T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2113.1 | The Usual Plus A Lot Of Blowouts | AQUA::ROST | Chickens don't take the day off | Wed Sep 06 1989 13:54 | 19 |
|
Seems about the same as always to me. The new hot boxes sell for close
to list at first, then become more and more heavily discounted. Those
who paid $2000 for their Kurzweils may end up weeping at $500 closeout
prices, but that's life, eh?
Accessories seem more resistant to price drops. I just paid $130 for a
Korg O3 module, which listed for about $700. The ROM cards for it,
though just went up to $80, and *every* dealer I called wanted full
list price. Never mind that they were only $70 a month ago and he's
probably sitting on old stock.
I am certainly not seeing drastic price drops compared to years past.
I *am* seeing stuff with more bang for the buck...compare the CZ-101 to
the FB-01 to the MT-32, for example. Also I see a recent rash of
closeouts from Korg, Kurzweil and others due to extreme competition.
Brian
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2113.2 | | SALSA::MOELLER | Nested assumption calls | Wed Sep 06 1989 14:08 | 4 |
| re $500 Kurzweil modules.. I grit my teeth and tell myself I've had the
use of the gear for a year and a half... $73/mo.
karl
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2113.3 | Consolation? | MARLIN::DIORIO | No, I'm not bored...really...Zzzzzzzzzzzzz | Wed Sep 06 1989 15:03 | 16 |
| >< Note 2113.2 by SALSA::MOELLER "Nested assumption calls" >
>
> re $500 Kurzweil modules.. I grit my teeth and tell myself I've had the
> use of the gear for a year and a half... $73/mo.
Karl, if it makes you feel any better,
I was talking to a guy (Chris something) who works at Acton Music
here in MA. He *claims* that the 1000 PX "blowouts" from Guitar Center were
defective modules that were "reconditioned" at the factory and then sold en
masse to Guitar Center. Personally, though this sounds like bullshit to me.
His store sells Kurzweil and I think he made it up because they can't come
anywhere near that price. These guys (Acton Music) were the same people who
didn't even know that Kurzweil made HXA and SXA soundblocks for those
respective expander modules until I told them!
Mike D.
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2113.4 | time is on my side | SWAV1::STEWART | There is no dark side of the moon... | Wed Sep 06 1989 17:33 | 14 |
| List prices are created so that mom & pop stores can sell one or
two units, offer a small discount and still make a profit.
Volume operations obviously purchase in quantity so they pay less
per unit to start with. Pricing on items like cables is held
artificially high since they're cheap to start with, therefore
they don't cost as much to keep on the shelf, and they don't go
out of style or fashion; the dealer can afford to wait to make
his 300% profit. Blowouts happen when someone (the dealer or the
manufacturer) is stuck holding a quantity of equipment just about
to be superceded by the next new thing on the horizon.
In my experience, you can get good deals on just about anything
you want if you're not in a hurry. Time is on your side and
working against the dealer.
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2113.5 | but back to the question at hand: | SWAV1::STEWART | There is no dark side of the moon... | Wed Sep 06 1989 17:41 | 14 |
|
But in response to the topic's question: maybe... but I don't
think so. We've just got more consumer dollars chasing more
equipment. What we're really seeing is a real leap in the
bang/buck index as manufacturers scramble to preserve/improve
market share. It's tough to be a music dealer now; my
neighborhood music store no longer carries any MIDI gear or much
electronics. Guitar Center blew them out of that part of the
market.
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2113.6 | Unpredictable at best; but later is still cheaper. | ULTRA::BURGESS | | Thu Sep 07 1989 09:43 | 15 |
|
I used to browse through here looking at the various equipment
and hot deals topics to see if there was any reasonable price/time rule
of thumb. I didn't do a lot of arithmetic on what I found, but it
seemed that 18 months to 2 years was about the mean time to 50% off
full recommended retail price deals (sort of a half life). The
Kurzweil stuff has exceeded this, one could argue that it was late on
the price/performance curve when announced, or that rumors of its
replacement have doomed it - lotsa room for subjective marketing type
speculation here. Maybe the EMU is going for pent up demand with the
proteus in the hopes of holding full retail for longer - who knows ?
R
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2113.7 | | KOBAL::DICKSON | | Thu Sep 07 1989 10:31 | 6 |
| I would guess that the recent spate of Kurzweil blowouts have more to
do with Kurzweil's new policy for retailers. To be a Kurzweil dealer
you now have to have certain minimum inventory, which is very
expensive. If you used to be a Kurzweil dealer but can't afford the
cash flow caused by the manufacturer's new policy, you drop the line
and blow out your remaining inventory.
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2113.8 | More on the Kurzweil phenomenon | XERO::ARNOLD | living in the big dream | Thu Sep 07 1989 13:47 | 18 |
| >>> I would guess that the recent spate of Kurzweil blowouts have more to
>>> do with Kurzweil's new policy for retailers.
Also, I read in the local paper (Middlesex News, Framingham, MA) a few
weeks ago that Kurzweil had laid a few people off and had decided to
focus on the home musical instrument market more. One can read into
this but I won't speculate. As a shareholder, I know that Kurzweil's
line to investors has always been:
(1) Establish a name at the high end
(2) Lower prices to the semi-pro market
(3) Reap the biggest profits by going after the home piano, home
music market.
It could be that we're seeing other ramifications of the move towards
#3.
- John -
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2113.9 | | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 235-8176, 223-3326 | Thu Sep 07 1989 17:31 | 4 |
| ooooh, trying to make it big in the music-makin' industry, eh?
Something doesn't sound right about that formula ...
Steve
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2113.10 | More than meets the eye... | CARP::ALLEN | | Thu Sep 07 1989 17:39 | 21 |
| re .5
I think this touches the heart of the matter. I predict that
in three years, many of the retail music equipment dealers we all
know and love will be extinct. In their place will be national
outfits like Guitar Center, who sell everything at 15% over cost.
You will also have an MIDIphile elite which buys exclusively
at boutiques which cater to those who demand "analog" sound. The
situation will be roughly analogous to what has evolved in the audio
(stereo) equipment marketplace.
If this is true, what would be the ramifications for us as users?
re .8:
If what I read in the Financial Pages is correct, I sincerely
hope that KRZM is one of your smaller holdings... :-) .
Clusters,
Bill
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2113.11 | Have I broken even yet? | XERO::ARNOLD | living in the big dream | Thu Sep 07 1989 18:07 | 19 |
| >>> If what I read in the Financial Pages is correct, I sincerely
>>> hope that KRZM is one of your smaller holdings... :-) .
When I was childless and couldn't afford a Kurzweil, I bought 200
shares to show some support for a local company whose products I
respected. Besides, it gets me on their mailing list of press
releases. Like my musical purchases (I've neglected the goals note so
infer my answer here), it's not money I expected to see a return on.
(Not that I'd mind one.)
Now with the price of the stock at ~1.75 (I paid 6), it's not worth
selling. Besides, I've been able to go to the annual meeting and (1)
drink free juice and tea, (2) eat free danish, and (3) meet Bob Moog,
Ray Kurzweil, etc. and (4) play with the equipment they make that I can't
afford.
Money over the dam,
- John -
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