MSRP, diferentiation and the illusion of value


I've been an audiophile for a very long time.  I've gotten to listen to a wide variety of gear, and even participated in the creation and manufacture of some audio gear in my past.  Took college courses in audio engineering I was not prepared for, and read quite a bit from the usual audio rags.

I want to share something I think every audiophile should know, which is how manufacturers leverage the suggested retail price (MSRP) as well as product differentiation to create this illusion of value.

A lot of gear sounds different. Cables are good examples. You make a cable which sounds different to a perceptive ear.  It doesn't matter if it's better or worse, but just make it different, and raise the MSRP above other cables costing similar prices to manufacture. Throw on some connector jewelry and exotic fabric to dress them in and bam, your $1 to make cable just became $250.

My point is, too often audiophiles want to equate different sounding with better. If the MSRP is higher, well, that reinforces this idea that this difference must be going towards some illusory holy grail, floating above the tower of nuns. Another factor that benefits the seller is that we almost never ask ourselves how much this difference is worth.  Lets accept that these cables, or speakers or amps are different sounding, and that you have judged that difference as preferable to what you wanted to buy when you started. How many of us step back and ask "is this difference worth the $$$ being asked?" Will it make my life that much better, or am I just bejeweling my sensual pleasures every chance I get?

I'm not begrudging anyone the right to spend money how they please.  I do however think audiophiles who feel like they work hard for their money to stop and think about these natural forces when judging how they will spend it.
erik_squires
@erik_squires 
Great topic…
Ive spent a lot of money on audio, to learn I didn’t need to spend a lot of money ….   That and I stopped reading stereophile …
Along with over 50 years of experience in trying various combinations of equipment..  I found that buying descent gear allows one to buy and try more gear without losing much value.
As much enjoyment and time I spend in this hobby, it’s a bargain at all the great musical moments it brings alive..  Priceless ! and time isn’t standing still.. 
Enjoy the music ! 



Hi Erik
Surely you know after decades on this forum that all its contributors are entirely objective when evaluating hi-fi kit, are never influenced by any hype from manufacturers or anyone else and would never spend money on over-priced products or snake oil?

Not.
In academe, it’s titled behavioral economics — a longstanding group of disciplines. I suggest that most readers have reached your realization on their own. 
Why do some women buy teeny tiny little purses that are not very good value? Because they think they are pretty and like them. Fashion statement. Bling!   Same thing. Only with mostly men.  
There is an economic concept that may fit this post - inverse elasticity of demand. Put a 6.00 price tag on a bottle of wine and folks will think it is awful and not buy it. Put a 30.00 price tag on the exact same bottle of wine and suddenly folks are talking about the wine's lovely bouquet and well-integrated tannins, and they buy it.