Deansocial
Member
- Joined
- Mar 14, 2010
- Messages
- 2,110
They could call the lot carp tool for all i care, if its good i buy it if not i dont. Im not a brand whore
skids said:Kev said:I see very little overlap in the Protool / Festool product ranges ... small circular saw, jigsaw, the odd cordless drill and the vac's ... but the majority of the stuff is uniquely Protool.
All of the concrete grinding / renovating stuff and the angle grinders are quite nice - but I don't believe there's the same margin of differentiation between Protool and "other" v's Festool and "other", so the move could be a branding error in some ways. Let's face it, the guy that grinds a concrete floor flat after removing your tiles doesn't have the same fastidious aura as the guy painstakingly cutting dovetails for you cabinet drawers!
I also believe Protool is made by a lower cost labour force (still European though).
I've seen a lot of very large companies screw up their brand image trying to weave it into a cost saving corporate strategy - it can be quite dumb!
Would as many people buy an Aston Martin Vanquish if it was called a Ford Vanquish? I know I'm talking in a different league - just making the point! A rebadged Focus with Aston Martin would sell for a little while, but ultimately it would damage the brand and the flagship product would suffer image degradation. It's a different scale, but this sort of thing needs to be considered.
Rather that merge the product lines, it would probably be better to leverage Festool but sub brad the range (maybe Festool Industrial - in a way that sets product expectation ... a Protool/Festool angle grinder isn't going to revolutionise your work).
Honestly I don't know this stuff all that well - but I do hear alarm bells [eek] and would like to know the underlying strategy.
I am 100% with you on this one. Totally agree. My preference is to keep these two delineated. No line extension.
Festool is Festool, Protool is Protool, or like you said Festool industrial could create the right image. I think these tools appeal to very different audiences so you can't just slap Festool labels on Pro Tools and call it a day, it's not that simple.
Frank Pellow said:Rick, I think that there is a reason as far as North America is concerned. The Protool brand is only known here by folks like you and me and we don't count. Ten years ago the Festool brand was only known here by folks like you and me but that is changing. Now lots of people have heard of Festool and they know that their tools are right up there with the best. If they want to sell Protool stuff here, the Festool rand would help.
Frank Pellow said:Support for only 240 volt tools would be a problem. Again, I have 240 volt capability both in my woodworking shop and on site (with a generator), but I am not the normal customer.
Frank Pellow said:Rick, I think that there is a reason as far as North America is concerned. The Protool brand is only known here by folks like you and me and we don't count. Ten years ago the Festool brand was only known here by folks like you and me but that is changing. Now lots of people have heard of Festool and they know that their tools are right up there with the best. If they want to sell Protool stuff here, the Festool rand would help.
Support for only 240 volt tools would be a problem. Again, I have 240 volt capability both in my woodworking shop and on site (with a generator), but I am not the normal customer.
Rick Christopherson said:From the very beginning I had always felt this was an unfounded rumor for various reasons. Even in the "wishful thinking department" there are some logic flaws.
First off, consider how closely guarded secrets are within the organization, even for just a new product, let alone a major change such as this. A sales rep would not know about an organizational change such as this until it was already being implemented.
Then there is the wishful thinking:
If Protool is not available in the US or other countries, why would a name change be required to change that? It is the same infrastructure. If TTS wanted the product in a specific location, they would bring it there regardless what the sticker was on the side of the tool. Trademarks are not strong enough to prevent a product from being sold if the desire is there to do so. For example, simply prefixing the name with TTS-Protool would be sufficient.
If Protool is available in only 240 volts, why would a name change be required to change that? Or conversely, just because it gets a name change, why would it force other changes to go with it?
If Festool wanted any of the products branded under Protool to be available under Festool, they would have or could have already done that years ago. It wouldn't require a name merger to accomplish that.
Even though there could be legitimate business reasons for wanting a name-merger, none of them have been touched on in this discussion.
WarnerConstCo. said:You guys get carried away, way to easily.
You can already get your hands on some of the protool stuff anyways.
Like a giant beauty shop in here.
WarnerConstCo. said:Like a giant beauty shop in here.
ccarrolladams said:In the USA there is a long established corporation which has used the ProTools trademark for almost 100 years. I strongly suspect that over the years TTS has researched ways around that trademark and felt the legal battle was not worth the expense.
Alan m said:surly going to another country and getting and keeping a trademark that another company is using is a sign of their intent .
ccarrolladams said:Well, eventually we will see what TTS does with the Protools trade mark they registered in the USA.
Just remember, trademark law is one of the most complicated in the Intellectual Property legal specialty. Often patents are issued than later invalidated when the product approaches the market. The same is true of trademarks.