Marsu42 said:
zlatko said:
The theory of "they won't do x because it would cannibalize y" never makes sense to me because they're constantly building things that cannibalize each other to a significant degree. By that theory, most cameras and lenses wouldn't exist. Just look at all of the overlap in the camera and lens lines.
"Overlap" and "cannibalize" aren't the same, and I'm 100% sure if there's one thing Canon marketing deliberates a lot about it's their internal lineup. A pure "overlap" is to be expected, but it's about user groups and the balance of a) the danger of them jumping ship or b) luring them into upselling to the next best model.
Don't underestimate this: For example, how much less profit would Canon have made if 50% of the 5d3 customers in the last 1.5 years would have bought at 6d instead because it would "good enough", i.e. not crippled enough, for video and shooting motion? If 2/3rds of the €1300 f1.2 "L" owners would have bought a good €500 f1.4 50mm update?
Overlap vs. cannibalize = doesn't matter what you call it. Just look at what we know rather than what we imagine. Canon currently makes:
EFS 10-22 and 10-18
EF 16-35/2.8 and 16-35/4 and 17-40/4
EFS 15-85 and 17-85
EFS 18-55 in two versions
EF 24-70 in two versions
EF 24-105 in two versions
EFS 55-250 in two versions
EF 70-200 in
three versions
EF 70-300 in
five versions
EF 24 in
three versions
EF 28 in two versions
EF 35 in two versions
EF 50 in three versions
EF 85 in two versions
EF 100 in
three versions
EF 135 in two versions
EF 200 in two versions
EF 300 in two versions
EF 400 in
three versions
EF 500 and 600
And I won't even mention all of the camera bodies that cannibalize each other, because there are a lot of them.
All of the above cannibalize each other to some degree. So, to say that they won't build X because it would cannibalize Y is just baloney. They do it all of the time and there is proof throughout the product line. They don't have to, but they do. If the "Canon avoids cannibalization" theory were true, a lot of these products wouldn't EXIST.
How much less profit would Canon have made if some percentage of 5D3 customers bought the 6D instead? I have absolutely no idea and neither do you. But I'm quite sure that some percentage of 5D3 customers DO in fact buy the 6D instead. I am one of them. I have 5D3 + 6D instead of two 5D3. So the 6D really shouldn't exist.
While an individual 5D3 body may bring in more profit than an individual 6D body, they may sell several 6D bodies for every 5D3, resulting in a net gain in profit. The same goes for a potential excellent new 50/1.4 lens (with or without IS) — it may sell
many more copies than the 50/1.2L, outweighing any cannibalization factor.
The cannibalization theory propounded by photographers in online forums is way too simplistic. When Canon introduces the cheaper product that allegedly cannibalizes the more expensive product, it isn't necessarily a net loss. While some customers buy the cheaper product as a substitute for the more expensive one, others buy the cheaper product vs. buying nothing at all or vs. buying a competitor's product.
Cannibalization is a normal and expected part of the business. As Steve Jobs said, "“If you don’t cannibalize yourself, someone else will."