Vacuum Cleaners Discussions |
|
Motorhead
Joined: Nov 2, 2007
Points: 409
|
|
Re: Dyson, In The News...
Reply #111 May 12, 2008 3:36 pm |
|
Probably a loving, caring, concerned husband, son/daughter who wants to make their Wives' and Moms' lives easier and simpler so they have more free time to themselves. It's like doing the vacuuming for them. Many husbands, sons/daughters do this for their Wives and Moms for Mother's Day for the same reason. Why not make it a permanent daily gift with a robotic vacuum? Come on HS. You've been inhaling too much powdered baking soda and its nuking the limited thought processes you have. Carmine D The Roomba is not a REAL vacuum cleaner. True, it may have a suction motor, but many toy vacuums have a suction motor as well, and most are twice as powerful. Even that POS Oreck will remove more dirt than a Roomba, and just barely. The Roomba is no more of a vacuum cleaner than the Swivel Sweeper. Anyone who takes these things seriously must have some REALLY dirty rugs...
|
M00seUK
Joined: Aug 18, 2007
Points: 295
|
|
Re: Dyson, In The News...
Reply #112 May 12, 2008 3:57 pm |
|
Hello Carmine, with all respect, I think justifying the Roomba's low sales figures because it's not a 'real' vacuum is missing the point. It's little more than a toy robot, that happens to be a surface cleaner.
I will concede that it appears to represent the best feature to value choice in the market at the moment and that's not to say that iRobot's trial and error won't lead to an improved product in the near future which could well be a replacement for the household cleaner. The reason I take issue is that, in this regard, they're much the same as Dyson. They're both launched products that might not be 100% perfect, but that if they strive too close to perfection each time, they're at risk of their R&D costs putting them out of the race for good. In summary, iRobot is allowed to launch products with shortcomings, but Dyson is not?
|
CarmineD
Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894
|
|
Re: Dyson, In The News...
Reply #113 May 12, 2008 5:39 pm |
|
Hello M00seUK: It is most definitely a surface cleaner. And most robots these days are that: surface cleaners. That's the reason in part I said they are used to supplement full sized user required vacuums. As a supplement, I would not expect the sales to rival full sized vacuums. They are not counted along with vacuum sales. But in a specialty category for household appliances. iRobot for 14 years was in the business of making robotic bomb detonators. Still does. But it was unprofitable all the time. Why? Because there was no pervasive demand for bomb detonators among the buying US public. When it used the robotic technology to mass produce the Roomba in 2002, the company's profits soared. First time in 14 years it did not run a loss. The following spring, the privately held company went public at $12 per share. Prices of the robotic vacuums went down with subsequent generations of models, due in part to the influx of investors' capital for the purchase of its stock. Sales are and have been brisk [at least here in the USA]. iRobot owns the market for robotic vacuums in the USA. And will I suspect for the near term. There is no viable competition even close in performance, price, or sales. All this in the same time [actually 6 months less] than the time dysons have been in the USA. Roombas are number 1 in their class. Carmine D.
This message was modified May 12, 2008 by CarmineD
|
CarmineD
Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894
|
|
Re: Dyson, In The News...
Reply #114 May 13, 2008 8:22 am |
|
Hello M00seUK: If you haven't seen, here is a link on the various household and garden products offered. More importantly the number of products, on-line customer support to maintain all the products, and tips for use. Very impressive to me. http://homesupport.irobot.com/cgi-bin/irobot_homesupport.cfg/php/enduser/home.php?clear_cookie=1 BTW, despite the economic market downturns and additional issuance of more irobot stock, which generally dilutes the stock market price, the iRobot share price has held steady at $12.50. Not many stocks can make this claim so far even this year to date. Most have seen stock hits of 10-20 percent. Must be doing something right for everything wrong. Carmine D.
This message was modified May 13, 2008 by CarmineD
|
DysonInventsBig
Location: USA
Joined: Jul 31, 2007
Points: 1454
|
|
Re: Dyson, In The News...
Reply #115 May 13, 2008 4:35 pm |
|
|
DysonInventsBig
Location: USA
Joined: Jul 31, 2007
Points: 1454
|
|
Re: Dyson, In The News...
Reply #117 May 13, 2008 7:00 pm |
|
Ace,
Yes, I saw your link, thanks. I happened to catch the broadcast live, I hope to see the DC24 demoed soon too. DIB
|
CarmineD
Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894
|
|
Re: Dyson, In The News...
Reply #118 May 16, 2008 7:26 am |
|
Chalk up 2 more free DC25 offers in the same day, a $500 product. Same marketing research firm for both [BrandnameRewards.com Promotions, a limited liability corporation based in Boca Raton, Florida] but different from the others. This firm adds the "cyclone' moniker to the dyson DC25 model. If my count is correct this makes 9 in 4 weeks. Will I get 10? Week ain't over yet! Carmine D.
This message was modified May 16, 2008 by CarmineD
|
DysonInventsBig
Location: USA
Joined: Jul 31, 2007
Points: 1454
|
|
Re: Dyson, In The News...
Reply #119 May 16, 2008 10:36 am |
|
|
|
|