This concept was not lost on King Gillette, who, many, many years ago
realized that the profit wasn't in razors but in razor blades.  He sold the
razors cheaply, or gave them away, in order to get people to buy the
blades.  To this day that concept still works for many products.

John Celio's explanation, and my experience talking with a couple of
friends who sold cameras, supports that POV.  My friend Rich, who worked at
a local shop, mentioned that the $$ was in accessories and lenses more than
in the camera bodies.

Shel



> [Original Message]
> From: William Robb

>
> I started selling cameras at about the same time 
> AF SLR cameras started  coming out.
> There was tremendous price competition at the 
> time, and everyone from  the manufacturers right 
> to the stores had to accept really slim margins.
> If you didn't, then the camera on the next shelf 
> over that did the same thing for 5 bucks less was 
> the one that sold.
> The real money back then was in lenses and 
> accessories. Bodies were  pretty much a loss leader 
> to get some glass and flash units sold.
> I pay attention to the market, up until a few months 
> ago, I was still  part of that marketing machine.



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