Originally Posted by Traindiesel:
Originally Posted by RadioRon:
Right you are Chris...... While he MAY have been there... in 10 years & 20 York meets, I never personally saw Jerry at York even once. Guess he didn't like having his ears chewed off by rivet counters. This in the face in what was an informal industry tradition upheld by leaders of the hobby: Mike Wolf, Dick Maddox, Dick Kughn, Maury Klein, Jerry Williams, Joe Hayter, etc.... each of whom was glad to chat with their customers.
Posted by cbojanower: Interesting, while he never really connected with the "Train Guys" he led Lionel through a period most others would have declared bankruptcy & run. Not only did he save Lionel he put it way back on top of the O-Gauge world.
While he may not have stayed for the entire Meet, Jerry did attend a few OGR Forum grandstand meetings.
Best to Jerry in his future. Thank you for your contributions to the hobby.
There is an old saying: "a little knowledge is a dangerous thing." The problem in many hobbies, including ours, is that there are people involved who are, in their own way knowledgeable about certain aspects of the hobby: wiring and relays (Dale), repairing the new electronic locos (gunrunnerjohn, GGG), layout masters (frank53, passengertrain collector, the marketing whiz for OGR). I could go on, but you get the idea. These folks are exceptionally knowledgeable, but that might not, and actually in many cases would likely not, translate into running Lionel successfully because there is a different skill set involved with people who understand what it takes to run and expand a business. Marketing is a key skill, as is the ability to be dispassionate enough about the trains not to get too bogged down in the smaller details -- for example, whether a detail is perfectly scale or prototypical. (Just to be 100% clear, I am not belittling people who want that type of thing -- that is a perfectly respectable part of this hobby, I am just making the point that such interest does not translate into qualifications to be the Lionel CEO.) I believe that Mr. Calabrese was a person who knows how to run a business -- his track record speaks for itself, while at the same time being sensible and self-confident enough enough to surround himself with the appropriate people in supporting roles. This gave Lionel the savvy it needed from a business perspective while retaining a good grasp on what the most passionate demographics of its client base wanted. In a simlar way, Joshua Lionel Cowen was not originally a train enthusiast but as many of you know, an inventor, marketing genius and overall savvy businessman. My opinion is that he was too old to really help Lionel when the country changed in the late 1950s into the 1960s, but had he been in his prime he likely would have figured out a way to keep the business alive, because he did that in the 1930s during the Great Depression.
That's a long way of saying it is not really all that relevant a critique of Jerry Calabrese to say that he didn't attend York. He didn't need to. He did a great job and the company is in much better shape now than it was when he arrived. Now all of us long-time Lionel fans -- people like me who are rooting for the company to get things right -- just need to continue to push the company to get the manufacturing situation straightened out and the quality where it needs to be.