Why Is Hi Fi Gear So Darn Expensive?


Why Is Hi-Fi Gear So Darn Expensive?! - The Absolute Sound

Interesting read.

"I recently heard a small 2-way stand mount speaker at a show. The sound was excellent. The product was priced at $50,000 or thereabouts, per pair. Allowing for distribution and marketing leaves about $25,000."

$25000 for distribution and marketing? Really? That much more for this than a similar product at 1/10th the cost?

I don’t doubt the marketing cost per unit could be much higher with boutique products. Makes sense. Is the cat is out of the bag regarding the value proposition of boutique products?

How about fancy fuses marketed for free here that cost practically nothing to ship? Oh my!

I guess there are "excellent" expensive boutique products and others that offer value everywhere. Hifi not unique. Take your pick! Live and learn!

The article also chalks up people’s reactions to high-fi prices to emotion. What about the sound they hear? Real or emotionally distorted? What would Mr. Spock think about that? I know he likes music...he plays a harp!

128x128mapman

On a more serious note, I also bought  a pair of the Ohm 2’s for $7xx.  Between improvements and inflation the new Ohm 5’s cost almost 5 grand with shipping and handling. 

When I was in the retail jewelry business, margins percentagewise were greater on the cheaper items, with markups as little as 5% on the higher ones - and this was paying mall rents. When gold doubled in price, existing jewelry was suddenly worth more and we charged more as consumers foolishly wanted gold jewelry more at the higher prices than when they (and raw gold prices) were cheaper.

The point that’s never made when discussing prices is simply that manufacturers and retailers charge what their market will pay. Otherwise, they will either go out of business or have to cut their prices (or both). Big box retailers price their products based upon price sensitivity - in a grocery store, milk, bread, eggs and bananas are have much lower markups than the rest of the store as people determine affordability by those items and shun stores they perceive to be high.

Years ago, Mark Levinson’s original company’s products were held by many, including Stereophile, as the top of the then available consumer level equipment and now, even used, are still going for more than an average consumer would pay. Since demand still exceeds supply, prices stay relatively high, even for decades old items. How many of these $100k speakers or amplifiers will hold that value?

There are two standard ways of pricing: First, the market: basically compare your product with the available on performance and aesthetics, then to price accordingly. The second is cost plus… basically all costs plus the profit you require. If what you want to manufacture has the market price less than the cost plus price… you should not produce it… you lose money.

As a consumer you have a choice. Buy it or don’t. So the market of consumers will determine if the speakers you are talking about are worth it. There are a few people out there with lots of money with no sense, but this is the exception, not the rule. Folks that have made a lot of money typically have worked for it by being perceptive, educated, smart and not wasting money. So, if these speakers are successful. There is probably something to them.