It is true that corporations don't exist to build loyalty, but instead to build profits, but loyalty often results in profits too.
I best re-state my prejudices. As I have said before, I am a Kodak "brat". My father worked for Kodak Canada for 36 years, and it is his Kodak pension that allows my parents to enjoy a comfortable retirement.
I have near infant memories of wandering through a Kodak lab, after hours, while my father attended to some after hours task that might be expected of a middle level Kodak manager.
I have used Kodak products since I was 8 (more than 40 years). I have also used and appreciated Ilford products, and probably some others as well in the mists of time (Edwal FG7 and Rodinal come to mind).
My overwhelming impression of my father, and many of those who he worked with and who I had the good fortune to associate with, was that they cared about the Kodak products they represented, and cared about the customers whose interests they served.
Kodak is going through difficult, changing times, and in order to appease the capital market interests that they need to serve, they are saying things, and doing things, that make many of us who use some of the more traditional materials unhappy.
But even with that in mind, they are still a very large and important source of analogue photographic materials.
I would suggest, that rather than helping the likes of Ilford, Efke, Fuji et al, if Kodak's involvement in analogue photography disappears, then the blow to that industry will be crippling.
Competition with Kodak is good for Ilford, Efke, Fuji et al, because it helps keep the industry in the public eye.
There used to be tens or hundreds of millions of people shooting film. Huge numbers have left, for digital. Large numbers have remained, and new users are joining too.
If the numbers stabilize, and money can be made, it will not be long before the CEO of Kodak will be referring to that smaller, but still profitable film/analogue division as a source of revenue, profits and confidence, and pointing to the huge R & D advantage that that (smaller) division will still enjoy. Advertising of film/analogue products will resume/increase and all of Ilford, Efke, Fuji et al will benefit.
If the numbers do not stabilize, and the market continues to spiral down to a tiny, niche market, Kodak will leave, many if not most of the others will fail, and the doom and gloom prophesies will come true.
I would suggest that, if there are Kodak products you like to use, don't leave them because you don't like the corporation's spin on certain issues. Instead, continue to use them, and try to get someone new or returning to try them out too.
Supporting stability or growth in analogue photography will assist our needs. IMHO, advocating the abandonment of one of the largest players in the industry will not assist.
Matt