Svar said:Yes, the market is hobbiests with means. People who do woodworking for fun and like to leaf through catalogs. Limited time gives a sense of exclusivity. Nothing wrong with that, different things make us happy. Similar niches exist in automotive, photo, etc. industries.Crazyraceguy said:There must be some kind of market for this business model, because it is apparently working? It's just not for me.
Crazyraceguy said:DeformedTree, do you really think that the majority of US users don't make their living with their Festool equipment? Why? is there some statistical evidence of this? or is it just the feeling you get from people you know or even from here on the forum?
I'm not disagreeing, just wondering, because I actually do. Also, several guys I work with either now or in the past do too. At least two subcontractors/installers have bought DF500s, RO150s and one got a TS55 based on my experiences and recommendations. Maybe because of my involvement in the trade, but I don't personally know any hobbyist woodworkers.
Certainly, in my retirement, I will keep them and use them. This would make me a hobbyist at that point, but I will still have acquired them as a professional?
Maybe this is why so many people complain about the cost? But even then, I see pros who do not see the value or have the willingness to invest in themselves.
DeformedTree said:I think most contractor just are not keen on buying very expensive gear, they buy stuff where it if gets destroyed that day, they can run to the big box store and be back in business.
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A Pro needs to make a business case or a cost justification for the tools. A hobbyist does not.
squall_line said:DeformedTree said:I think most contractor just are not keen on buying very expensive gear, they buy stuff where it if gets destroyed that day, they can run to the big box store and be back in business.
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A Pro needs to make a business case or a cost justification for the tools. A hobbyist does not.
Many hobbyists on a budget make cost justifications, too, especially if the original tool is a project-based purchase. Hire out the job or buy the tool that will allow you to do the job yourself? If you can justify using it for more than just that project, the case makes itself.
squall_line said:The irony is that the mindset of "I'll just buy the cheapest thing I can get my hands on and if it breaks, I'll buy another one" lives on in the hobbyist world just as much as the professional world. If it didn't, places like Harbor Freight wouldn't sell through as much as they do.
squall_line said:If you're in a trade where you get into the specialty tools or some of the specialized ways that the Festool "system" works, the time and hassle difference may start to make up for the price difference.
Alex said:Over here Festool is 98% bought by professionals.
On this forum I see a lot of theorising by people who hardly see any Festools around them.
Joebuck said:Over here in the States (Southern California at least), the Festool brand seems to be entirely geared towards woodworkers (furniture makers, cabinet makers etc,) which by its very nature is an area in which a lot of “hobbyists” occupy the space. I can’t claim to have been in many professional cabinet shops lately, so I don’t know how much penetration the Festool brand has in these settings, though I suspect it’s pretty substantial. Track saws and Dominoes would be attractive to any professional who calls him/herself a woodworker by trade. In the construction trades, seems every pickup or van is filled with red or yellow “Max Volt/Fuel” cordless tools of the variety you buy in bundles.
Joebuck said:We are surrounded by big box lumber yards, which is the main tool source for many in the construction trades, and none of them sell Festool. Here in Orange County, we have a pretty decently sized Professional lumber yard that carries Festool, though even before the pandemic, their inventory was pretty lacking which probably indicates lack of sales. It’s the Woodcraft stores and now Rockler that remain the only reliable source for buying these tools off the shelf.
For me, being a hobby user, it is actually the opposite.Crazyraceguy said:For me, if I was a hobbyist DIY person, I would really struggle to see the value. But as a pro who builds reception desks, bars and things like that for a living, the speed/simplicity of the system make a big difference.
Crazyraceguy said:It may just be me, but if I was a DIYer, I could never justify any of it. There are other ways, they just might be slower, which wouldn't necessarily matter to me.
Dr. P. Venkman said:Crazyraceguy said:It may just be me, but if I was a DIYer, I could never justify any of it. There are other ways, they just might be slower, which wouldn't necessarily matter to me.
Replace “DIYer” with “hobbyist”, and you’re more in Festool’s non-pro market. These aren’t people whose goal is to fix or build something in their house as economically as possible. These are people that enjoy the process and enjoy using nice tools.
Dr. P. Venkman said:Replace “DIYer” with “hobbyist”, and you’re more in Festool’s non-pro market. These aren’t people whose goal is to fix or build something in their house as economically as possible. These are people that enjoy the process and enjoy using nice tools.
It is a huge deal in practice.Crazyraceguy said:The idea that better tools will somehow make a beginner DIY person automatically better, I just don't see. There may be some validity to junk tools leading to bad results, but it can't be that big of a deal, can it?