Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/04/26

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Subject: Re: [Leica] Leica quality MF system ?
From: Andre Jean Quintal <megamax@abacom.com>
Date: Mon, 26 Apr 1999 06:08:31 -0400

At 06:53 +0200 26/04/99, Nathan Wajsman wrote:
>Jim,
>
>I used to own a Hasselblad (the basic model, 501C) and I think it is a
>wonderful
>system. It shares many of the virtues of Leica: great lenses, mechanical
>operation, it is a classic. [ ... ]

	People don't seem to realize that launching any new photo
	product line is FAR more involved that just throwing
	some lump sum of money at a problem: it has to
	be and remain a viable business in an extremely
	competitive world-wide market environment.

	It simply would be suicide for LEICA to get itself
	in the MF format where every single customer
	literally means jobs at the other end for the brand
	he (she) decides on. Profits margins are spreading
	extra thin these days and it would have to be
	a very large conglomerate that could simply "enter"
	the MF market.

	What MF market segment was left open, it would seem,
	got "covered" by the new Contax 645 autofocus
	camera system with Carl Zeiss lenses. This corporate
	move may weaken Hasselblad significantly by diverting
	Hasselblad's profit margin clients to Contax, witness
	the Hasselblad family selling most, if not all, of their
	financial stakes in their namesake corporation.

	What market(s) would provide good and
	significant business opportunities for LEICA ?

	I have considered the matter and it might eventually
	make sense to develop professional lenses for
	the HDTV / cinema industry, both on camera
	and for projectors, and yet, you still have Schneider
	and Zeiss to contend with, not to mention Cooke,
	Angenieux, Canon and Panavision. What room does
	that leave for profits when most movie houses get
	"standard grade" lenses and still charge their
	obscene $8.oo per customer and $2.00 for 10 cents
	worth of popcorn... ! ? ! So, would it make sense
	for LEICA to go that way, develop and refine ( ! ! ! )
	a series of high grade lenses, and merely cover the
	investment? Hardly !

	If someone really wants a top grade MF camera,
	what risk would it be to go for Hasselblad ?
		- traditional quality and dependability,
		- difficult to beat lenses,
		- no nonsense everything,
		- prices to match ...

	They are not LEICA brand but definitely represent
	to MF what much of LEICA stands for in 35mm,
	and there certainly are some professionals who
	would like to have LEICA have quality as good
	as Hasselblad's: not a negative comment, but, at one
	point, such photo equipment gets to reach a peak
	for precision and dependability, then saleability.

	Very serious and competent people opt for Nikon
	or Canon, for example: it's their privilege.
	What work$ for them is a different equation
	than LEICA's and I presume most are sensible enough
	to appreciate the LEICA philosophy and products
	to their full extent.

	The final comment is: there IS such a thing as market
	saturation and it does make company excutives and
	marketing / sales personnel nervous when a given
	market segment shrinks by even a very few percentage
	points, as happened to myriad firms last and this year
	as a consequence of world-wide financial and monetary
	instability; things could even get worse, world-wide,
	and it could kill LEICA altogether to not be "conservative"
	in such context. Notice the structural and inside managerial
	adjustments LEICA is going through, getting itself in
	a better posture to survive to the next positive business
	cycle: it bespeaks of the top level competence
	of LEICA 's executive level management to do so.

	Count your blessings, I say.

	Andre Jean Quintal










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   "I may have been born a reformer,
          I'll die a rebel."
		     DUNE VII