Discussion:
#1 Forklift manufacturer

In the US, Clark used to hold the #1 position for market share. Then Toyota came along & took top honors. My question is- what did Clark do have have the #1 position and what did Toyota do to earn it?

Back when Clark was king of the hill, I don't really think their product was head & shoulders above the rest. I certainly don't think their product was bad- just not over the top better than the rest. And as far as Toyota, their early trucks were bare bones, again- nothing over the top. Just a simple unit that was easily maintained.

Was it the pricing of the units, or perhaps the dealer networks in place at the time? Or maybe the dealers themselves had better service from one brand to the next? Or something else I'm ignorant to- any help would be appreciated.
  • Posted 1 Nov 2012 01:27
  • Modified 1 Nov 2012 01:30 by poster
  • By bbforks
  • joined 1 Mar'12 - 1,437 messages
  • Pennsylvania, United States
bbforks (at) Hotmail (dot) com
Customers love technology- until they have to pay to fix it!
Showing items 21 - 21 of 21 results.
bbforks;
MIS-MANAGEMENT.
This is often the case as I'm sure johnr j would also say. Having seen good firms fail. R&D, failure to stay price competative and not hearing customer's needs-wants and desires. Another key factor is "GREED" (the parts are of more value then the whole).
  • Posted 1 Nov 2012 02:03
  • By MEngr
  • joined 15 Jan'11 - 247 messages
  • Missouri, United States

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Fact of the week
The word "okay" (or its abbreviation "OK") originated as a humorous misspelling. In the 1830s, a fad in Boston involved using abbreviations of intentionally misspelled phrases. "OK" stood for "oll korrect," a playful mispronunciation of "all correct".