But Ibanez and ESP are known for being made in Japan, Korea, etc. The Kramer models mentioned, Pacers and Barettas, were USA models. There were also the Focus models (F2000 and F1000) made in Japan and of course Strikers made in Korea. The thing with Kramer now is with Gibson's latest efforts, they were trying to push it back in to a market that has already been saturated by Ibanez, ESP/LTD, Charvel/Jackson. That and they simply didn't advertise them well at all. But still, Kramer had been out of the game for a number of years before Gibson bought the brand. They've tried twice to resurrect it without any real success (MusicYo and then the more recent effort). That's why they need to sell the brand to a group that cares and is willing to do it right with a USA line or put it out to pasture. Sad to say, but in my opinion, Kramer's glory days are long passed. I'll take a vintage Kramer or a Gary Kramer model before anything else recent with the name on it.
Norlin 2.0, the Vengeance.
Mark my words...
/Peter
The new CEO needs not to have experience as a musician, or even be able to play guitar, dumb ass.
They are not looking for a new bass player for Metallica, WTF? But a turnaorund artist with proven experience in change management. The most successful turnaround artists of FOrtune 500 companies had no experience in the industry they were entering. AMerican Express, Apple, eBay, GE, Pepsico come to mind.
This whole thing of consumers fretting about the the old CEO and his replacement, is ridiculous. Do you even know anything about business? How many of you have a bachelor degree in business adminisration? C'mon man... Just shut the f up and play the guitar. You are not fn business analysts on CNBC attempting to sway Gibson stocks with your lopsided opinion.
The new CEO needs not to have experience as a musician, or even be able to play guitar, dumb ass.
They are not looking for a new bass player for Metallica, WTF? But a turnaorund artist with proven experience in change management. The most successful turnaround artists of FOrtune 500 companies had no experience in the industry they were entering. AMerican Express, Apple, eBay, GE, Pepsico come to mind.
This whole thing of consumers fretting about the the old CEO and his replacement, is ridiculous. Do you even know anything about business? How many of you have a bachelor degree in business adminisration? C'mon man... Just shut the f up and play the guitar. You are not fn business analysts on CNBC attempting to sway Gibson stocks with your lopsided opinion.
Jacew, sounds like you've had some bad experiences. But on average, the data is very clear... Putting customer needs at the center of product, marketing and biz dev creates a common focus and the associated processes increase sustainability and all work together to increase return on investment.
Search for terms like 6 sigma or data driven decision making for background and look at anaytics vendors (like SAS) and you will find thousands of highly sucessfull case studies.
Also keep in mind that the series addressed mass production as well as boutique markets... If Gibson focused only on boutique, there would be far less need for change.
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Jacew, we're on the same page with "The processes need to be built and focus needs to stay in running the business, while steering it forward."
That's about 75% of the series and there's a lot of "here's how you do it" to back it up.
Don't know if you read the most current post about leadership, but we did prioritize knowledge of industry...
Obviously, Gibson didn't go that direction, and yes, if Gibson doesn't optimise processes around product, marketing and biz dev ( especially dealers), it's likely they will continue to loose market and mind share.
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