APP Adrian
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But this is not what manufacturers want. They want people buying their products all the time.
I know =P. That's how businesses make money.
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But this is not what manufacturers want. They want people buying their products all the time.
So, what happened to Allen Edmonds is that some venture capitalists stepped in to try to keep a legacy business going by adapting to market conditions as best as they could. And this is a bad thing?
AE was sold for $200 million, and based on that valuation, I'd say they had adapted to market conditions nicely under their previous owners, who were also venture capitalists. Maybe Goldner Hawn will buy it back for $100 million.
Kinda, but not really. You've two models at play here. The one used by Alden and Goldner Hawn and the other one, currently used by Brentwood Associates. In the past, within the footwear industry, a model similar to Brentwood's has been used by the management of Johnston & Murphy as well as Florsheim; neither instance worked particularly well. In the broader luxury goods industry, similar strategies have worked with Burberry and Coach. Only time will tell if Allen Edmonds end up just another junky, perpetually marked-down, foreign-made, mall shoe...
...for context, a top-of-the-line pair of Florsheims cost about the same in the 1960s as they do today - in dollars not adjusted for inflation!
And I still can't understand why you object to them adapting successfully. Would you rather they adapt unsuccessfully? Then they would be gone and you would have to complain about something else.
I looked at the website and saw a broad range of traditional shoes that seemed to be reasonably priced, as to quality I haven't bought any in the past few years and cannot speak. I did buy eight pairs of their competitor's shoes in the last couple of years and two pairs had to be returned and several others had issues that would not have passed ten years ago. American made merch requiring handwork has gone down across the board if you haven't noticed, for reasons certainly beyond any one firm's control.
They don't (can't for the money people want to pay) make em like they used to. I'm happy that some folks still try and come pretty close. I hope they make money at it so they can continue.