unfocused
Photos/Photo Book Reviews: www.thecuriouseye.com
Sabaki said:So a different market but a pretty huge company by the name of Sega sat in a similar position a few years back...
...If anything, the above indicates that current market position needs to be looked at considering other factors...there is a strong argument that catering to the hardcore market whilst paying less attention to what the masses are looking for in a camera, may change the landscape quickly and dramatically for Canon.
I always love these strained analogies.
The camera market is either undergoing, or has already emerged, from the crash that so many people here like to predict.
The market crashed because all the major players (not just Canon) grossly misread the impact on internet connectivity and social media on the market. As a result, they saw the bulk of their customers and arguably some of their most valuable customers (young consumers who will someday have the resources to buy expensive equipment) leave them for the inferior technology of cell phones.
Finally, today, about six or seven years too late, they are just beginning to add internet connectivity to their products. Still, it is clunky and difficult to use and doesn't come remotely close to the convenience of a typical cell phone.
The question people should be asking is which companies have emerged from this meltdown with the least damage to their bottom line?
The other question is which companies seem well-positioned and willing to adapt to the new realities and finally give consumers cameras that are built for connectivity?
Canon obviously fares pretty well in the first question, but falls down in the second. Fortunately, for them, all their competitors have proven to be equally incompetent in this regard.
Someday soon, one of the players will emerge with a camera that allows consumers to easily and quickly go through their pictures, identify the ones they like, do a few quick in-camera edits and then post those pictures directly to the internet or upload them to a service like Dropbox.
If one of the other manufacturers does that before Canon, then I would say Canon has something to worry about. But, so long as the major differences between cameras are the feature sets that elicit so much angst among the dinosaurs on this forum (myself included), Canon has nothing to worry about and all the strained analogies won't change that.
Upvote
0