Not so surprisingly a lot of businesses fail because they didn't do basic homework on the cost of doing business like say opening a restaurant and not figuring out things like how much money I have to make just to cover all the costs at the end of the month. You would be surprised at how many simply don't do the math so when designing products with a limited economic audience, hopefully, you do some statistical analysis, and get a realistic idea of how many people are out there who can afford it but would purchase it. Though, When Dave Wilson started his speaker company with the Watt, he thought he would sell a few, 20- 30(I have the review somewhere). His business was recordings, records, but he ended up with 250 orders the first year and that was a very expensive item for what it did at the time.
Is it possible for a high end manufacturer to overprice their goods?
Having just read the interesting and hyperbole laden review by RH of the new Rockport Orion speakers in the latest issue of The Absolute Sound, one thing struck me..
is it possible in the high end for a manufacturer to overprice their product ( doesn’t have to be a speaker, but this example comes to mind)? I ask this, as the Orion is priced at $133k! Yes,a price that would probably make 99% of hobbyists squirm. Yet, the speaker now joins a number of competitors that are in the $100k realm.
To that, this particular speaker stands just 50.3” tall and is just 14.3” wide…with one 13” woofer, one 7” midrange and a 1.25” beryllium dome ( which these days is nothing special at all…and could potentially lead to the nasties of beryllium bite).
The question is…given this speakers design and parts, which may or may not be SOTA, is it possible that this is just another overpriced product that will not sell, or is it like others, correctly priced for its target market? Thoughts…
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I only make 1 model bookshelf speaker ($9k/pair) now. Is it overpriced? Please remember my WT speakers are purist/cleanest sounding, closest to the original music, and the only no veil natural sound speaker in the world and 150 years of audio history. Alex/Wavetouch audio |
Very few of these extremely priced pieces of equipment are sold relative to the rest. Egos Drive most of these sales. Sitting in a room with extremely high priced equipment is hard to resist for those who have the funds, and many people do have the funds for these expenditures. Many of them are very gullible souls. The more seasoned and experienced listeners who really know what they’re doing can get the same Quality, and most often better, for considerably less. YouTube channels are culprits in promoting this exceptionally high priced gear, which serves to only stretch prices in a manufacturers lower end models. Even the Rich need to hold someone’s hand and there’s plenty of outreached hands. |
The "market distortion" aspect as suggested by @hilde45 has merit in my opinion. Here’s this audio market where everyone plays nicely and introduces "new products or new versions" with incremental price increases of, say 10%-20%. Then, out of nowhere some manufacturer has the audacity to take that metric and increase it by a factor of 2 over previous "norms". This presents a number of possibilities for other manufacturers. The "sticker shock" of their top end products is has been obliterated by another company (thank you!) so their products appear to be a more reasonable cost/performance value. So, they would feel justified in raising the price, not just 20%, but 40% and still be very much in line with the perception of high performance AND high value. So, yes, a market distortion could follow the introduction of steep pricing into the marketplace. A little about the luxury market: Centi-millionaires, traditionally, don’t loose sleep agonizing over whether or not they received strong price/performance when making a purchase.. They are primarily concerned with owning something that really IS something worth owning. Sure, they’ll brag about the "guts" or "workmanship", but their true motivators may be the intangibles that can’t be measured. What is the prestige in owning the best of the best actually worth? And, if it IS expensive, wouldn’t it be viewed as a badge of honor rather than a shockingly high-priced trophy? Customers are also different. Many who engage in the ultra highend of a product category are true enthusiasts who love what they are doing and appreciate every nuiance their extraordinarily expense product does for THEM. They ARE getting great value from something they have heavily invested in. Back to the marketing considerations, I think we could look at various price ranges to see if a significant and meaningful gap exists whereby a segment of the buying public is being ignored, or has been abandoned altogether. As a result of that 2x product introduction, is there still a healthy market for legitimate high-value products at 1/2 that price, and somewhere in between? IF that 2x product negatively impacted the viability and availability of those other (lower) price ranges, then some measurable damage has been done. |
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