jon_rhees
Member
Registered: Dec 2000
Location:
Posts: 5 |
The answer, in a nutshell:
*Market size*
When you see a GPS, MP3 player, etc. on the shelf at your local consumer electronics department, you are seeing mass-market products. They have a broad market scope, which in turns equates to large quantities, which in turn equates to large competition.
Large quantities+competition = lower price potential.
Never is this more apparent than in the consumer electronics sector. I am an engineer, and it still amazes me to tear open a VCR, etc. today and see what can be manufactured for $60, or even $50.
When quantities are lower, which will simply be the case for Springboard modules, you're playing a different ball game. Manufacturing, parts procurement, etc., cannot enjoy the economies of scale of the mass-market items.
Yes, I know there a lot of Visors out there. But when you consider an installed base of Visors, say, of 2 million, and a manufacturer is marketing a module with an attch rate of, say, 5% of those Visors (which I believe is high for a GPS), that's only 100,000 units. That's a drop in the bucket compared to the market potential for that GPS you see in Circuit City.
-Jon
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