Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/09/06

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Subject: [Leica] Giving Away Cameras
From: Marc James Small <msmall@roanoke.infi.net>
Date: Mon, 06 Sep 1999 12:34:10 -0400

Back in the late '50's, Nikon revised their policy of support to pros using
their gear.  They rarely "gave" anything away -- heck, Leica has given more
commemorative cameras away, probably, than all Japanese companies combined!
- -- but they aggressively stood behind their product line in a manner
distinct from all other manufacturers.  This was the genius of Joel
Ehrenreich.

For instance, you were a pro who was hired to do a shoot which required an
exotic lens.  You called Joel and, blammo!, a lens was sent to you "on
approval" -- but Nikon knew it would be in the mail back to them in a
couple of days, and the "approval" was a fiction.  You had a shoot in
Missoula, Montana, on a Saturday.  Friday night, you check into the Trail
Trash Hotel & Diner and check over your gear.  Uh oh!  Broken body!  Call
Joel -- and a new body would get to you, somehow, by the next morning.  And
so forth.

These services were extended not just to the top guys, but to most working
pros.  And it was such a change from, say, Zeiss Ikon, who would suggest
that you BUY the lens or who would tell you to send your camera in so that
they could give you an estimate for repairs, which would take four months.
Canon, Leitz, even Rolleiflex operated the same way.  Only Nikon really
supported pros.  And, as they were marketing a REALLY solid system, the
pros flocked to Nikon in droves.  By the middle 1960's, almost every middle
and lower strata pro was using Nikon:  only the very top few still used
Leica or Zeiss Ikon or Rollei.  

Today, Canon operates a less-extensive but similar system, and Hasselblad
has been known to occasionally move in that direction.  But Nikon gives
less support to pros, so the shift has been towards Canon since the early
1980's.

It isn't so much "giving away" cameras which makes professionals support
the breed:  it is the constant support given them during their grueling and
often frustrating daily grinds.

Marc

msmall@roanoke.infi.net  FAX:  +540/343-7315
Cha robh bas fir gun ghras fir!