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[CQ-Contest] "Ham" Manufacturers

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Subject: [CQ-Contest] "Ham" Manufacturers
From: "K5RC" <tom@k5rc.cc>
Date: Tue, 9 Dec 2008 09:08:36 -0800
List-post: <cq-contest@contesting.com">mailto:cq-contest@contesting.com>
I posted this on the Emtron reflector. I have gotten so much positive
response that I thought I would share it with Contesting.com.

 

Let's do talk dispassionately about the topic of hams running manufacturing
companies. I am a management consultant who has worked with more than 500
companies over 40 years. I have had three ham-radio businesses myself. I
have tried to rescue at least three well-known ham manufacturers who did not
want to be saved. Without a willing entrepreneur, my services are
ineffective.

1.    Hams who start companies to serve hams are most often passionate but
misguided individuals who have some particular talent for a product or
service but also have no business acumen. 
2.    Manufacturing businesses require four sets of expertise; leadership,
technical/production, sales/marketing and financial skills. I have NEVER met
a single entrepreneur who was proficient in all four disciplines (including
ME). 
3.    To overcome their shortcomings, entrepreneurs surround themselves
with like-minded people, friends and family. Instead of the four skill sets,
they wind up with group-think and never make progress with their weaknesses 
4.    The product or service is only as reliable as its weakest component.
Each and every part must be evaluated for its reliability, availability and
serviceability. Critical components must be plug-replaceable. "This ought to
do the job" simply does not work in products produced for sale across the
world. 
5.    Manuals must have novice-level instructions and have sufficient
technical data for a skilled service person to fix without calling the
factory. I was looking at the manual for my Johnson 6N2 Thunderbolt amp and
it could literally be built from scratch from the manual. 
6.    The customer interface is critical to the success or failure of the
business. HAMS EXPECT HAM BUSINESSES TO BE THEIR LIFELONG FRIENDS, NOT THEIR
CUSTOMERS. The most dramatic reason for the decline of a ham business is the
endless stream of phone calls, emails, letters and complains from HAMS. When
I sold chrome-moly mast, I was expected to design antennas, do survival
calculations, engineer getting the mast inside the tower, and listen to
hours of war stories about antennas and towers. Even if the entrepreneur
tries to run their business as a "business" the ham customers won't let them
with their constant need for personal attention to non-related issues. 
7.    Failure data and customer input is a gold mine of information for
product and process improvement. Unfortunately, most manufacturers take it
as an annoyance. I am currently working as an expert witness on a law suit
where the company is sued for the same failure once a year. They justify the
legal expense as a "cost of business" because the customers are careless and
use their product incorrectly. Amazing! 
8.    The best you can hope to do as a ham business is "make a living."
Few are financial successes without branching into commercial markets. When
that
happens, the ham customer service goes in the toilet.

 

I disagree vehemently with those who say we should not expect flawless
service from a high-end product. I have been leasing Lexus vehicles for 11
years and have never had a warranty failure. Without naming names, expecting
such reliability from ham-manufacturers probably is folly, but I chose the
Emtrons so that I could run them conservatively and avoid having guest
operators blow them up during a 48 hour contest. I don't think that is too
much to ask.

I like Rudi, Tom, Mike, Mike, George and the other myriad of ham
entrepreneurs I have met and done business with. Perhaps they should spend
some time with Mike Stahl's wife (M2 Antennas). She said the success of
their company is partly due to her policy that Mike is not allowed in the
production shop any more. He is relegated to the R&D lab where his strengths
lie.

I have been working with W7CY for the last couple of years on the next
generation of rotators called the CYclone. Instead of letting hams find the
defects, the rotor has undergone months of testing in a lab and has been
completely redesigned half-way through development. We have had design
review meetings, done market feasibility studies and financial analyses. It
will be the most reliable rotator ever brought to market. It may never get
to market, however, since none of us want to deal with selling to hams.

 

Tom Taormina, K5RC

Virginia City NV

Home of W7RN and K7RC

http://k5rc.cc   FOC 1760

"Communication is the problem to the answer" - 10cc

 

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