Why the huge increase in the price of Sonus Farber Amanti G5 speakers.


Just the other day, the G5’s were $36k and now they’re $43k!  I’m thinking it’s too soon for it to be tariffs.  Is Sonus Farber selling so many pairs that they’re just getting greedy?  Whatever the reason, an almost 20% price increase can’t be good for business.

 

curiousjim

@ghdprentice is the only person in this thread or anyone else on this forum who has the slightest clue about how things actually work.  Without profits businesses fold, private entities in niche markets especially. The biggest overhead in any business is labor and benefits. The people who build SF speakers are extremely skilled craftsmen that are for the most part impossible to replace. Perhaps you’d want them built by robots which after the initial investment and those costs were amortized over several years doing so, would make them cheaper and more profitable which would provide more individuals for the unemployment lines and more burden on their fellow taxpayers.

So many of you have this sense idealism and entitlement that only concerns your own wallets that inevitably results in a decline of your quality of life not to mention all of you who don’t want to pay for music appreciation in their local schools because they consider it a needless expense and they don’t want their taxes to go up. Remember crap rolls downhill!

You sure are cynical. 

While there are a few companies that attempt and get away with charging "excessive" prices for their products, they are far between. Certainly not in tiny markets in highly discretionary markets. If folks don’t think the speakers are worth it, then they don’t buy them. Also, folks buying speakers in the $30K - $100k range are smarter than the average population, not dumber. 

I would think it more likely that a marketing person(s) from Sonus Faber / Bose did a complete analysis of the SF product lines and of the competitions. Considered the sonic characteristics, craftsmanship, global demographics, production costs and forecasted costs, and probably the Bose guidelines for profitability. They would have got together the COO, CFO, VP of Sales... probably the entire executive staff. The marketing team would have spent several hours explaining their findings and recommendations. The VP of Sales would complain endlessly about how they would not longer be able to sell the volumes they had committed to in the annual plan with these price increases. Everyone would look to purchasing to get long term contracts on raw materials to stabilize the material input costs. Anyway, I can go on and on. This is how it works. A huge amount of research and heated discussion by very savvy people trying to make sure they stay in business and make some money. 

Price gouging only works with commodities that are mandatory. Health care, food, water, power. 

 

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+1 @ghdprentice 

@1971gto455ho Sure. SF speakers are woefully overpriced and that’s why nobody has purchased them. Just another pretty box.

They are pretty. Very much so. While I get that they might not be your cup of tea, the performance of the speaker is fully competitive with the others in their price range - even after the increase. I bought into the brand because i liked the sound. They’re more musical and easier on my ears than my previous, very highly rated and accurate speaker. They’re more musical than the other higher end brands sold by my local dealers to which I directly compared them. 

Why is it not possible for some people to accept that we all have different tastes and biases - which is a good thing - as it’s made the industry adapt and provide increasingly competitive choices. You shouldn’t need me to like what you like to validate your purchase. And you shouldn’t need to denigrate a brand and those who’ve purchased their products just because it’s not what you would have done. Millions of people around the world have disagreed with their wallet.

On the business case - I’ll just defer to ghdprentice as he covers it well.

 

@faustuss yes  very true. He knows what he is talking about, while other are mostly guessing. 

Unless you are about to buy a Sonus Faber loudspeaker, then why do you even care what the MSRP is?  How does it effect you?  While I found this thread interesting I really don't care what a Sonus Faber loudspeaker costs.  My interest in the thread was piqued by the vitriol and quasi-conspiracy undertones of some of the comments.  Plus there were several comments about better loudspeakers at much lower prices.  I wish they had named those loudspeakers.

Anybody know the prices of the new Rolex lineup?  I haven't worn a watch in 35 years and plan to die that way, but I think I can muster some faux outrage on the subject.