Which would you rather have? Or would you rather have both?
When you sell a high end pen to a business executive you are probably taking a customer from one of the "big name" expensive pen makers. Why should he buy from you instead of Mont Blanc? Because when someone sees your pen and asks where he got it, he can casually say "Oh this, I had it custom made by a Master Pen Maker, and it writes as good as it looks. Here try it." That, btw will carry more prestige than saying "It's a Mont Blanc"
Move that down the line to a Low End pen you gave to a relative. The chances are that if someone sees that pen and asks the same question...they might say "Oh this, my 2nd cousin twice removed from Poland, NY makes them and gave me one - and it writes even better than it looks - here try it."
While each above case is from a different end of the "kit" spectrum, they can each represent high quality and if you are selling pens across the spectrum that is exactly what you want them to do.
That's the reason I maintain that quality is conformance to specification, "luxury" has to do with the specification. If you specify a pen made of gold, all other things being equal it will cost a lot more than one made of aluminum. It will cost more even if the workmanship and outward appearance is not as good. Simply because the price of gold is a ton higher than the price of aluminum
In short, two component sets can be of equal quality but have vastly different prices based on luxury. Both can have equally good (or bad) workmanship, plating application, fit and finish, yet one may sell for a much higher price because of the design, size, plating material(s) etc.
So the question (asked often) What is the "best" quality pen kit can never be answered as long as we use the term "quality" to mean either quality or luxury depending on how we feel and each of us has our own opinion as to what 'quality' is.
When you sell a high end pen to a business executive you are probably taking a customer from one of the "big name" expensive pen makers. Why should he buy from you instead of Mont Blanc? Because when someone sees your pen and asks where he got it, he can casually say "Oh this, I had it custom made by a Master Pen Maker, and it writes as good as it looks. Here try it." That, btw will carry more prestige than saying "It's a Mont Blanc"
Move that down the line to a Low End pen you gave to a relative. The chances are that if someone sees that pen and asks the same question...they might say "Oh this, my 2nd cousin twice removed from Poland, NY makes them and gave me one - and it writes even better than it looks - here try it."
While each above case is from a different end of the "kit" spectrum, they can each represent high quality and if you are selling pens across the spectrum that is exactly what you want them to do.
That's the reason I maintain that quality is conformance to specification, "luxury" has to do with the specification. If you specify a pen made of gold, all other things being equal it will cost a lot more than one made of aluminum. It will cost more even if the workmanship and outward appearance is not as good. Simply because the price of gold is a ton higher than the price of aluminum
In short, two component sets can be of equal quality but have vastly different prices based on luxury. Both can have equally good (or bad) workmanship, plating application, fit and finish, yet one may sell for a much higher price because of the design, size, plating material(s) etc.
So the question (asked often) What is the "best" quality pen kit can never be answered as long as we use the term "quality" to mean either quality or luxury depending on how we feel and each of us has our own opinion as to what 'quality' is.
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