Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/11/11
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]The discussion on how to "save" Leica seems to offer enough choices for the management and if we all put in our two "Pfennigs" worth we can probably buy the company - the Ultimate Collectible! Everybody else has had a go at it, so here is my try. Leica's product line is fine, with the exception of the R-system. The M-camera is probably as evolved as it can be without going "hi-tech". The biggest problem facing Leica now is how to increase sales. For the last 20-25 years the marketing has been targeting the existing M-owners. This is a rather reactionary group, we don't want to many innovations, status quo is fine and although we splurge and buy the latest APO/Asph etc lenses, we are still hoarding our old 35's and 50's and only buy the new stuff to prove to ourselves that the old stuff is still the best! The problem is that we are a diminishing group, death and taxes take their toll. We also wake up occasionally and say to ourselves "enough is enough - lets shoot with what we have, rather than go broke on the latest piece of glass"! Leica and Mr. Cohn must expand the base of customers. Rather than trying to sell a slightly changed product to those of us who already have a perfectly usable version of the same product, they have to expand the market. If you ask the younger crowd of photographers, they are almost surprised that the Leica is still being made! At ICP in NYC among 25 students, 2 owned Leica's and the picture is similar at most every "Photographic" educational facility. All right, the price of a Leica M puts it out of reach to most students, but there seems to be no "lusting" after the M either. For those of us that have reached middle age and beyond, remember the thrill of getting a new lens or a new body. You did save, ate a lot of cheap food and abstained from expensive habits for months at end to scrape the money together and then one day you stood there with your green/white box and a pristine M2 or M3 in it. You unwrapped it, attached a strap and the lens (35/2 of course) and loaded it up. The old used one that it replaced was thanked for its hard service and allowed a period of rest and out you went with your new tool. There is something missing today, you phone or e-mail a dealer in another time-zone, give him/her your credit card number and 24-48 hours later FedEx delivers. Somehow not the same thing. Leica almost did achieve this period of anticipation with the 90/2 APO-Asph and the R-8 Motor, but most of us could scrape the money together in the 2 years it took to bring these products to the market and now the delay become an aggravation instead. Now, how do we install the same quality of "worth the wait" in the younger, larger market for M-products? The optical performance is one thing, the durability is another and the historical background can and should be capitalised upon. The new M-brochure does this well, but there is something missing here. The same cache that sells Rolex, Louis Vuitton, Mont-Blanc and to some extent Porsche should be applied to Leica. Make it something that you reward yourself with and also make it something that defines you as a person who knows good value and good design. There are enough well paid professionals in a variety of fields that at 25 years of age and over that can afford "the best" and all we have to do is tell them as far as cameras go, the M is it! The discussion of "new products" and "more whiz-bang diodes" is a moot one. Rolex/L-V/ Mont-Blanc and Porsche/Morgan survive because they are constants. The product is refined as it is being made, but for all practical purposes it remains the same as it was decades ago. The M-camera is and should remain the antidote to the gadget-laden offerings from other manufacturers. All that remains for Leica and those of us who use the products is to convince the younger ones around us to go forth and spend on it. It is not an entirely selfless suggestion either. Some of these new buyers will tire of the camera, as they do of their Rolexes, L-V luggage, Mont-Blanc pens and Porsches and sell them, at a discount to us, but some will take to the camera, become fascinated with the mechanics of it, its optical performance and the history. They will possibly join the LUG and LHSA and expand our circle of friends with a common interest and they might even turn out to be damned good photographers too. So go out there and introduce the joy of an M to a young person and point them to the Leica-shop nearest you and tell them to spend their stock dividends or "signing-up" bonuses on something that will give them years of pleasure. You are doing yourself a service, expanding the availability of buyers and sellers of Leica stuff and you are doing your part to keep the Leica-Legend alive! The alternative to this is that all LUGgers chip in and ante up about $70,000 each and we buy the company and run it as we would like it to be run. You think that Mr. Cohn has problem today, imagine a shareholders meeting consisting of 700 LUGgers. All with one vote each trying to decide the future of the company and the product line! To quote Brando in Apocalypse Now "The Horror, the Horror". Tom A Tom Abrahamsson Vancouver, BC Canada www.rapidwinder.com