Current orthodoxy in the camera market is based around the triumvirate of Sony, Nikon, and Canon. They hold the keys to the professional full frame sector, supported by wide ranging lens systems. However the last decade has taught us that change is normal, so would the best future for the sector lie in Nikon ending camera production?
No business is too big to fail, with some failing more spectacularly than others, Kodak being a case in point. However reality is often far more nuanced and Olympus' recent offloading of its camera division has shown that there are actually a myriad of ways for this to happen, which doesn't necessarily mean the loss of a product line. Just witness Minolta's transformation under Sony. Sales, bankruptcies, hostile take-overs, and closures are all on the cards when it comes to an imaging division moving on to a new future. It has been the same since the birth of photography: businesses start up and sell products before morphing in to something new. However the period of camera history we now find ourselves in is markedly different from anything else that has gone before and there are two key reasons why this is the case.
The Present Day is Unique
Firstly, it's no secret that sales of digital cameras have fallen off the edge of a cliff. We are regularly regaled with large year-on-year reductions in sales, but it pays to see what that actually looks like over the history of the digital camera (from CIPA sales data). As the graph below shows, the change has been seismic. They haven't just dropped, they've imploded. In 1999, film and digital sales had parity but since then it's all been about the digital camera. It was a success story predicated on increased consumer spending and microelectronics. Everyone wanted a digital camera and the golden years were 2007-2012, all with over 100M units sold. That's a lot of cameras.
Fable likes to point to the release of the iPhone in 2008 as the turning point when the smartphone outgunned and then outsold the compact camera market. The truth is that digital cameras were already in feature phones, starting with Sharp's J-SH04 in 2000, then outselling compact cameras by 2003. It took a few more years before consumers realized that they no longer needed a separate device. The impact was catastrophic with sales crashing from 120M to 60M in three short years, before entering free fall. In fact the last time camera sales dropped below 20M units was 1984 which gives an idea of the scale of collapse within the sector, except this time there are large companies contracting rather than small companies expanding.
The business impact has reverberated ever since. Building 120M cameras doesn't occur magically. The design, manufacturing, and sales channels needed to be spun up with profit returning to those that cornered this part of the market. Capacity expanded and cash flowed back to investors. The peak in sales coincided with the development of mirrorless which subsequently saw an unprecedented amount of research, development, and innovation. New camera systems abounded, born out of the compact camera boom; they were the perfect antidote to weening a wealthy public on to more expensive systems.
The reality was somewhat different as sales crashed, surplus stock was sold off, excess manufacturing capacity was wound down, and dwindling profits clung to. Those companies that made the right strategic choices at the start of the 2010s would reap at least some of the benefits and Sony was particularly successful in this regard when you consider that before 2006 they didn't have a camera division, yet by 2019 they were the number one seller of full frame cameras in Japan.
Secondly, digital cameras have become complex, high cost, devices which are as much about successful design as they are about supply chain sourcing and just-in-time manufacturing. Gone are the days of a small number of suppliers piecing together purely mechanical devices in a single factory. As this CNBC article about electronic suuply chains shows, in 2018 Apple worked with 43 suppliers across six continents but when you break this down in to raw materials it gets even more complicated. Apple sits at one end of the spectrum where it undertakes the design itself, but then outsources component manufacture and assembly to a global production line. Camera manufacturers tend to undertake much more manufacturing and assembly themselves, but this still relies upon a chain of third party suppliers. The complexity of design and manufacturing is at a level unseen in the past and is therefore a significant barrier to entry in to the market.
Exacerbating Factors
The above two unique features that are shaping the current camera industry have been exacerbated by two further factors. The first of these was the impact of mirrorless interchangeable lens cameras (MILC). Were they an inevitable outcome of digital camera development? Yes, in the sense that at least some manufacturers were always going to produce a MILC design. However more broadly no, at least not in the manner in which they have currently disrupted the market. The unique combination of timing and manufacturers has led to the current slow decline of the DSLR. Timing was important as all the seeds for mirrorless had been sown in the previous decade, in large part by Olympus starting with the Four-Thirds E1. With the peak in camera sales just about to arrive, manufacturers rushed to market with a plethora of new mirrorless systems. Foremost amongst these was Sony fresh from its 2006 purchase of Minolta with its E-mount sporting MILCs. Sony had the capacity, expertise, breadth, and vision to define the market and was also not heavily invested in DSLRs. They saw an opportunity and ran with it. Perhaps if sales had remained buoyant then the DSLR market would have persisted longer — it's difficult to know, but the knock on effect was to invest heavily in the development of top-shelf MILCs and so the balance of power shifted in this direction. Nikon and Canon rapidly followed suit as it became evident that not only was their core compact market largely gone, but that the DSLR sector was contracting.
As the graph above shows, the camera market has been gradually shrinking, with some manufacturers teetering on the edge of financial viability, as evidenced by Olympus' recent announcement. What the market didn't need was a shock to the system and this is precisely what it has got in the form of the COVID-19 pandemic. CIPAs sales figures for 2020 make pretty grim reading. January was down 20% on 2019 with 800k units, however this crashed to 370k units in May. Many businesses have been hit by the pandemic, but those that don't have a financial cushion will be severely impacted.
A Sustainable Camera Market?
The chain of events which I've outlined above has led to one key problem: the market has shrunk back to the size (in unit sales) it was at in 1984. In short there are too many companies, too many products, and too much production. The net result is excessive competition for an ever diminishing market. In order to combat this, production needs to downscale and become more efficient. The latter could in-part be addressed by following Apple's lead and focusing upon core camera expertise in terms of design and then outsourcing production in order to streamline supply chains and then manufacture in lower cost domains. Some camera manufacturers already do this, it's just that the scale of operations needs to increase.
In order to address excess production, there needs to be a net reduction in capacity. Whilst this may occur with Olympus' sale of its imaging division, this is currently a transfer of operations not a closure and, anyway, accounts for a relatively small proportion. In order for there to be a bigger market shift we would need to see one of the bigger producers — and specifically one of the big three — to pull out of the market. Canon and Sony are both too heavily invested, too diversified, and too successful to want to withdraw. That leaves Nikon as the single prime candidate for closing its production line. This would have the benefit of reducing capacity and so competition, allowing a lift in prices and so margins for the sector.
It would also benefit Nikon in terms of its focus as a company which has significantly shifted away from its Imaging Division. It is increasingly accounting for a smaller amount of income whilst incurring losses as it loses market share. Unlike all of the other main camera manufacturers who have much broader income streams, Nikon is still largely an optical company. Imaging Divisions can also be vanity projects for some corporations, persisting longer than they rightfully should given the lack of revenue.
Should Nikon cut its losses and exit the camera market? And would this result in a more balanced and better performing camera sector?
CLICKBAIT! I have noted the author and will be avoiding ALL "articles" from him in the future.
Summary: G A R B A G E
Fstoppers content quality is sinking.
People are too judgmental as if everyone venting their spleen? What happened to free speech....next thing people will go blue in the face with rage....corona anyone?
Why are you attacking Lain's free speech?
Free speech subject to libel and slander in law. Decorum? My point to slag off fstoppers content fine and dandy but to label it GARBAGE shows a rather bad tempered dialogue like a collective ritual of tortured souls in the last days of the Roman Empire. Is that where we are today? Everyone sees red?
If it was a comment to an article I would not care in the least BUT it's not!
It was an Article on the front page of Fstoppers so I would expect a higher quality and not such clickbait.
As for the US and A1 I hope you are going to be doing the right thing on Nov. 3?
Vote for Nikon / Nixon......now more than ever. Trump another Nixon Republican waiting for his Watergate / Waterloo. Winner takes all.
Oh I should have known... a profile with 1. no profile image 2. no portfolio images 3. no profile text.
Who is the hiding little dork now? you have invalidated all your comments by writing from such a profile so just stfu.
Dork....from England. No mug shot available. Not familiar with your clipboard vocabulary.
Who writes this sh!t? Perhaps they should exit the industry. And what is happening to Fstoppers editorial process. It's been declining over recent years. Not much further to fall.
Click bait article. By that logic Fuji is dead as are all other brands apart from Sony and Canon. 🤦🏻♂️. Fstoppers article quality has taken a nosedive in the last 18 months or so. Sad.
FStoppers.....sad? But not that bad compared to Dpreview?
The article comes across as weak and whiney. Not a lot of depth other than "the market has shifted". Welcome to the free market!
On the one hand, I'd like to see 2 more articles, each highlighting why Sony and Canon should exit the market. But frankly all you'd need to do is switch names around and then republish/recycle this one.
Maybe try something different. Hostile Takeover: why (Big 3 company name) should take over (another Big 3 company name).
But fewer companies means less competition. That means less innovation and higher prices for consumers, with a likely drop in sales as a result (especially entry level, consumer grade product).
What the market needs is a shakeup similar to what Tesla has done for the automotive world. That would drive innovation and competition.
The five stages of grief:
1. denial
2. anger
3. bargaining
4. depression
5. acceptance
Most Nikon-afficionados are currently in stage 1 or 2, as can be witnessed here.
Prepare yourself to wander through the next 3 stages as Nikon shuts down camera business. If you need help in the process, you can always make contact with the Olympus-fellows, which already proceeded to stage 3, 4 or 5.
🤣
Snobs ruin everything. Whisky snobs ruin drinking, coffee snobs ruin breakfast, & in this case, photography snobs try to ruin being "amateur".
My take on the article? Camera manufacturers failed to identify their market, and are paying the price. Much like the laptop & cell phone manufactures, the industry seems focused on short-lived, high-end units crammed full of leading edge technology to command a premium price (and higher profits). I get it, profits keep a company...um...profitable.
The average consumer just wants a good, reliable product at an affordable price. Perhaps camera manufacturers should take THAT into consideration? I mean, let's face it, the basic parts of a 35mm SLR-style camera hasn't changed much over the past few decades.
For years I've been using this website mostly to host some of my photos and to read something once in a while, fully aware of the bullshit articles like this one.
But... YOU'VE DONE IT!!
I can't be complicit anymore. I'm deleting my account and I seriously hope you never touch a keyboard in your life again.
Fstoppers...fuck off.
When I read the headline, I read this:
The Best Thing for the Camera Industry Is for Nikon to Exist
I approve of that headline.
What a contorted logic to reach an absurd conclusion for a clickbating article.
One of the three largest camera producers in the world should just decide to commit harakiri?
And removing a competitor is good for industry and end-users?
Canon and Sony are heavily invested but Nikon are not?
They don't want to withdraw but Nikon does?
They have strategies and investments in place but Nikon don't?
Being diversified means being better at a specific industry?
Oh, and "In order to address excess production, there needs to be a net reduction in capacity." - Yes, and? What about reducing costs, increasing margins and improving product mix to sustain the business with lower volumes?
What a great solution to industries downturns, just convince large businesses you don't particularly like to shut down, everybody else will be so much better off...
Was expecting an article in the calibre of bythom (http://bythom.com/). Sadly underwhelmed and disappointed.
Several hundred words of generic, possibly recycled, words about the industry with two paragraphs of brand-wars drivel appended. What a waste of time.
*unsubscribe*
are u freak'n kidd'n me!? how self absorbed can u get to write drivel like this...
Nikon should not fold. This article is nonsense.
But, it is going to be incredibly hard for ANY camera company to do R & D, sell cameras in a declining market and still make a bucket of money. Nevertheless, the market and manufacturing will adapt to the changing conditions. Take Fuji for example. Fuji looked at the market and has done a very good job pushing into the medium format area to innovate and reduce the cost of 50 mp+ cameras. Sony for its part, is a consumer electronics company that has done well in the camera market. Canon is much the same. Nikon will figure itself out and move forward. Lastly, if people really want Nikon to fail, just remember that competition and innovation won't happen with just two or three companies. You'll have an oligopoly or a monopoly and then you'll be crying the blues over that.
Wait for the paid YouTube "reviewers" and their ilk to get ahold of this. It'll be like Christmas in August. How many of the YouTube crowd are in the pocket of certain camera companies? You can sell their bias from your computer screen.
People need to calm down just a little bit. And all the mentions of journalist in this thread is hilarious. FStoppers is essentially a photoblog with contributors writing opinion pieces. So yeah, calm the fcuk down.
What a load of mindless tripe. The best thing for the photography industry would be for Mike Smith to be given a gag order! This is the last "Fstoppers" article I am going to read. See ya!
Eliminating entrants to the game is not the correct play. The smarter thing that Canon and Nikon especially need to do, is lessen the number of camera models they manufacture. There are WAY too many in the mid-level to entry level dslr range, primarily crop sensor. It creates buyer confusion, floods the resale market and hinders new sales.
PS... coming soon...a follow up Fstoppers article touting "Can you believe this shot taken by a cellphone?!?!"
F-Stoppers articles have been on the down hill slide for sometime
As a Nikon user, which I chose because it had what I wanted and fitted my big hands, I disagree. Perhaps there is another reason sales fell, everyone already has their ideal DSLR and the rest are using camera phones and finding that they are crap at taking photos so won't bother getting anything better. I only decided recently to invest in a DSLR as I won a couple of contests and had pictures published from my camera phone. I wanted more night time photos which my CP couldn't do so I am able to do the stuff i want with the lenses i need.
As I had an accident many years ago which meant I cannot carry heavy objects for long periods or grasp for any length of time, I had a lot of considerations and as I had previously used a Nikon and liked it I decided on that. Like a tradesman with his tools, you can take one of their tools and an identical one and the tradesman can pick out his over the identical one, it has a "feel" to it better known as muscle memory.
As far as I am concerned, why doesn't Sony take the hit, they have their fingers in more pies than they know what to do with. When they were moaning about people sitting in cinemas copying their new releases, I came up with an idea how to stop it. Sony's response, well there was no response! That's how interested they are to stop losing money
Deleting FStoppers from my news feed.
I did that awhile back.
you should look at Mike Smith website
Higher function ILCs have traditionally ALWAYS been a very limited niche market with the exception of a few years after the advent of affordable digital imaging.
Before that the vast majority of photographs taken were with little film point and shoot cameras; Instamatics or whatever. Nearly every household had at least one.
Now the smartphone is the point and shoot, and high function ILCs are simply reverting back to their niche status.
There really is very little supporting reason given this for an exit by a major player. To the extent that thre is logic here, it would be better applied to a conclusion that all small players exit, than one of the big three exit. But even that doesn't make much sense. Nikon, Canon, Sony, Fuji, and Hasselblad all add to the industry hopefully can survive. What really would be helpful is if Nikon were bought by a conglomerate that wanted a prestige brand and had money to give Nikon plenty of runway and cushion.
Personally I'd rather see Canon leave the market, of the big 3 they are the only one pushing 2 separate mounts for mirrorless and have a tendency to cripple their cameras.
While any of the camera manufacturers would love to see Nikon fade away so they've got less competition, it wouldn't be good for the photographer/consumer. It sucks for the camera companies but the stiff competition results in innovative new products and lower prices.
The real question is should Mike Smith be allowed to write another article?
Mike - You mentioned “the last time camera sales dropped below 20M units was 1984”. You did not show year 1984 in the graph, however from shown 1999 to 2002 each year was below 20M.
And the answer from Nikon: Yes Sir yes!
Is there a setting for hiding posts from certain authors?
“Just kill yourself, Nik. Nobody likes you. Do it now.”
(Cut to open casket viewing) “I’m so sorry, Nik. I wish I could take it all back...”
Again, more click bait garbage.
The problem with Nikon is their accessibility. I live in Puerto Rico. We have the United States Post Office, and deal in US dollars, but they won't ship anything here. If I want to get my camera repaired quickly, I have to fly to New York.
Guessing the author is a Canon user?
Sony and Nikon have shared technology for years, Nikon making the best bodies with up until recently, Sony chips.
You don't throw the baby out with the bath water...or 70 years of development and backward compatibility with lenses over decades.
Competition drives technology and controls price. As a Nikon user since the 70's I would find it hard to accept we were just left with Canon and Sony....and eventually just Sony then if you follow the arguements to their natural conclusion.
Although I guess there's always innovators Fuji for brilliant rangefinders and medium format...!!
Interesting information until he had to make a case for Nikon's demise. A bold and irresponsible title with shallow arguments to support it. "Here have my segment of the market, for free" CRAZY. Well crafter click bait - I should have know before wasting my time.
What a silly article! Less competition will keep or increase prices. Prices need to go down not up.
You know we have been hearing about the demise of the camera market for years......and Mike Smith just seem to want too perpetuate that argument. I have been using Nikon since I was 15 year old and will continue too use Nikon for many years more.....So please Mike find something else to write about cuz frankly your boring
raphael bruckner photography
It is not going to happen. Give me single example in any other industry with such scenario. Nobody quits just for the sake of the industry or idea.
I don't know if there are too many cameras out there but there are certainly too many photographers. Perhaps Mike Smith should offer to retire to open up the field a little.
I can't comment on what's best for the industry - I'm not involved in any of that. I can say the my two favorite cameras, for different reasons, are my Leica M10 and my Nikon Df.
I don't know what will happen with the mass market, if anything - seems like hardly anyone thinks they need more camera than what's available on their smart phone, but for those of us who are actually USING our cameras to produce/create PHOTOGRAPHS (read about Ansel Adams) a good quality camera, with a good collection of available lenses, is what will keep a company going.
DPReview has lots of specs. Ken Rockwell has lots of practical reports on the gear he has used. I don't always agree (I still have my Leica M8.2 that he hated), but he's on the right track.
I've been using Nikon ever since I bought a Nikon SP to replace my old Contax IIa, and eventually got into the F. My own limited experience with Canon and Sony sent me back to how I feel about Nikon. As to my Leica M10, it's the closest camera I can find to use just the way I used to use my old Nikon and Zeiss Contax gear.
Maybe the author should exit the “clueless pundit writing nonsense” market. That would certainly benefit the photographic community.