"And already a successful one, at that. It's difficult to say something is a flop when it appears to have sold more than US$50m worth on day one of availability, with hundreds of millions of other orders still outstanding. I doubt there's anyone in Tokyo thinking the Z9 is a flop. Certainly not at Nikon headquarters, and I'm pretty sure not at Canon or Sony headquarters, either."
E precisa dizer mais o quê? Se isso é um fracasso, o sucesso seria vender para cada habitante do planeta uma Z9?
Kkkkk esse ódio contra a Nikon é hilário.
"It's ironic. About fifteen years ago I started covering the business side of cameras, and I wrote quite a few articles pointing out an upcoming "volume change" that was going to change the business. After that change happened, I noticed more and more sites trying to provide the same sort of analysis I had been, but not understanding what a volume change really meant. Tracking volume for a business only is instructional when there's a strong change in volume occurring. I.e. rapid expansion, a flip from expansion to mature or decline, or a strong decline. And even then you have to account for change in strategy. The Japanese are particularly good at changing strategies based upon market conditions.
Anyone trying to assess where Nikon Imaging is today and how successful they are or will be shouldn't be spending much time looking at volume. Nikon made the choice to get out of the chasing volume business and rebuilt the business on a different strategic model. So, to all those sites that keep picking up (too late) on things I write about: where's you article on the "new Nikon model" and how successful they are at that? Right. Isn't very click-baity, is it?"