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#156995 - 07/27/06 11:11 AM
Re: Roland G70 now in the MI Division!
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Senior Member
Registered: 10/08/00
Posts: 4715
Loc: West Virginia
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Posted by keybplayer: ------------------------------------------- Actually Yamaha and Roland are very sneaky. They are trying every angle they can to extract the most amount of money out of you and me the customer. From a business perspective it's actually a smart move (in theory) but ultimately you and I are the ones that lose out in the end by paying higher prices and not having the ability to demo them firsthand before purchasing. -------------------------------------------- Well said! Regardless of how much you support either company--at the end of the day, they're a business...... It's all about profits, and creative advertising. Also keep in mind that being a business they have unavoidable obligations to their "shareholders". Sure we're the customers and they make a good penny off us us, but where would they be without their shareholders. They have a legal obligation to provide for them. Are they going to try and get every penny they can? Hell yeah, that's classic Capitolist Mentality Make more, make them cheaper--keep the money saved in costs for making them cheaper (not passing those savings on to the consumer), give them only portions of what they want--because you have to leave room for the next upgrade, otherwise by giving them what they want--who will upgrade. Not going to knock the T2 but take into consideration what "creative advertising" Yammie used. What was one of their major focal points..? The new Super Articulation voices. There were quite a few who dumped the T1 for the T2. Did their T1's suddenly not function properly because it lacked SA voices, and were their audiences screaming "Where are the SA voices". Were they booking less gigs because they owned a T1? It's all creative ads to keep us the consumer buying and upgrading. As long as we keep shelling out over $3,000 for a high end arranger, Yammie and others will continue charging those prices because people pay them. We can control the cost as a consumer if we choose, but people fall into the "hype' and the "I gotta have that new lemon fresh model" they just keep shelling it out. Maybe if for just ONE year we all kept our current keyboards and didn't upgrade when the new models came out we could have more control over cost It's all b'out the "Benjamins" Baby! Squeak [This message has been edited by squeak_D (edited 07-27-2006).]
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GEAR: Yamaha MOXF-6, Casio MZX-500, Roland Juno-Di, M-Audio Venom, Roland RS-70, Yamaha PSR S700, M-Audio Axiom Pro-61 (Midi Controller). SOFTWARE: Mixcraft-7, PowerTracks Pro Audio 2013, Beat Thang Virtual, Dimension Le.
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#156997 - 07/27/06 06:00 PM
Re: Roland G70 now in the MI Division!
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Senior Member
Registered: 11/24/99
Posts: 3305
Loc: Reseda, California USA
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I know all the marketing people at Yamaha and Roland and can tell you that both companies would love all the dealers to have a demo model on each stores sales floor, but reality is that most stores choose not to stock a high end arranger because of slow sales on these products. This is the reality here in the USA. If they could sell them, they would stock them. There are many reasons. Poor sales help, a high learning curve and most often heard, not as many musicians interested in high end arrangers vs studio workstation type keyboards like Motifs, Fantoms and Tritons. Again, I go back to the average age of musicians working in big chain stores. Most of the sales guys are under 30 years old and don't want to play styles but rather tweak sounds in a Synth keyboard. The manufactures are not at fault here.......the store managers hiring people to work in stores. Yes, I sell a lot of arranger keybaords, but I'm 56 years old and I choose to stock and sell these. Yamaha, Roland and other manufactures come to me and know I will stock their high end arrangers. They try to get stores all around the USA but often hit dead ends from the dealers. We all must buy our demo keyboards and invest our money to stock them and if they aren't going to sell because of all the reasons mentioned, then they won't show up when you look for them. So, don't think all the blame lies with the manufactures. The blame lies more with each independent or chain store management. George Kaye Kaye's Music Scene Reseda, California
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George Kaye Kaye's Music Scene (Closed after 51 years) West Hills, California (Retired 2021)
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#156999 - 07/27/06 07:53 PM
Re: Roland G70 now in the MI Division!
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Senior Member
Registered: 10/27/03
Posts: 2417
Loc: CA
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Well said George. As we know though, Guitar Center did stock the Tyros and they sold many of them I'm sure. >> I was just one of the many. But what I think has happened with the Tyros2, is Yamaha, in listing it at $4,200, has priced it so high that with a lot of customers coming in to GC they are shell shocked by the price. For instance, when I went into a GC recently, there was, lo and behold, a Tyros2 on the rack! What had happened was the guy told me that someone bought it (through special order) and because of financial problems brought it back to get his money back. I can see why he may have had financial problems. They had a price tag hanging on it that said $4,200! There was no discounted price because of the return. Most people would immediately gasp at the price and look elsewhere. I asked the guy what his bottom offer was and he said I could have it for, get this, 3 Grand even! But I don't think a lot of people would necessarily dicker like I did. They would see the high price and vamoose. So that may be a big reason why GC decided against stocking the Tyros2 and instead made it a special order item only. Because of the high price. OTOH, the Tyros when it first came out was listed at most MI stores for $2,499. I have a much easier time looking at a $2,499 price tag than a $4,200 price tag. As would most other potential customers I would think. Btw, that may be the same reason Roland went strictly CK with the G-70. We do know however that Roland personally stated that they would not sell the G-70 through MI stores. And many MI stores feel the same way with the Tyros2 apparently. But I'm glad Sam Ash is stocking them at least. So in conclusion, money always seems to be the main instigator in what gets sold where. At least that's what I think has happened with the G-70 and Tyros2 anyway. Plus the fact that Roland specifically made it their policy to only sell the G-70 through CK outlets - until now it seems. Best regards, Mike
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Yamaha Genos, Mackie HR824 MKII Studio Monitors, Mackie 1202 VLZ Pro Mixer (made in USA), Cakewalk Sonar Platinum, Shure SM58 vocal mic.
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