Okay that is far more than I was expecting, at £210, particularly as it is £178 directly from moraAvailable for pre order at the Bath Bushcraft Store, the Lok looks great, but that price Mora Lok
No affiliation with the store, but they have been great to deal with when I have purchased from them in the past.
£190 for the Wit and cleaver.
Who do you think the target market is? I'm skeptical that most people about to drop ~£200 on a 4 inch knife wouldn't have more than a passing interest in the specs of that knife. For a Mora Companion impulse purchased at a camping shop, sure, they probably don't care beyond carbon steel or stainless.I'd just like to add, I don't think Mora has overpriced these. I believe that it's a well researched launch and campaign.
There's obviously data they have that says I) the market can bare this pricing, and ii) most people don't care about the steel used.
The storytelling thing they have going has been a buzzword in branding for years as a way to connect with people and get them invested emotionally, and the data obviously says that the green messaging is what people care about, that's why green washing is a thing.
I've been saying for a while that the data doesn't actually always align with behaviour. For example, I want to support sustainable farming, but I'm price sensitive and I prefer to have meat than not, so Tesco gets my business instead of the farm stall on Saturday.
The other thing is that I think I'm the only person I know who cares at all about knife steel. My whole family and friend group think I'm weird... There's more of them then there are of us... But you know what, they like hiking and camping too. Maybe they'll feel good about a high quality recycled steel knife to cut their bread and make a tent peg with? Maybe they don't care.
The big takeout for me here is that the people on this forum aren't the target market for this knife, but some will buy it anyway because we decide with our hearts. (If we're meant to be the target market someone screwed up pretty badly)
Mora is expanding it's audience with this and I find it very interesting to see if it's a success or not from a strategic point of view.
You know, I'm not 100 percent sure to be honest. I imagine there to be a style conscious demographic with money to burn.Who do you think the target market is? I'm skeptical that most people about to drop ~£200 on a 4 inch knife wouldn't have more than a passing interest in the specs of that knife. For a Mora Companion impulse purchased at a camping shop, sure, they probably don't care beyond carbon steel or stainless.
As you said some will sell, but I don't think it will be the success they hoped, then they will have two choices....sell off slowly any remaining stock or drop the price.You know, I'm not 100 percent sure to be honest. I imagine there to be a style conscious demographic with money to burn.
Being careful of what I say because I don't want to cause offense, and I don't intend to because we all have our own ways and reasons for our hobbies. So...
Imagine the person with all Fjallraven gear, the best cooking sets and sleeping gear, a Gransfors SFK. But they get out once a year for a weekend. I think this person will buy it without thinking twice.
Then the person who walks into an outdoor store and says they want to start an activity and take what the guy behind the counter recommends... Who often doesn't know much themselves. Even with a bit of internet research this person would see years of people saying "buy a Mora"... The most expensive one must be the best right?
There also seem to be different types of bushcrafter social media types. Some who post interesting skills and some gear, others who post the latest and greatest knife pictures in front a campfire and lots in-between. I think the gear driven ones will buy... And influence others to buy.
If I had money laying around I'd consider one of these myself actually. I don't even bushcraft much. I spend most my outdoor time course fishing and I live in a town without easy access to woods I'm allowed to camp in. Yet I'd still buy if I had the money... I guess the target is the better off version of myself
£190 for the Wit and cleaver.
That‘s a lot, especially when they don’t specify the steel.
I think they want to move upmarket, like Seiko did a few years ago.
Yep it is, I won't be buying one
Steel is the regular stuff
recycled is marketing for the hippie crowd
That was my original point, and in the case the opposite for the garberg upon release was £50 everywhere....then it went up to £100 for a time, and now it has settled to around £70 to £80.We’re all still working off of the assumption that we will pay full RRP for these. When did you last pay full RRP for an item of outdoor gear, whatever it was? We don’t because the internet makes things so competitive for retailers. I anticipate within a few months these will be had for £60-£70 less than RRP and although this is probably still expensive for what it is, people (maybe even me) will buy them because they trust/admire the brand and have confidence in those tools.