Lenny Manfred
Well-known member
Maybe i am not understanding the business model here, but this is the message i am getting from the announcement on friday: "we at RED only want to have 7,000 clients, ever.."
In other words, if you where one of the first 7,000 customers that bought a camera, and you did not sell your camera either, then, we still want to do business with you. but if you did not buy a camera from us in our first two years of business, or if you did, but you sold it, we don't want you to buy again from us.
So, if you where a kid during those first two years and now that you got out of school and you want to start doing your own productions, you are out of luck.
If you just got into the "video" camera rental business, you are also out of luck. Or, like me, if you where one of the first couple of hundred people that put your trust and cash into a company that no one had heard of at the time, but then you did not do well with the camera and decided to sell it, but always hoped to try again later, you are out of luck.
Because only the chosen 7,000 will be able to buy this camera as a package at a reasonable price, and the rest of us will have to pay a lot more to own it, and there are all these confusing rules to keep up with that will probably change anyway...
This goes back to my number one complaint i always had about RED, it is more a club, less a business.
I am one of those people that don't like private clubs ("i would never join a club that would have me as a member" comes to mind), or clicks, or bars where they pick you from the line, because you are cool or good looking.
I thought this was supposed to be the camera for the people, what happened to the rebellion?
Now, just like in most communist regimes, it becomes an elitist society where the "friends" of the leader get all the benefits and the people are left out in the cold.
RED! When did you loose your way!?! The Rebellion seems to now be dead.
In other words, if you where one of the first 7,000 customers that bought a camera, and you did not sell your camera either, then, we still want to do business with you. but if you did not buy a camera from us in our first two years of business, or if you did, but you sold it, we don't want you to buy again from us.
So, if you where a kid during those first two years and now that you got out of school and you want to start doing your own productions, you are out of luck.
If you just got into the "video" camera rental business, you are also out of luck. Or, like me, if you where one of the first couple of hundred people that put your trust and cash into a company that no one had heard of at the time, but then you did not do well with the camera and decided to sell it, but always hoped to try again later, you are out of luck.
Because only the chosen 7,000 will be able to buy this camera as a package at a reasonable price, and the rest of us will have to pay a lot more to own it, and there are all these confusing rules to keep up with that will probably change anyway...
This goes back to my number one complaint i always had about RED, it is more a club, less a business.
I am one of those people that don't like private clubs ("i would never join a club that would have me as a member" comes to mind), or clicks, or bars where they pick you from the line, because you are cool or good looking.
I thought this was supposed to be the camera for the people, what happened to the rebellion?
Now, just like in most communist regimes, it becomes an elitist society where the "friends" of the leader get all the benefits and the people are left out in the cold.
RED! When did you loose your way!?! The Rebellion seems to now be dead.