Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/06/01
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Stephen Gandy jotted down the following, which is representative of many people's reactions: > This begs the question how many cameras new Leica buyers are really paying > for? > --- the one in the box plus how many rejected and dumped due to poorly trained > and managed technicians ?? > It's amazing how the human mind works. Mr Gandy is here succumbing to the type of counter-factual reasoning which seems quite prevalent in much of society today. I'm sure that if Mr Gandy was a technician at Leica, or held some other position at the company which afforded him insight into the workings of their manufacturing and assembly, the story would be very different. He would see that it's a complex process in which many factors come into play and in which the potential for errors is indemic in the very nature of the work. Yet, standing outside the company and without the benefit of first hand data, many people choose to blame it on the incompetence, unwillingness, or general lazyness of *those other people*. It is as though being removed from the actual situation affords you a God's eye view and complete knowledge, allowing one to say: "But what else *could* it be?" when in fact one rarely knows the first thing about it. I find it extremely unlikely that a company like Leica with the reputation they have at stake would employ incompetent technicians, or fail to train or manage them well. It is exceedingly improbable that Leica could have reached the position it has today in terms of quality if its products by being anything but well-intentioned, vigerous, and conscientious. Leicas command a premium price, in part -- I'm assuming from what I've read about these things -- based upon a higher rejection rate than many other manufacturers. This is standard operating proceedure in high quality, low volume manufacturing. But to state that this is due to "poorly trained and managed technicians" rather than recognizing that there are inherent tradeoffs in the process itself that manifest themselves as a larger number of rejects, is -- I'm sorry -- just plain stupid. M. - -- Martin Howard | "We can't make mistakes like that on our Visiting Scholar, CSEL, OSU | own. We need computers to help us." email: howard.390@osu.edu | -- A pharmacologist on computerization www: http://mvhoward.i.am/ +-------------------------------------------