Ed Haywood
En-Route
But he's doing a great job making the opposite point.Whatever point you're trying to make isn't being made.
But he's doing a great job making the opposite point.Whatever point you're trying to make isn't being made.
There are more than 5 independent breweries just in my neighborhood.Yes, you get to choose between 5 brands of beer.
Yes, you get to choose between 5 brands of beer.
View attachment 122047
If Vans inspected and accepted the parts, it could be SOL even if the vendor didn't do exactly what it said it would, unless the "flaws" weren't detectible. And Vans would also likely have to show some harm from the change, which would be difficult if its position is that the parts are fine but it's replacing them for customer satisfaction. Of course all this does depend on the terms of the agreement, the factual details, and a bunch of legal issues.That will be determined by the terms of the agreements Vans and the vendor signed. Unless the vendor wants to avoid the negative reputational impact of failing to satisfy a customer, enforcing those agreements will probably require legal action. The mediation and litigation process can take several years, so it is unlikely to save Vans in the short run, and will cost them $ before it saves them $$. If the vendor does not have fairly deep pockets, prevailing could put them out of business too, and now the whole mess is bogged down in two BK's.
There seems to be a fundamental misunderstanding of what the word “brand” means.
If by "local" you mean continental, sure. There are dozens if not hundreds of beers that are available across the U.S. not on that chart.Fair; 5 supermassive beer conglomerates and whatever local breweries have on offering.
There seems to be a fundamental misunderstanding of what the word “brand” means.
Funny. Not one of the beers I've had in the last 5 years is on that chart. Guess there's more choices than it wants you to believe. Do those guys sell a lot of beer? Absolutely. But there are more choices outside that list than inside.
And a fundamental misunderstanding of “competition.” Even inside a conglomerate, brands compete and the conglomerate will allocate or remove resources and sell or acquire brands depending upon competitive performance.
Do the Steelers not compete with the Patriots although both are part of the NFL?
"You only have 5 choices in general aviation, and most of them are Textron InBev"
Sure, I guess my point is that if you want to avoid a certain conglomerate it isn’t always particularly easy to do.
I'm some ways, yes. In many ways (other than on the field) no. They even directly share some revenue. In the most important ways referring to markets, probably not. Certainly not in the same way they compete with XFL teams.And a fundamental misunderstanding of “competition.” Even inside a conglomerate, brands compete and the conglomerate will allocate or remove resources and sell or acquire brands depending upon competitive performance.
Do the Steelers not compete with the Patriots although both are part of the NFL?
Which one? I'll stop by the next time I'm in town.My friend owns a brew pub in Chapel Hill. Where is he on your chart?
While true, that does not mean there is limited or no competition. Take EssilorLuxottica and Safilo, in your example. Luxottica brands hold ~60% market share in the US, owning about a dozen brands and about another dozen licensed brands owned by other companies.Sure, I guess my point is that if you want to avoid a certain conglomerate it isn’t always particularly easy to do. Take sunglasses/glasses for example and look at Luxxotica…
While true, that does not mean there is limited or no competition. Take EssilorLuxottica and Safilo, in your example. Luxottica brands hold ~60% market share in the US, owning about a dozen brands and about another dozen licensed brands owned by other companies.
Safilo holds about 6% market share across about 2 1/2 dozen more brands.
34%, or 1 in 3 brands are neither Luxottica nor Safilo.
While true, that does not mean there is limited or no competition. Take EssilorLuxottica and Safilo, in your example. Luxottica brands hold ~60% market share in the US, owning about a dozen brands and about another dozen licensed brands owned by other companies.
Safilo holds about 6% market share across about 2 1/2 dozen more brands.
34%, or 1 in 3 brands are neither Luxottica nor Safilo.
If you're arguing that gigantic corporations control everything, it would be a challenge to find a worse example than beer.Yes, you get to choose between 5 brands of beer.
I'm struggling to see how this becomes an issue, or an illustration of really anything. OK, Luxottica owns a lot of eyewear brands. There are dozens of others, likeSure, I guess my point is that if you want to avoid a certain conglomerate it isn’t always particularly easy to do. Take sunglasses/glasses for example and look at Luxxotica.
oooohhh Kaa....now back to Vans
You would think with their market if anyone sees a viable business, they will either get the help they need, or someone will scoop them up at the sale... Could be the market will shrink if the amount of price correction needed is too great.
I don't really have a dog in the fight any more. I am part owner of an RV-12 E-LSA, and spent a few years hammering away at an RV-7 a while back (I was owner #2; owner #3 finished and is flying it now). My current construction project is all wood and plans built. I'm not one of those who thinks Van's is the end-all be-all of aviation, but it's hard to argue with over 11,000 airplanes completed and a few thousand more being built. Van's has consistently succeeded where many, many others have failed over the years.
Which one? I'll stop by the next time I'm in town.
Wow, this thread went astray.
It really chaps my arse that we can't have a civil discussion here or twenty other forums where I participate without someone jumping in and turning it into a nutter-fest.Nah, this thread has jumped the shark, I think the free market moon bat - ery started it. Too bad. Still a few good insightful posts about vans though. Maybe the mods could pull the crap out and put it into another thread, but probably too out of scope for this forum.
I hope you are right but old Companys disappear pretty regularly. "Past performance is no guarantee of future returns "I think there is definitely a viable business there, as evidenced by the fact that they've been around for 50 years
You mean Van's isn't in trouble because of Walmart? And I joke about that as someone that hates Walmart AND large corporations in general.It really chaps my arse that we can't have a civil discussion here or twenty other forums where I participate without someone jumping in and turning it into a nutter-fest.
Let's assume (worst case) Vans as we know it goes bankrupt. Closes the doors, sells the assets (tools, designs, remaining inventory) and refunds pennies on the dollar to kit owners and others (tool suppliers, parts suppliers, banks, etc.).So trying to steer this back to airplanes, what about Van's going open source?
E-AB - you can pretty much build whatever the heck you want as long as the "major portion [...] has been fabricated and assembled by persons who undertook the construction project solely for their own education or recreation." (21.191 g)assuming they or someone else can build the parts. No idea at all if it's possible for certified, given the complexity of the regs.
Or going after ice cream.Because if they used BR we'd all think they were going through mist.
Nauga,
perpendicular
The point is that fewer and fewer people know how to read, hence cartoons or graphics or video instructions are required.I've seen that image posted a number of times in various places; I have yet to see the point of it. What exactly is the point?
It really chaps my arse that we can't have a civil discussion here or twenty other forums where I participate without someone jumping in and turning it into a nutter-fest.
If Vans files a bankruptcy, I'd expect it to be a reorganization rather than a liquidation. It's a going concern with a viable business model that it did a poor job of executing, but it seems to me that the company is still worth more than the value of its hard assets. But that's just a guess and this isn't my area of expertise.Let's assume (worst case) Vans as we know it goes bankrupt. Closes the doors, sells the assets (tools, designs, remaining inventory) and refunds pennies on the dollar to kit owners and others (tool suppliers, parts suppliers, banks, etc.).
Whoever buys the plans, tools, etc. can restart the business under a different name. "Albany Tom's Aircraft" and begin selling kits and replacement parts. There's profit to be made doing that, given a slightly different business approach (more QC, more contractual mitigation of issues, selling prices indexed with inflation, etc.)
Ain't no money to be made by going open source and releasing the plans to the public, so I don't see that happening. Albany Tom's aircraft didn't buy those plans and design rights to give 'em away...
It really chaps my arse that we can't have a civil discussion here or twenty other forums where I participate without someone jumping in and turning it into a nutter-fest.