Looper's Delight Archive Top (Search)
Date Index
Thread Index
Author Index
Looper's Delight Home
Mailing List Info

[Date Prev][Date Next]   [Thread Prev][Thread Next]   [Date Index][Thread Index][Author Index]

Re: Looper development and production costs?



If anyone's interested in a blow by blow account of the rise and fall of such things, check out the book "Vintage Synthesizer" by Mark Vail. It's chock full of true life stories of such events. Frankly, when Electrix discontinued it's entire product line to focus on the Repeater, I though Uh-oh. How could they sustain an entire company on one esoteric product? Seems crazy, but I'm not a business man.

Mark Sottilaro

On Wednesday, October 10, 2001, at 09:29 PM, Kim Flint wrote:

that's a good start Doug. you are starting to get the idea, but I think your numbers are still on the optimistic side.

I suggest the following adjustments to your assumptions:
- in low volume electronics production, everything costs much more. Parts, fabrication, packaging, whatever. Anything you think you know about costs from looking at prices of consumer electronics products or PCs is way off from reality for electronic musical instruments. Your $150 COGS will be a bit too low for what I would expect a next-gen looper to cost to manufacture, based on what sort of processing, display, audio components, controls, memory, i/o, etc it would have to have. I would guess it between $200-$300 if we don't get too fancy.

- In the niches of the musical instrument industry, I would consider selling 1000 units in a year to be quite a big success for mid-range rack mount stuff. Most things probably won't sell that well. Sustaining that for several years is not likely. Your 2000 unit/year number would be a smash hit, probably beyond the realistic size of the looper market at this time. Maybe it will grow that big, but it is not there now.

- sales on esoteric new products can be weird. Musicians are very conservative in general, and don't really go for new things. So if you introduce a new kind of product you might see good sales at first as all the really experimental types get it to try, then a big fall off while others wait to see what they think. if it is good sales will grow slowly as the advance users figure it out and start incorporating it in music that others begin to hear. That vast majority won't even think about it at all until they see their favorite musician icon using it in a hit song they like. That can take years. So after all your R&D expense, you have to be ready to ride this out.

- $2M R&D is probably a comfortable number for a normal industry, although in the MI industry people usually cut a lot of corners to do things for less because they can't afford it. (with the associated risks of taking shortcuts coming into play later, usually). You might be able to do this for $1M, although most of that would go into salaries for engineers and other key people. Add in marketing related R&D, prototyping, lab equipment, travel, computers, development tools and such things and maybe we call it $1.5M. So depending on how complete of a job we do, it may range between $1-2M. Basically, you have to realize that a looper is a complicated electronic system. Much more so than your average effects processor. It takes a lot of difficult engineering, and it's the same cost to develop whether you are going to sell 500 or 500,000. In small volume products, a lot more of those development costs show up in the price you pay.


So play with those numbers. What kind of prices are realistic for a small company trying to make a "modern" looper and remain in business? (by any standard measure of corporate size, even Gibson is a small company. In fact, the entire musical instrument industry combined is smaller than many mid-sized corporations.) How frequently will such a company be able to afford to design a new version of it? Every year? two years? 5 years? longer? How long does their product have to be able to last in the market? Is it possible that line6 is right, in saying it isn't worth it to pay the cost of a programmer to add more looper functions to their delay? How big of a risk do you think Electrix is taking by betting it all on the Repeater, and what is their business prognosis given their pricing?

This is not an easy business. Look at Alesis. A few years ago, they had one of the hugest hit products ever with the ADAT. Now they are bankrupt! There are a lot of those stories.

kim


At 08:44 AM 10/10/2001, Doug Cox wrote:
Since I don't have experience in the audio hardware development field, I
have to make some broad assumptions. I'm sure Kim will let me know where
I'm wrong.

If $2 million was spent on R&D, including the labor and materials for
development, testing, market analysis, etc... everything that R&D implies,
these $s can be put on the balance sheet and amortized over 5-7 years.
Let's use 5 years for conservatism. That's $400k per year of amortized
(non-cash) expense.

Let's say that following the R&D effort, the organization had an ongoing
overhead cost of $1M per year. That's just for executives, sales/marketing,
haircuts, etc.

Let's say that the ongoing cost of production is $150 per unit. That
includes materials, labor, equipment depreciation, any licensing costs, etc.
"Cost of goods sold", as the beanheads call it. Let's also say that this
$150 per unit figure assumes that 2000 units are produced and sold every
year.

So:

$400,000 R&D Amort.
$1,000,000 Overhead
= $1.4M general expenses annually
divded by 2000 units
= $700 per unit of overhead costs
+ $150 per unit mfg costs
= $850 per unit total costs

If the company wants to earn a 15% return, they'd need to charge $1,000 per
unit

All of this ignores transportation costs, which seems to be an important
issue in the current EDP scenario. Although I lumped a lot of things into
those 2 general expense categories, I may have left out other important
costs too...

Is this even close? How do other complex pieces of audio hardware get
developed and sold for less? Obviously, if the same company can spread that
$1m per year of overhead across multiple product lines, each one gets
cheaper. Same is true for some of the manufacturing costs... Finally,
economies of scale kick in for wildly popular products - if I can make and
sell much more than 2000 per year, my costs per unit will drop dramatically.

Hey, you asked... and I assumed you were at least 50% serious. At least
Kim, Andy, Matthias, et. al. could use this as a starting discussion point,
and help us understand the costs involved. Or not :)

Doug

______________________________________________________________________
Kim Flint | Looper's Delight
kflint@loopers-delight.com | http://www.loopers-delight.com