Yamaha completes acquisition of Bosendorfer piano:
will maintain Vienna production and unique piano designs, but will
reassess global sales & marketing.
Music Trades • Feb, 2008 • FOREFRONT: NEWS * ANALYSIS * INFORMED
OPINION
YAMAHA FINALIZED ITS acquisition of Bosendorfer, the famed
Vienna-based piano maker, from Bawag Bank, on December 20, 2007. The
final price will be determined by an audit of B6sendorfer assets and
operations. However, estimates place it at approximately $21.0 million.
The purchase brings together two companies on opposite ends of the piano
making spectrum. With 2007 production of 93,700 units, valued at
approximately $550 million, Yamaha dwarfs Bosendorfer, which built just
300 units at its Vienna factory. In announcing the acquisition, Yamaha
CEO Mitsuru Umemura stressed that both piano businesses would continue
to operate independently and that the Bosendorfer factory in Vienna
would be maintained. However, he said that combining Yamaha's
manufacturing, marketing, and management expertise with
Bosendorfer's craftsmanship, tradition, and tonal quality would
strengthen both businesses, and that the combined enterprise would be
better equipped to address the growing global market for premium pianos.
Umemura stressed that Yamaha is committed to preserving
Bosendorfer's unique tonal quality and that there were no plans to
alter the handcrafted manufacturing process or shift production outside
of Vienna. He said that "Bosendorfer's manufacturing
facilities, which are the basis for the company's craftsmanship,
are in solid condition," adding, "Craftsmanship resides in
people. We will sustain the current employee group as part of our plan
to carry on Bosendorfer's technology and skill." Yamaha will
work to incorporate its Disklavier player-piano technology, and
"Silent Piano" technology into the Bosendorfer product line.
Bosendorfer production peaked in 1999 at slightly over 500 pianos.
Since then, the company has struggled financially, selling approximately
300 units yearly. Umemura said that Yamaha's global sales and
marketing expertise would immediately be applied to increasing
Bosendorfer sales to previous records. However, he emphasized that sales
would not be automatically turned over to Yamaha's worldwide
network of distribution subsidiaries. "We are going to examine all
our distribution contracts on a case-by-case basis to determine the best
course of action," he said. Given that Bosendorfer's exclusive
distributor in Japan recently filed for bankruptcy, he left open the
possibility that Yamaha's Japanese dealers could soon be
representing Bosendorfer pianos.
Yamaha has long addressed the concert piano market with its CF
series of grands. The latest model, the CF-III, has won praise from a
broad cross-section of pianists including Chick Corea, Elton John, Abbey
Simon, and Norah Jones. How will Yamaha manage its concert operations
alongside Bosendorfer, which also has a lengthy artist roster? Umemura
again stressed that the two lines would operate independently. He said,
"The positioning of Yamaha pianos and Bosendorfer pianos is
completely different. The two pianos are built to satisfy completely
different tastes. By combining the two product lines, we will be able to
satisfy the needs and tastes of a wider spectrum of performers."
Founded in Vienna in 1828 by Ignaz Bosendorfer, Bosendorfer piano
achieved acclaim a few years later when virtuoso Franz Liszt said it was
his favorite piano because it was the only instrument that could stand
up to his vigorous playing style. The piano company soon became an
integral part of the rich Viennese musical tradition. Bosendorfer
remained in family hands until 1907, when it was sold to Carl
Hutterstrasser, an employee. In 1996 the company was acquired by Kimball
Piano & Organ, which hoped to use Bosendorfer's reputation to
enhance the image of its American made pianos. Kimball exited the U.S.
piano business in 1988 and sold Bosendorfer to Bawag Bank of Austria in
2002.
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