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For reference this series originally aired in 2019. Since then Simon Kohler has retired from Hornby
Simon has clearly said he did not retire. There's more to the story, it seems.
This part 2 gives good insight into the bad blood between the Mfgs and the shops, and the production of the show seems to frame it as a 'dick move' on Hornby's part.Seems like a pretty ruthless move to try to return to profitability by rush producing and under cutting prices for duplicate products being produced by your 'competitors' when those same competitors are also the dealers you rely on to sell your product.~Ian
I recall there being rumbles when Horizon Hobbies bought Athearn, clearly a vertical consolidation, and the other elephant in the room, Walthers.But what has come of it? Walther's sold the N scale stuff it ignored back to the manufacturing sector (Atlas) and Athearn remains a reasonably innovative player as really a third stringer in N scale, but with a pretty strong distribution network, plus its expansive and expanding HO reach.Neither of these really scratch the surface of the relationship that Hattons and Sheffield have/had with Hornby. Horizon and Walther's are primarily distributors, not retailers (although you can buy direct from Walther's, not sure about Horizon) but not in the bricks and mortar sense that the UK seems to prefer. A more direct comparison would be if MB Klein or Lombard Hobbies actually did a full on manufactured and proprietary product line. (custom paint jobs on someone else's model are pretty common, but an actual product run is not.)
Hmmm. A few takeaways.I recall there being rumbles when Horizon Hobbies bought Athearn, clearly a vertical consolidation, and the other elephant in the room, Walthers.But what has come of it? Walther's sold the N scale stuff it ignored back to the manufacturing sector (Atlas) and Athearn remains a reasonably innovative player as really a third stringer in N scale, but with a pretty strong distribution network, plus its expansive and expanding HO reach.Neither of these really scratch the surface of the relationship that Hattons and Sheffield have/had with Hornby. Horizon and Walther's are primarily distributors, not retailers (although you can buy direct from Walther's, not sure about Horizon) but not in the bricks and mortar sense that the UK seems to prefer. A more direct comparison would be if MB Klein or Lombard Hobbies actually did a full on manufactured and proprietary product line. (custom paint jobs on someone else's model are pretty common, but an actual product run is not.)I think the key points are:The prior management of Hornby failed the retailers by not providing the products that were needed in a timely manner, and Simon was working to correct that. It's pretty remarkable that he got the two "competitive" models out in a year's time.The retailers, on the other hand, were attempting to meet the product demands, but were clearly out of their league and had a steep learning curve with overseas manufacturing, product development, pricing, and marketing. Simon wasn't wrong when he said that perhaps they were stepping into his arena as a manufacturer, rather than staying in their lane as retailers/distributors.And, at the end of the day, business is business. Hatton and Sheffield took a risk to try to meet a market demand, and someone with more resources was able to beat them to the market. It is what it is. Clearly there was a market for an updated Terrier, just as there was a market for an updated Bachmann Consolidation. Hornby wasn't wrong to make that staple of their product line a priority. The unspoken comic opera in all of this is the whole Chinese manufacturing thing. After the old MTH vs Lionel hubub of a few years ago, it would be hilarious to learn that both of the Terriers are being assembled in the same plant.It was enjoyable to watch the process unfold, and it makes me wonder about the old "gentlemen's agreement" we used to talk about when manufacturers would steer clear of a particular model because another maker was producing, or had produced that same model previously. (SD40-2 anyone?) Suddenly we have three different Big Boys, several E units, and other such models, and they all seem to be be doing just fine in the sales charts. There's likely room for more than one Terrier.Now I have to get back to work.Lee