If they read anything here it would amaze me because they never seem to want to engage with the single biggest group of MT (users, collectors and enthusiasts) in the world
- they continue to make serrated blades because they're better for certain tasks. (whether most people do those tasks most days is less important - a breath of fresh perspective from LM)
In your mind, you need to disaggregate "collectors and enthusiasts" with the actual market for multitools. Collectors and enthusiasts make up probably 1/50,000 of their total market. Even if they buy 100x the regular amount of tools, that's 0.2% of their market. It would make no sense to cater heavily to that sector (although they do from time to time with special editions and highly collectible variants like the Damascus Charge). They aren't building highly specialized tools targeted towards a very particular customer - they are making generally useful tools for everyone.
Overall, it seems that there's a lot of thought that goes in to what they produce (as expected) and the "average user" isn't the average MTo member.
- They've found that most use only two bits, as I suspected.
I wouldn't dare speculate as to their data collection methods, lest I be grouped among the "mind boggling number of people who think they know how leatherman does business"but I would ponder if people only use two bits because they can't be arsed carrying a bit kit/card thing - and if the tools had built in storage, they would use more.Case in point - I have this handy screwdriver that carries two double sided bits...which is kinda neat.I'm not suggesting that this method itself would work on a multitool (or that it wouldn't) just that I rather carry this than a bit card with my Wave - not carrying extra wave bits isn't because I won't use them, it's because I don't find it that useful or convenient (I have a bit card, I find it small, easy to lose, hard to get the bits out of, it's all just a bit hinky)I wonder if something like this was on the drawing board when Gerber released their long bit driver, then when that didn't make a dent in LM sales they moved on as there was no need to compete with it.(Since a specific engineer at Leatherman definitely *doesn't* lurk here and therefore won't ever see this comment, I guess I don't have to worry too much about the eye rolling he's definitely not doing about my guesswork at their planning whiteboards )
I just finished reading that Reddit AMA. I think it's pretty neat that the Leatherman engineers EDC their prototype tools. One of the engineers also said that "One of the cool thing about Leatherman's culture is that there is a modding culture amongst the manufacturing team. There are all kinds of cool one off tools floating around the company." It sounds like the people at Leatherman are just like us, but with more access to spare parts for mods!