deewayne2003
AH legend
If I remember correctly from his interviews - He's a former Pepsi executive that bought Swift bullets many years ago.Guys,
I have no dog in this fight. However, I do know a few things about hard business. I was 12 when my mom tells me that the tire factory my dad worked at was going to close down and 2,000+ people were going to loose their jobs. Dad started a construction company.
The guy who owns Swift Bullets is an old guy. He happens to run a business in the middle of nowhere, because that’s the hand he was dealt. Probably started as nothing and would cost millions to relocate. He happens to make an above average product.
Let’s not pretend he can just pay more wages, or move the company; business is too complicated for such easy solutions. If he charges 50-75% more per bullet, that’s not the answer as so many other qualified competitors exist in his exact market.
Business is hard, really hard, there are hundreds if not thousands of influences on why a guy would or would not choose to modify any slight nuance of his business model. Simple math, regarding the “just pay your people more” every single person who works for me would gladly accept a $10 an hour wage increase. That would bankrupt my company in about 4 months.
If I raised my hourly rate $10 an hour in probably 18 months we would have zero back log of work. Meaning only the most desperate and least likely paying customer would hire me. I would go bankrupt.
I am guessing the bullet business in Kansas is hard. Let’s not vilify this guy because he is an anomaly with a great product in a really challenging industry.
YMMV.
John the electrician
That doesn't take anything away from his great products or the stellar reputation that he's built; but the lack of availability is frustrating when you are aware of so many competitors that are by comparison much easier to obtain.
For instance Woodleigh, Not the easiest product to find even before the fire but you could get them; after the fire happened they were approached by an investor that wanted to buy the company and move it to the USA and Woodleigh declined, now their back up and running with two different USA retailers, one of which being a sponsor of this forum.
Last edited: