Uncle Bill
Member
I have been following this thread with interest, I would classify Fotomipex and JandC as "Microbrewers".
Kodak's big problems are management and their vision for the company. As pointed out, all the Executive suite come from outside the Photo Imaging industry and honestly, in their heads, it all comes down, how many units did we move, be it rolls of Tri-x, sensors, Digi point and shoot crap etc. That is the reason why the company is sick.
One thing I noticed while looking for work in the public relations field, the Kodak website has no page for media releases or community relations. The conference calls made to the money managers raise hackles here, because Wall St gets the message that film does not matter. Meanwhile, film and photofinishing is still carrying the business as pointed out in the numbers quoted in this thread.
Now compare that to a Fujifilm site in your country/region of residence and Simon's active participation on this site on behalf of Ilford is brilliant community relations practice.
What I am getting at is Kodak could care less about the long time customer, at least that is how the optics look.
At this stage of the game if somebody had any brains, Big Yellow wants to get burned in digital world, licsence off the Film business to someone who cares about the product and can do a better job of it.
Kodak's true survival would be something more along the lines of Ilford/Harmon technology. If anything I would cut the digital camera side of the equation and focus on the graphic design, medical and film/photofinishing side of the business and that can include inks and printers for digital output. To use the old cliche, stick to what you do best
Bill
Kodak's big problems are management and their vision for the company. As pointed out, all the Executive suite come from outside the Photo Imaging industry and honestly, in their heads, it all comes down, how many units did we move, be it rolls of Tri-x, sensors, Digi point and shoot crap etc. That is the reason why the company is sick.
One thing I noticed while looking for work in the public relations field, the Kodak website has no page for media releases or community relations. The conference calls made to the money managers raise hackles here, because Wall St gets the message that film does not matter. Meanwhile, film and photofinishing is still carrying the business as pointed out in the numbers quoted in this thread.
Now compare that to a Fujifilm site in your country/region of residence and Simon's active participation on this site on behalf of Ilford is brilliant community relations practice.
What I am getting at is Kodak could care less about the long time customer, at least that is how the optics look.
At this stage of the game if somebody had any brains, Big Yellow wants to get burned in digital world, licsence off the Film business to someone who cares about the product and can do a better job of it.
Kodak's true survival would be something more along the lines of Ilford/Harmon technology. If anything I would cut the digital camera side of the equation and focus on the graphic design, medical and film/photofinishing side of the business and that can include inks and printers for digital output. To use the old cliche, stick to what you do best
Bill