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#99741 - 12/06/00 12:35 PM
Re: Casio Styles
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Senior Member
Registered: 10/08/00
Posts: 4715
Loc: West Virginia
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I agree with you Tom.... The styles on Casio's new models are pretty good, and the one's on the MZ are EXCELLENT! It is odd to see that no one is sharing or exchanging styles. A while back I was at the UK site for Casio and I went to a discussion forum and if I remember correctly someone mentioned that there was supposed to be a site for Casio users to exchange styles.. It's worth investigating though...
Squeak
_________________________
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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#99742 - 12/07/00 08:14 AM
Re: Casio Styles
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Member
Registered: 01/30/00
Posts: 367
Loc: Indianapolis, IN, USA
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The reason that Casio style sites can't be found is that Casio is new to the upper end arranger market. Arranger styles, support, and sharing are all demands made by end users. Until recently, Casio's keyboard marketshare was simply low end keyboard techno toys so the number of end users demanding support and arranger styles is infinitesimally and unprofitably small.
If the MZ2000 takes off, and if Casio values and fills customer needs for additional styles, then its only a matter of time before their end user customer base will grow large enough to begin message boards, style sharing, style conversion and the rest.
But for now, they can't compete with the big boys. If you buy an MZ2000, then you get what you get at purchase time and that's it . . . forget about getting more styles until Casio sells enough units to make their arranger style market profitable (and that could take a very long time).
The best you can hope for right now is that someone can figure out how to convert other arranger styles into Casio's MZ2000 format so you can use them. Of course, Casio could throw a lot of money into developing a huge base of arranger styles and support in the hopes of luring customers from other manufacturers. But customer brand loyalty (as seen on Synthzone) makes this highly unlikely.
Probably the best marketing ploy Casio could make right now would be to develop a style conversion program that handles most of the available formats and simply give it to all of their MZ2000 customers for free. That would relieve Casio of immediately having to develop styles for a tiny unprofitable market and help satisfy customers at the same time.
Sorry, but I've been in marketing and technical communication for the past 25 years, and this is just the way it is . . . its just business.
_________________________
Some see, some don't, some will, some won't
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#99747 - 12/07/00 05:10 PM
Re: Casio Styles
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Member
Registered: 10/28/00
Posts: 297
Loc: Ledyard, CT USA
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Originally posted by Stevizard: The reason that Casio style sites can't be found is that Casio is new to the upper end arranger market. Arranger styles, support, and sharing are all demands made by end users. Until recently, Casio's keyboard marketshare was simply low end keyboard techno toys so the number of end users demanding support and arranger styles is infinitesimally and unprofitably small.
<--I agree they have very poor support!-->
If the MZ2000 takes off, and if Casio values and fills customer needs for additional styles, then its only a matter of time before their end user customer base will grow large enough to begin message boards, style sharing, style conversion and the rest.
But for now, they can't compete with the big boys. If you buy an MZ2000, then you get what you get at purchase time and that's it . . . forget about getting more styles until Casio sells enough units to make their arranger style market profitable (and that could take a very long time).
<--This is not true about available styles disks. Casio does sell a line of styles disks that are available for a few of their boards which have disk drives.-->
The best you can hope for right now is that someone can figure out how to convert other arranger styles into Casio's MZ2000 format so you can use them. Of course, Casio could throw a lot of money into developing a huge base of arranger styles and support in the hopes of luring customers from other manufacturers. But customer brand loyalty (as seen on Synthzone) makes this highly unlikely.
<--Conversion is not difficult as the MZ2000 has a built in converter. It can convert Roland styles and Technics styles. This is one reason I purchased it.-->
Probably the best marketing ploy Casio could make right now would be to develop a style conversion program that handles most of the available formats and simply give it to all of their MZ2000 customers for free. That would relieve Casio of immediately having to develop styles for a tiny unprofitable market and help satisfy customers at the same time.
<--Again, it already has a conversion program built into the MZ2000. On the WK-1800 you load the conversion program from disk.-->
Sorry, but I've been in marketing and technical communication for the past 25 years, and this is just the way it is . . . its just business.
<--Hmmm....-->
[This message has been edited by LindaFus (edited 12-07-2000).] [This message has been edited by LindaFus (edited 12-07-2000).] [This message has been edited by LindaFus (edited 12-07-2000).]
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Linda F Casio Privia PX-560 - Korg Micro Arranger - Casio MZ X500
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#99748 - 12/08/00 05:51 AM
Re: Casio Styles
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Member
Registered: 01/30/00
Posts: 367
Loc: Indianapolis, IN, USA
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OK Linda, I get your point. Since I don't own a Casio (never have, likely never will) I can't speak from personal experience about Casio. I was speaking from a marketing prospective, and saying that Casio wouldn't make a huge effort developing arranger styles until it became profitable for them to do so.
A built-in (FREE - like I said) converter does help but they've got a long way to go before Casio instruments will be on a par with Roland, Yamaha, and Korg. In fact, not a single Music Dealer in my area carries any Casio products at all -- no demand -- no market among professional and semi-pro musicians, just amateur home users. That's probably why they're being advertised in toy catalogs. (Say, does your MZ2000 also have "Magic Keyboard Lights?).
<== Hmmmm ==>
_________________________
Some see, some don't, some will, some won't
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