tugger
Well-Known Member
I have no doubt and I in no way condone their activity nor should my knowledge of the owner imply that I would, but I recognise the old owner, and would also have recognised the new.
This looks like not very well hidden advertising for your labour rates!We hear on the grape vine, (visitors, reps, customers) all sorts of woes and tribulations about what is or isn't happening at various yards on our coast.
I have to say that there seems to have been a lot more stories coming true this year.
Even for businesses that on the face of it seem ok you then hear some strange decision making which smacks of either greed or desperation.
One such is the trend toward charging contractors a set fee for working on site.
This used to be something like £35 per day or I think Foxes charged £500 a year.
I hear things are changing in the new year to a charge of £15 per hour !!
This obviously gets pushed onto the customer and tries in effect to force the customer to choose the yard facilities at their rate of £48 per hour or more, making it very hard for the man in a van to make a living no matter how good he is.
Bad news for any of the folk recently made redundant who might think they could go it alone.
On the up side it helps yards like us with a charge out rate of £28 per hour but then we don't have a marina stuffed with boats on our doorstep so folks have to make an effort to get here.
I hear also that some yards are trying to stop owners from working on their own boats and using yard facilities.
Often using health and safety and other such spurious excuses to justify it.
I find this daft and short sighted.
What ever happened to developing a long term relationship with customers?
All automotive manufacturers worldwide use a minimum of 15% of contract engineering and test staff, and the UK leads the world in their supply.. I was one for more than 20 years until the recession and senior managerial opportunities led me to permanent employment.I have great sympathy for those made redundant at Fairline, Foxes, and also Caparo (near my home), Tata, Redcar, JCB (laid off) etc. That sympathy is associated with anger at our governments, last Labour, Coalition and the Present Tory, and the Bank of England for so shaping our economy that we have such a high pound that manufacturing finds it so very hard to compete. Moreover many more companies, such as JLR have a large number of their "employees"as bought in agency workers so that the company can fluctuate the size of the labour force, usually without adverse press coverage.
I dont know the full details of the Fairline saga, but I do know the misfortune of Sealine, 10 miles away from my house. The company was created out of a caravan manufacturing business and built up over 20 years or so by hard family work and then sold to a large American Company, who to be fair invested until the 2008 recession forced them to retract overseas and it was sold to a company who shortly afterwards, as with Fairline, closed it down. The intellectual rights then passed to Hanse and the brand is now made in Germany. Ironically some of the premises are now used to mold glassfibre panels for caravans and horse boxes!
I speculate as to which country and brand the Fairline moulds will go. Bavaria? Arcona? South America? We shall see.
Since you are apparently too dumb to consider the possibility that I may not have actually seen your post while being otherwise engaged, I don't imagine that you will be up to understanding any possible answer.
And i have always done so.Firstly I'm sorry if I gave the impression I was advertising and having read my post again it can be read as such but my actual intention was to flag up a comparison which as an owner and sailor myself I thought was relevant.
I am perhaps guilty of living in the past a little where there were essentially three types of boat works.
1, Owners doing it themselves,
2, A man with a van or small local shed/workshop.
3, A boat yard with lifting, covered workshops, painting facilities etc.
My point is that it seems that there is less opportunity for 1 and 2 to exist and in many cases this is driven by the yards.
Once a yard has removed 1 and 2 it can raise its rates as its created a localised monopoly.
As an boat owner I believe this is sad and in the longer term, bad news for all but the wealthy owners who can afford full yard rates.
Driving the small first timers or folk sailing on a tight budget away, forgetting that one day these same people may well upgrade and require full yard facilities in the future.
I'm in the lucky situation that I'm able to carry out much of the work on my boat myself and that our harbour allows us to do it.
Firstly I'm sorry if I gave the impression I was advertising and having read my post again it can be read as such but my actual intention was to flag up a comparison which as an owner and sailor myself I thought was relevant.
I am perhaps guilty of living in the past a little where there were essentially three types of boat works.
1, Owners doing it themselves,
2, A man with a van or small local shed/workshop.
3, A boat yard with lifting, covered workshops, painting facilities etc.
My point is that it seems that there is less opportunity for 1 and 2 to exist and in many cases this is driven by the yards.
Once a yard has removed 1 and 2 it can raise its rates as its created a localised monopoly.
As an boat owner I believe this is sad and in the longer term, bad news for all but the wealthy owners who can afford full yard rates.
Driving the small first timers or folk sailing on a tight budget away, forgetting that one day these same people may well upgrade and require full yard facilities in the future.
I'm in the lucky situation that I'm able to carry out much of the work on my boat myself and that our harbour allows us to do it.
Firstly I'm sorry if I gave the impression I was advertising and having read my post again it can be read as such but my actual intention was to flag up a comparison which as an owner and sailor myself I thought was relevant.
I think it's horses for courses. Usually I do my own maintenance and get pleasure from so doing. Occasionally I have paid a yard to do some work, not necessarily where I keep my boat and, when pushed for time have taken the hit and had a big job done at considerable expense.Yep, but as I said, the marina that pulls those stunts will soon lose their first time feeder customers. Then their older customers retire.move away/sell the boat and....no more business except for those that can afford the full concierge service. Not many of those in reality
Please don't apologise, I like your labour rates and your attitude to customer service, if we can't advertise that sort of thing on our own forum then what the heck has happened? I plan to ask for a quote.
As for some others on this thread the vituperative posts and uncool posts about mobos, those who drive them and those who build them - are they ECF? This is a local forum for local people whatever they drive or build![]()
+1Come on everyone, the tone of theses comments don't reflect the friendly nature of the ECF......leave other forums for that, they are much better at it.
I am still confused why anyone would be happy at the demise of a British boat builder, that employed local people and supplied by other British businesses who will also be out of pocket for unpaid orders. I wish all former employees of Fairline the best of luck in finding alternative employment.
As for some others on this thread the vituperative posts and uncool posts about mobos, those who drive them and those who build them - are they ECF? This is a local forum for local people whatever they drive or build![]()