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Please Help Me with a Market Research Project!

Started by badbadleroybrown, May 19, 2008, 09:52:00 PM

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badbadleroybrown

Hello everyone,

I would appreciate your help with a market research project for my management class.  Please complete the poll and answer the following questions:
1. Do you shoot carbon, aluminum, or wood arrows?
2. How often do you buy arrows and how many do you usually purchase?
3. In what ways can your current arrow be improved upon?  
4. Do you prefer plastic or feather fletches?

**DONOTDELETE**

I buy just the raw shafts, feathers, points, glue & tape.. I cut my own nocks...Plan Jane arrows, just whip-on some poly

JImmyDee

You need some "no preference" and "all of the above" choices...

Rob DiStefano

IAM ~ The only government I trust is my .45-70 & my Ol' Brown Bess

BobW

"A sagittis hungarorum libera nos Domine"
>>---TGMM-Family-of-the-Bow--->
Member: Double-T Archery Club, Amherst, NY
St. Judes - $100k for 2010 - WE DID IT!!!!

tim roberts

Got to agree with Bob W.  The loss of quality POC, has left a void in the wood arrow market.  Some better worded questions, or more options on answers might have been better, but that is just my opinion?
Tim

TGMM Family of the Bow

I guess if we run into the bear that is making these tracks, we oughta just get off the trail.......He seems to like it!  
My good friend Rudy Bonser, while hunting elk up Indian Creek.

heydeerman

I shoot carbon. I have some a few cedar, ash, and lodgepole arrows that I will shoot on occassion.

I rarely buy arrows. I have several dozen shafts and make my own as I need them which is not very often. Remember, I shoot carbon.

I cant think of a way to improve my current arrow.

Feathers.

Rob DiStefano

1. Do you shoot carbon, aluminum, or wood arrows?  
95% carbon, 5% wood

2. How often do you buy arrows and how many do you usually purchase?
Never buy arrows, always make - I always stock at least a few dozen carbon and wood shafts

3. In what ways can your current arrow be improved upon?
No substantial need for improvement

4. Do you prefer plastic or feather fletches?
Feather
IAM ~ The only government I trust is my .45-70 & my Ol' Brown Bess

just a bit outside

1. Do you shoot carbon, aluminum, or wood arrows?
Carbon only. Tried the others but didn't like them.

2. How often do you buy arrows and how many do you usually purchase?
Usually buy arrows about every two years by the dozen.

3. In what ways can your current arrow be improved upon?
No need for improvement. Like them where they are; simple, plain and effective.

4. Do you prefer plastic or feather fletches?
Shield cut feathers... definately.
We should have shotguns for this kind of deal.

Jeff Carter Southern Draw 64" Hybrid LB 43@28/48@28
Zipper SXT Recurve/LB 58" 47@27

BEN

1:   Carbons about 95%
    Chundoo woodies about 5%

2:   Usually buy 1 dozen a year

3:   No need to improve my arrow----just my shooting:)

4:   Feathers----parabolic for hunting.
            ----Shield cut for target shooting (for looks)
Ben
M.O.A.B  54# Thunderstick
Ancient Spirits 62# "Thunderhawk"
Browning Wasp 45#

"VEGETARIAN"----Old Indian word for "BAD HUNTER".

last arrow

1. Carbon 95% wood 5%

2. buy 1.5 dozen carbon shafts per year. Wood shafts about 1 dozen per 5 years.  I assemble the arrows

3. none other than price.  carbon shafts are very expensive for the low level of complexity in thier manufacture.  Must be a lot of cost in distribution and marketing.

4. feathers only.
"all knowledge is good. All knowledge opens doors. Ignorance is what closes them." Louis M. Profeta MD

"We must learn to see and accept the whole truth, not just the parts we like." - Anne-Marie Slaughter

Michigan Traditional Bowhunters
TGMM "Family of the Bow"

badbadleroybrown

QuoteOriginally posted by tim roberts:
Got to agree with Bob W.  The loss of quality POC, has left a void in the wood arrow market.  Some better worded questions, or more options on answers might have been better, but that is just my opinion?
What type of questions or options would you, or anyone else, suggest to make this survey better?

Thanks,

Eric

Dave Worden

I mostly shoot alum, but I have some wood for when it's required.  I usually buy a dozen or less (shafts, not arrows), since I have dozens at home already made up.  I won't even consider plastic fletch.  Yeah, the feathers wear out.  So what?  Now I can strip them and rebuild the arrows.  Making them is almost as much fun as shooting them.  I guess I don't know how to make them better, but I'm not really sure we need to.  The aluminums are certainly straight enough and tough enough.  The woodies bend and break, but then they're supposed to, aren't they?  If I really wanted technological improvements, I'd guess I'd put the bow away and get a gun.
"If I was afraid of a challenge, I'd put sights on my bow!"

hvyhitter

1. Aluminum 99%

2.Have bought 10 to 12 dozen in the past 6 months...hoarding older easton shafts like gold...I hate the UNI nock.

3. Dip and crest for more better purdy.

4.5 1/2 inch shield cut feathers
Bowhunting is "KILL and EAT" not "Catch and Release".....Semper Fi!

tim roberts

By the survey one would guess that you are looking at starting a small business?  With out going back and looking at the question, and going off a slow dial-up memory, it seemed that all the answers were limited to yes and no.  It woulde have been better if my response would have been more choices on the answers.  It seems to me that market research would spreading out the possibilites a little greater than yes or no.  If your intent is to start a small business, best of luck!
Tim

TGMM Family of the Bow

I guess if we run into the bear that is making these tracks, we oughta just get off the trail.......He seems to like it!  
My good friend Rudy Bonser, while hunting elk up Indian Creek.

DEAN

1. carbons
2.every 6 months 2 doz @ a time
3. no need
4.  any type 5 in feather right wing
TGMM Family of the Bow
Comptons Traditional Bowhunter

David in Hickory

1. Carbon or wood(ash, hex pine, cedar)
2. At least a dozen a year, normaly a dozen at a time
3. Arrows don't need improvment but could do away with the shaft tax and get the prices back down
4. Feathers all the way
"When we can no longer draw bows, when sinew has shrunk and bone gone brittle, we will hunt in our dreams because hunting, is part of our souls..."-Primal Dreams

 

Brian Krebs

I have tried many different shaft materials; but I really like to shoot wood arrows. So; I shoot wood arrows. So I cannot answer question 1.
I have not bought finished arrows in 30 years. I make my own; I do buy shafts; and sure would like to see a dozen that don't have run offs; or are so twisted it takes half the winters dull time to straighten out.
 I couldn't answer all the questions; as I have never shot tapered shafts so I don't know if I would prefer them to the paralell I do shoot.
  I shoot feathers only.
THE VOICES HAVEN'T BOTHERED ME SINCE I STARTED POKING THEM WITH A Q-TIP.

backwater

All of the above  but mostly wood.
Every couple of months  about 4-5 dozen a year.
My arrows are capble of better performance than i am.
Feather.

dnovo

Wood 98%  aluminum 2%
I don't buy arrows, I make them so I am very satisfied with my current arrowmaker. I make 2-6 dozen/ year
I taper all my wood shafts and prefer it.
Feathers only.
PBS regular
UBM life member
Compton


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