality of collector is the way to do it. |
17 July 2020, 11:18 PM | #7 |
"TRF" Member
Join Date: Dec 2013
Location: FL
Watch: platinum sub
Posts: 15,884
|
peak interest doesnt last forever in anything.
__________________
If you wind it, they will run. 25 or 6 to 4. |
17 July 2020, 11:21 PM | #8 |
Banned
Join Date: Apr 2018
Location: Hong Kong
Posts: 893
|
What a pointless and totally flawed analogy. Rolex is not a small volume niche brand.
|
17 July 2020, 11:24 PM | #9 |
"TRF" Member
Join Date: Jul 2017
Location: California
Watch: Shiny One
Posts: 5,450
|
Crazy. After only the third sentence, I looked over to your avatar/profile to see if you were German, because I knew exactly the brand you were speaking of.
|
17 July 2020, 11:35 PM | #10 |
"TRF" Member
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: China
Watch: IWC IW389001
Posts: 762
|
|
17 July 2020, 11:39 PM | #11 |
"TRF" Member
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: China
Watch: IWC IW389001
Posts: 762
|
My point wasn't the bulk shipping, it is the loss of specialised interest.
Some here are so fast to pick holes in any opinion here they don't even read the post. Patek are getting it right: the WIS want the interesting complications and less obvious non sport models. Rolex doesn't have these models. |
17 July 2020, 11:43 PM | #12 |
Banned
Join Date: Apr 2018
Location: Hong Kong
Posts: 893
|
I read the post. One reason I can tell you that Grundig lost out was because their products were dull and unappealing by comparison to the much more interesting Japanese made products from Sony, National Technics, Panasonic, JVC, Pioneer and a host of other far more exciting brands. The Grundig name wasn’t all that appealing either in the UK.
|
18 July 2020, 12:07 AM | #13 | |
"TRF" Member
Join Date: Jan 2020
Real Name: KP Jimmy
Location: Singapore
Watch: R/AP/FPJ/Hermès/et
Posts: 6,597
|
Quote:
Patek also have collections and models cheaper to acquire grey than from AD. Patek buying WIS are outspent by obvious sport watch desiring crowd that drive machine produced models up to insane premiums and those that buy non sport models only to be in line to acquire obvious sport models.
__________________
|
|
18 July 2020, 12:08 AM | #14 | |
"TRF" Member
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: China
Watch: IWC IW389001
Posts: 762
|
Quote:
Their glory days were Yacht Boy radios and similar in teh '60s and '70s. Every well off family in my childhood seemed to have one. |
|
18 July 2020, 12:11 AM | #15 | |
"TRF" Member
Join Date: Jan 2020
Real Name: KP Jimmy
Location: Singapore
Watch: R/AP/FPJ/Hermès/et
Posts: 6,597
|
Quote:
Yep. Dull and dour. They did enough wrong beyond the one strategic mistake that the OP believes was the fatal one.
__________________
|
|
18 July 2020, 12:22 AM | #16 | |
Banned
Join Date: Apr 2018
Location: Hong Kong
Posts: 893
|
Quote:
The 70’s is exactly when I’m referring to. I was one of those very people buying audio equipment back then. |
|
18 July 2020, 12:24 AM | #17 |
Banned
Join Date: Apr 2018
Location: Hong Kong
Posts: 893
|
|
18 July 2020, 02:02 AM | #18 |
"TRF" Member
Join Date: Sep 2017
Location: Miami, FL
Watch: Tudor & Cartier
Posts: 2,499
|
I have been enlightened!
__________________
"Chi ha paura muore ogni giorno, chi non ha paura muore una volta sola" - Paolo Borsellino |
18 July 2020, 06:38 AM | #19 |
2024 SubLV41 Pledge Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Real Name: Rommel
Location: Toronto Canada
Watch: 116710LN
Posts: 9,203
|
|
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
|
|
*Banners
Of The Month*
This space is provided to horological resources.