John C
Well-known member
Actualy this is a great thread. It is something that gets talked about in many different ways.
here is the dilema....I dont want ot make crap.
I wanted to make something of quality and something ergonomically sound.
That leaves me in the dust on the flavor of the month club unless someone big uses it for awhile.(Keith Richards, EVH)
If they are good and mad ein America thenthey will cost more.
My marketing on the strings is aggressive and balls to the wall on the guitars it is almost zero.
My main signature artists are virtuosos.
virtuoso, made in usa, limited production= higher price....the kids are usually influenced by more fashonable players and safer guitar choices along with a smaller income base make our guitars a stumbled upon discovery.....
BP,
Good points. As an EBMM fan, my first "choice" for getting the word out is to have someone just play one; I've loved the feel of EBMM necks since I played a Silo back in 1989 or so; I was even more hooked on the necks when I tried an EVH in 1992 and an early Silo Special in 1995. It took me a while to actually pull the trigger on one - maybe because I had an aversion to custom ordering back in those days and I really wanted an s/s/s one, not the s/s/h versions the local dealer was stocking at the time.
However, as a marketing researcher by trade, I can also see that EBMMs often generate an immediate "Yes"/"No" response - i.e. "Yes, I love the neck; I've got to get one" or "No, that neck isn't for me". It's almost an immediate response; like me, you're hooked immediately or you hang it back on the wall and never pick up another one. Of course, that is an issue since the AL neck is different from the Silo Special neck, which is different from the Axis neck, or the Luke neck, or of course the JP neck. Again, getting the word out is key - EBMM does indeed have the "different horses for different courses".
BP, you also mention your price point on the EBMMs. I don't think your price point is outrageous. In fact, it is pretty much in line with G&L and the upper-level Fender lines (the Amercian Deluxe, American Vintage, USA Signatures, and American Hot Rod Vintage). In fact, a Silo Special in just about any finish other than that year's Limited Edition is going to be within $100 of an American Deluxe Strat, which has "comparable" features (locking tuners, upgraded pickups, etc.). You could wind up spending more on a G&L, depending on options. Of course, none of these have that magical EBMM neck, which is why I'm posting here instead of on Guitarsbyleo.com or the Fender Forum.
At 45, I can play whatever I want. As some RSI issues have robbed me of some mobility, I've spent a lot trying to find the "perfect for me" guitar neck. Most of the usual small-production suspects have come and gone; the Silo Special is the one that does it for me when playing a 25 1/2" scale guitar. For that I'm thankful to BP, Dudley and all the EBMM staff for this guitar. I realize that makes me kind of an "outlier" in the guitar market. However, as evidence by the younger posters on this thread the "viral" marketing of just getting the guitars in people's hands works wonders.