Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/07/07
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Charles Dunlap wrote: > > >Would the M customer want a non-German M > >camera? > > It wouldn't matter to me. A well-made camera doesn't have to be > manufactured in Germany. Given my recent experiences with quality control > on the M6 I wonder if it wouldn't be just as well to make it somewhere else. Charles, I agree with you, manufacturing country should bear no importance. On a personal level, I try to refrain from supporting producers who delocalise production in countries where social protection does not exist or where child labour is considered normal. Buying "German" is a way for me to put my wallet where my mouth is. But, fortunately, Germany is not the only country with social laws. There is no widespread child labour in Japan either, Canada and even the States may be considered civilized on that main point as well, and Europe as a whole is a model in my eyes. Quite a few developping countries also strive to impose limitations on the "freedom to exploit". Having said that, I do not consider that it is the German social system alone that explains the pricing of Leica products. Extremely high labour cost countries are also capable of producing sophisticated goods with extremely high productivity. The production organization, the level of automatization, the capital investment are some of the fields where the battle of price is fought. Leica, as a company, seems to have strategically opted, with their M and R lines, for a photographic niche where there is hardly any pressure on the quality/price ratio. Productivity and mass marketing are not - officialy - on the Leica agenda. But they do make concessions to the real world in other fields (their P&S products for example). In order to make a profit in their niche, the M and R lines must maintain their current production level and an "indexed" price level. Hardly any room for expansion in the normal sense, and I do not see any hopes for strategic investments on the production capacity front in the published financial data of the company. On another level, I believe that the Leica buyers, installed base expected to upgrade or prospective buyers, are very much encouraged by the "made in Germany" logo and that this logo is an integral part of the Leica identity (even if there was a nice level of support for the "Canadian" Leica products at one stage). That is why Leica is so silent regarding its foreign production partnerships. The magic part of all this is that the hard core Leica customer base is extremely faithful and extremely forgiving towards their "object of devotion". So, as long as Leica maintains the adequate level of marketing hype around its roots and maintains the mystic link with Barnack, Wetzlar and all, there will be a niche market of very rich or very "crazy" (that's me) buyers that will pretend to see the Leica glow even in equipment manufactured by Minolta, Sigma or Kyocera. Nevertheless, I bet my unattractive salary that these buyers would frown at Leica M and R products if their packaging was too clearly stamped with a Made in Japan, Made in Korea or Made in Singapour logo and sold at a similar price level to that of the competitors. All of a sudden the "glow" will have vanished.... One last word before the LUG responds to my blasphemy by the traditional excommunication procedures : I sincerely, really, honestly, hope that the coming Photokina will show how wrong I am and how innovative and creative Leica is. Like many others here and elsewhere, I sense that this Photokina will be more crucial than any previous one for the future of Leica, and even of photography as a whole. Friendly regards, Alan Brussels-Belgium