Eric Stecker
FNG
- Joined
- Jan 7, 2023
- Messages
- 15
Knowing him as I do, if you sat down with Bob and talked hunting, you'd walk away from the discussion with a different opinion of the man.
I’ve seen all I need to see in a handful of YouTube videos. There are certain personalities I know I will not jive with. Nor actions I wish to condone.As someone who runs a business, I'm sure you can read between the lines that the conditions we face/d did not develop overnight. There was a real race against closure which we could do nothing about until we owned the company. When we did, we were compelled to act fast, or else.
I know the story you refer to. Do you have all the details or just the headline? There is a big difference between unlawful and unethical actions and what actual happened.
I'll offer that because I know the truth and can respond with it quickly, doesn't mean that I've "prepared" for anything. I just share what I know.
You can call me Eric. Thank you for your point and I'll add one thing to help people understand the situation. Defiance stopped taking retail orders mid last year. (This has changed as we are accepting retail orders now)I can’t believe you can build them for $1600 retail or whatever it is and do anything but break even. There’s real money in machine work not involving firearms. Folks need to go check and see what the shop rate is at a machine shop before they decide the action or the barrel is too expensive. I appreciate companies that still do it, I don’t care who’s name is on the sign.
I respect your opinion and will politely disagree with your perspective. Holding fast to an opinion in spite of having new, different or more facts is a choice everyone is free to make. Happens every day. It doesn't necessarily reflect the truth, but it is certainly your choice.I’ve seen all I need to see in a handful of YouTube videos. There are certain personalities I know I will not jive with. Nor actions I wish to condone.
Certainly not but it was necessary. As I posted a bit ago, 90%+ of Defiance customers are getting the deepest discounts and until a few days ago, an individual shooter couldn't purchase a Defiance action even when they can afford it.Was losing customers like GA the desired outcome?
Due to your respectful post, I’m going to drop the matter, but suffice it to say there’s more to my opinion than just the poaching conviction.I respect your opinion and will politely disagree with your perspective. Holding fast to an opinion in spite of having new, different or more facts is a choice everyone is free to make. Happens every day. It doesn't necessarily reflect the truth, but it is certainly your choice.
This is worth quoting. The general public is highly naive to what it takes to have and maintain a location, tooling, hire and retain good help, do some R&D, take care of warranty issues, insurance, taxes, and on and on.Thank you Mr. Stecker. I can’t believe you can build them for $1600 retail or whatever it is and do anything but break even. There’s real money in machine work not involving firearms. Folks need to go check and see what the shop rate is at a machine shop before they decide the action or the barrel is too expensive. I appreciate companies that still do it, I don’t care who’s name is on the sign.
Edit:
Now go build us a damn scope we can drop!
I will respectfully disagree with your first paragraph because individual shooters COULD purchase a Defiance action, through great dealers like Altus, J&A Outdoors, Piercision Rifles, Front Range Precision, and others. I know this because I did it...Certainly not but it was necessary. As I posted a bit ago, 90%+ of Defiance customers are getting the deepest discounts and until a few days ago, an individual shooter couldn't purchase a Defiance action even when they can afford it.
We are compelled to reduce the number of actions we send to builders if we are to supply any actions to individual shooters. We are also compelled to reduce the number of actions we send to builders if we are to minimize price increases into the future.
We are making tough choices during tough times. We wish GA the best. They won't be the only builder that stops using Defiance because we can't continue to supply them all.
We've also stopped all sales outside the USA for the same reason. We will fill existing orders, but we aren't accepting any more.
Amen to that. My dad retired a couple years ago as a machinist in the aerospace industry after 35 years and has done some consulting to a few big and small shops. Just the price increase in materials alone, let alone the upkeep on machines, and wage increases is huge. Retaining help is a big one right now as well in these smaller towns out west with the increase in housing prices. Many of these employees are getting priced out of their towns and getting new people in is almost impossible.This is worth quoting. The general public is highly naive to what it takes to have and maintain a location, tooling, hire and retain good help, do some R&D, take care of warranty issues, insurance, taxes, and on and on.
I'm part owner of a small construction company. Way less overhead than a manufacturing facility, but it still would surprise most people.
There's a reason they say 90% of businesses fail in the first 5 years, and out of the 10% that survive, 90% of the those are gone in the next 5 years.
How is it greed, please explain.This is how greed ruins a good company
I will respectfully disagree with your first paragraph because individual shooters COULD purchase a Defiance action, through great dealers like Altus, J&A Outdoors, Piercision Rifles, Front Range Precision, and others. I know this because I did it...
Perhaps they couldn't purchase directly from Defiance, but other dealers were still selling.
90%+ of the actions that were shipped and are still being shipped today go to builders who get 22% off. I get why people look at the retail sticker price and wince. $1,600 is a lot of money to anyone. If we sold all the actions at retail, they would be cheaper.
Good point. You are absolutely correct. Individual shooters could and can purchase Defiance actions from our resellers. These resellers also get the 22% discount. My point in bringing it up related to product discount mix, the price we sell those products for directly and the impact it has on a company's financial health.I will respectfully disagree with your first paragraph because individual shooters COULD purchase a Defiance action, through great dealers like Altus, J&A Outdoors, Piercision Rifles, Front Range Precision, and others. I know this because I did it...
Perhaps they couldn't purchase directly from Defiance, but other dealers were still selling.
You make several great points. The one I've highlighted above is a huge problem. Defiance is in an area that has a small population and is a regional hot spot for summertime vacations. The result is extraordinarily high housing costs and too few people nearby to fill all the jobs that the area has due to these circumstances. We are compelled to recruit nationwide for entry level roles. Tough challenge.Retaining help is a big one right now as well in these smaller towns out west with the increase in housing prices. Many of these employees are getting priced out of their towns and getting new people in is almost impossible.
You nailed it. Maintaining the right product discount mix balance is a serious challenge when it comes to a company's financial health.Its pretty easy to see what is going on here with some critical thinking using erics own numbers.
@Eric Stecker tell me if this is completely wrong.
Quick math is defiance was selling those actions at 22% less to the dealers at $1150 with 22% off for $897. With the dealers making $250 on the action.
Those dealers were selling to the public at deficance listed prices or more.
The dealers were basically making all the profit and getting all the actions since defiance has a set capacity and the dealers were ordering more actions then defiance had capacity. The dealer discount was probably rolled out when raw material was cheaper. Now that the profit margin has gotten much thinner they can no longer continue to operate at the agreed to dealer margins and need to make rapid and extreme changes to maintain the viability of the company.
They have raised the prices back to $1150 plus a $130 cost of material and labor increase.
Since $1645 less 22% = $1283.10
This is the real amount the action should cost.
This effects a 2 step program which is free capacity for direct to retail market that has better profit margin that they havent had capacity for by cutting dealer alotment.
If you dont like the action cost you 22% more then the dealers tell them. I personally think direct to consumer market is the now/future. I think jason hairston had it right long ago with that model.
Problem is with the down turn with the economy now is not the time to cut dealer ties and make a single price structure direct to consumer jump in an industry that direct to consumer isnt exactly possible due to the processes required to aquire a firearm.
Time will tell.