Millicarat 50 Marketing Problems | 
    
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Why did the Millicarat not sell?
We 
were very proud of the Millicarat scales. They worked excellently and we had 
very few returns. But apparently we misjudged the market. We had extensive 
experience in the market for .01c scales which were used primarily by colored 
stone dealers. But the Millicarat (.001c) was for diamond merchants. It seems 
that these two groups of people are about as different as it is possible to be 
in outlook toward the world. 
The colored stone dealers are adventurers. They travel to Colombia and get 
knifed in the jungles. They bring stones back from Afghanistan. They consider 
huge risks a normal part of their daily existence, and risking a few hundred 
dollars on a small scale is nothing to them. They flocked to our Gemscale 50 and 
appreciated the follow-on .01c products. 
Finished diamond dealers are among the most conservative humans on the planet. 
Many do not travel whatsoever beyond their offices. They live in safe enclaves 
in New York or Antwerp, within a mile of where their fathers grew up. Often 
their attitude toward a new product is "If it wasn't good enough for my 
grandfather, it isn't good enough for me". Of course it wasn't available for 
their grandfathers. So they just use Mettler and Sartorius, the large scales. 
And our Millicarat is designed for travel, which is pointless for them. 
Dealers in rough diamonds, while sometimes adventurers like the colored stone 
dealers (or even worse, as some are in Africa!), do not need .001c accuracy and 
thus use the less expensive .01c scales. 
The other market we intended to hit with the Millicarat was retail jewelry 
stores who dealt in diamonds. We thought that its smaller size would allow it to 
fit in a drawer when not in use, thus conserving space in a crowded store where 
every square inch was potential selling and displaying space. I think there were 
two reasons this never happened. First, due primarily to the portable nature of 
the scale and the "Legal-For-Trade" laws originating in the pre-digital age, we 
never could get "Legal-For-Trade" status for our pocket-sized scales, enabling 
them to be used in retail trade. Second, retail jewelers valued the impressive 
and traditional appearance of the large table-top scales, which lent an air of 
respectability to their stores. A Millicarat stored in a drawer could never do 
this. 
And the Millicarat, while substantially less expensive than the large scales, 
was still more expensive than our .01c scales. So the outcome was that no one 
group ever bought them in enough quantity to support their production. It was a 
pity, they were great scales, a technical success which took us almost ten years 
to perfect, but a marketing disaster. 
C'ést la vie! 
 
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