Q.G.
Member
I was under the impression that MAC Group stands for Mamyia America Corportion.
It does.
Ever since they (not Mamiya) secured the right to use the Mamiya trademark in the U.S.
Doesn't mean that they are the Mamiya company that made all the good stuff, nor that they had anything to do with them at all. Except, of course, making it impossible for the real Mamiya company to use their proper name in the U.S.
Thinking about this a little more, it occurred to me that MAC Group was founded as the marketing, distribution and sales arm here in the U.S. for Mamiya products. True, they are not Mamiya, So I think Q.G.'s comment about not allowing even Mamiya to sell products here in the U.S. is a little misleading.
In what way?
MAC is an independent company, whose aim it was to secure the right to trademarks, thus making it impossible for companies to operate in the U.S. unless they went through them. They somehow (still find it incredible) succeeded.
There are no two ways about it: they do not allow even Mamiya to sell Mamiya products in the U.S. Only MAC (holder of the trademark in the U.S.) can.
Other importers (and dealers) just come to an agreement, sign contracts, with both parties being completely free in their decisions. But that's not how MAC does things.
All importers protect their market. No problem with that. But MAC controls the entire way Mamiya products reach the U.S. consumer.
Most photographic equipment is much cheaper (larger market) in the U.S. than anywhere else. Mamiya products are not.
You can get most equipment repaired by local 'representatives' of the people who made the thing all over the world. But MAC (and, i believe, Nikon in the U.S.) will not.
You can buy something abroad and take it home with you, and the manufacturer will thank you for buying his stuff. Trying very often to arrange it that you can get things fixed under warranty where you live, without you having to take it back to where you bought it. If MAC had their way, they would have it confiscated and destroyed the moment you crossed the border into the U.S.
So when you look at the MAC way of doing business, both from the manufacturer's as the consumer's perspective, free enterprise, and its (relative) blessings, is nowhere to be seen.
It could be argued that the MAC business model is a sublime piece of enterpreneurial thinking, but it is not. Or rather, it is, as much as piracy and monopolism are.
Maybe, now that the real Mamiya has gone from being a big player in the market to a company owned and run as a side line by a company making poles for golf flags, MAC's attitude has changed. In this digital age, owning the Mamiya trademark may no longer be a big money maker enough to bother with the strict enforcement of trademark rights.
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