skillian
Subscriber
Fhovie,
I'm not sure I understand your claims of stupidity - maybe you know something about Kodak we don't know, but they didn't create the market forces that are at work today. Given a choice, I'm quite certan Kodak would have preferred to continue making highly profitable film & paper than face the market conditions they're in now. The number 1 rule of running any business is to face reality every single day and management there has no choice but to respond to the marketplace as it is today, not as it was in the past. In recent years, Kodak made most of its money from the sale of consumer film through discount chains, drugstores, airports, grocery stores, etc... The television, microwave oven, telephone and personal computer didn't see the kind of adoption rates we've seen with digital cameras in recent years so this is the reality companies like Kodak are facing. You either get on the bus or you get left behind.
Its easy to play armchair quarterback and question every move this company and others have made. I don't know anything about little distributors or other specific moves they've made, but I do believe that delivering shareholder value is "the right and honorable thing". Anybody in this supply chain who hasn't seen the writing on the wall for years is simply not dealing with reality.
I'll miss Azo and other products, but I have faith in the human spirit so I'm confident that enterprising folks with step in to fill the void. This is where some of the best products ever made have come from - even Kodak's.
I'm not sure I understand your claims of stupidity - maybe you know something about Kodak we don't know, but they didn't create the market forces that are at work today. Given a choice, I'm quite certan Kodak would have preferred to continue making highly profitable film & paper than face the market conditions they're in now. The number 1 rule of running any business is to face reality every single day and management there has no choice but to respond to the marketplace as it is today, not as it was in the past. In recent years, Kodak made most of its money from the sale of consumer film through discount chains, drugstores, airports, grocery stores, etc... The television, microwave oven, telephone and personal computer didn't see the kind of adoption rates we've seen with digital cameras in recent years so this is the reality companies like Kodak are facing. You either get on the bus or you get left behind.
Its easy to play armchair quarterback and question every move this company and others have made. I don't know anything about little distributors or other specific moves they've made, but I do believe that delivering shareholder value is "the right and honorable thing". Anybody in this supply chain who hasn't seen the writing on the wall for years is simply not dealing with reality.
I'll miss Azo and other products, but I have faith in the human spirit so I'm confident that enterprising folks with step in to fill the void. This is where some of the best products ever made have come from - even Kodak's.