Lack of ammo advertising

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  • A5BLASTER
    Chieftain
    • Mar 2015
    • 6192

    Lack of ammo advertising

    Why is it that the ammo companies that make 6.5 Grendel ammo don't advertise their products?

    Case in point: Did anybody know that Nosler brought out another 6.5 Grendel load? That's right. Nosler is now making and selling a 120 grain ballistic tip 6.5 Grendel load.

    I just saw it on Midway's website. All the way in the back last page of listed Grendel products.

    What is up with this stuff? Why does the Grendel get no advertising time? Heck, companies can't seem to keep up with demand, you would think they would lay out a few more dollars and advertise it more.

    Oh and S&B says their loads will be on the shelves mid-year, this year.
    Last edited by LRRPF52; 02-11-2020, 09:45 PM. Reason: Fixed artifacts
  • Keef
    Warrior
    • Jun 2017
    • 296

    #2
    If you are already selling faster than you can stock a product, what is the point in advertising???

    Comment

    • mdram
      Warrior
      • Sep 2016
      • 941

      #3
      wow at the prices on noslers website
      just some targets for printing
      https://drive.google.com/drive/folde...xQ?usp=sharing

      Comment

      • LRRPF52
        Super Moderator
        • Sep 2014
        • 9058

        #4
        Of all the cartridges that have been developed over the past 20 years, many have fallen, and a few have gained enough market traction to become mainstay.

        Every cartridge except for one was supported out-of-the-gate by big US manufacturers working in conjunction with a rifle manufacturer usually. To me, the story is more about the actual rifle market than the cartridge market because rifle manufacturers had more control over what would be adopted, since not everyone could build or assemble a rifle in their home.

        Prior to that, the standard roll-out of a cartridge in the mid-late 1900s was for a big rifle company (that also made ammo) to launch a rifle and ammunition product combo together in many cases of successful cartridges. If the action already existed, they would introduce the new cartridge in legacy action/styles, as well as a new model for that action. The Model 70 Winchester and later Remington Model 700 were the most popular turn-bolt rifle actions of the latter 20th Century. There would be short and long action versions of each to accommodate the particular Cartridge Overall Length of certain classes of cartridges.



        There was the battle of the belted magnums between Remington and Winchester, with the 7mm Rem Mag and .300 Win Mag emerging in each of their own spaces as the 2 dominant magnums. In the .473" case head long-action cartridges, the .30-06 and spin-offs became popular.

        There were some great cartridges like the .264 Winchester Magnum and .284 Winchester that never gained wide acceptance though, while bringing real performance gains to the consumer that should have been better marketed and accepted.

        The .30-06 Springfield before them became mainstay because it was the standard US military service rifle cartridge.

        Same with the .308 Winchester and .223 Remington later on. You start to see a back-and-forth game that developed between Winchester and Remington in the 20th Century.



        Fast-forward to the 1990s and 2000s and the proliferation of the AR15 in the wake of political pressure driving people that would never have purchased one, to everybody and their brother rushing to buy them because, "You never know when they will ban them outright, so get them while the gettin' is good."

        An enterprising wildcatter named JD Jones of SSK Industries developed the .300 Whisper on his own, chambering TCs and AR15s in it primarily for suppressed use, with a heavy emphasis on it being necessary to fit and feed from the AR15's magazine and action with nothing but a barrel change.

        After the .50 Beowulf in 2001, the 6.5 Grendel and 6.8 Remington SPC were developed in the early 2000s, one from a small company (Alexander Arms) working in conjunction with Lapua of Finland, while the other was done with the full support and backing of Remington in hopes that they would get a military contract for the new cartridge, since it had been advertised to them as something Special Forces was going to adopt.

        The big difference now from a market standpoint was that individual customers could drop a completely new upper receiver chambered in a new cartridge onto their existing AR15 lower receiver group, slap in a magazine, and enjoy more energy on-target than the .223 Remington or 5.56 NATO AR15s, which were largely prohibited by most States for being used for hunting deer and medium or large game.

        Ruger introduced the .204 Ruger with rifles to fire it in 2004.

        Hornady introduced the short action 6.5 Creedmoor in 2007.



        Remington later put in a lot of work on the .30 RAR (2008) to increase the power one could deliver from an enlarged upper receiver AR15 that still used AR15 lowers and most other parts for that reason.

        The market started to shift from one where rifle manufacturers get to determine the actions and cartridges for each new season every few years, to one where consumers could switch to their pet cartridge faster than you would normally see any market be able to respond in the later 1900s. Since the AR15 is so modular and doesn't require traditional gunsmithing skills, with a reasonable degree of mechanical aptitude, the home DIY builder can assemble an upper themselves in whatever cartridge they can get a barrel, bolt, and magazines for.

        So even though Alexander Arms made complete rifles and uppers in 6.5 Grendel, they weren't and still aren't a large company that is going to compete with rifle sales like Remington or Winchester. So what is driving the success of the 6.5 Grendel?

        * AR15 compatibility
        * Performance
        * Ammunition availability, especially affordable ammo and a lot of hunting load options
        * Steel case ammo

        If you'll notice, none of the popular US rifle cartridges outside of .223 Rem and .308 have enjoyed steel case availability other than 6.5 Grendel, until recently (Dec 2019) with the new Wolf .300 Blackout Polyformance.

        Anyway, the big rifle manufacturers who also make ammo aren't going to be champions of someone else's baby, and their norm is to fail at marketing most of the cartridges they introduce to the market, mishandle the execution of design and production of cartridges they do launch in many cases, and miss major opportunities to promote very successful cartridges that people have been begging for over decades. Look at the .260 Remington, for example. The .260 Remington and a wide line of Rem 700s and R-10s should be the flagships of the Remington brand. They don't even make many relevant loads for it. Hornady has better .260 Rem ammo, and the 6.5 Creedmoor is their golden child.

        So if a company doesn't even do a good job supporting their own children, we shouldn't wonder why they don't advertise much for our pet cartridges, and just let the market do its thing. 6.5 Grendel sells itself by being AR15-friendly, with actual performance gains that no other double-column magazine AR15 cartridge has been able to match. To beat 6.5 Grendel, you have to go to one of the WSSMs in a single stack, with a different upper receiver, and not enough room in the COL limits of the magazines and mag well to have a nice 6.5 WSSM AR15.
        NRA Basic, Pistol, Rifle, Shotgun, RSO

        CCW, CQM, DM, Long Range Rifle Instructor

        6.5 Grendel Reloading Handbooks & chamber brushes can be found here:

        www.AR15buildbox.com

        Comment

        • A5BLASTER
          Chieftain
          • Mar 2015
          • 6192

          #5
          Originally posted by LRRPF52 View Post
          Of all the cartridges that have been developed over the past 20 years, many have fallen, and a few have gained enough market traction to become mainstay.

          Every cartridge except for one was supported out-of-the-gate by big US manufacturers working in conjunction with a rifle manufacturer usually. To me, the story is more about the actual rifle market than the cartridge market because rifle manufacturers had more control over what would be adopted, since not everyone could build or assemble a rifle in their home.

          Prior to that, the standard roll-out of a cartridge in the mid-late 1900s was for a big rifle company (that also made ammo) to launch a rifle and ammunition product combo together in many cases of successful cartridges. If the action already existed, they would introduce the new cartridge in legacy action/styles, as well as a new model for that action. The Model 70 Winchester and later Remington Model 700 were the most popular turn-bolt rifle actions of the latter 20th Century. There would be short and long action versions of each to accommodate the particular Cartridge Overall Length of certain classes of cartridges.



          There was the battle of the belted magnums between Remington and Winchester, with the 7mm Rem Mag and .300 Win Mag emerging in each of their own spaces as the 2 dominant magnums. In the .473" case head long-action cartridges, the .30-06 and spin-offs became popular.

          There were some great cartridges like the .264 Winchester Magnum and .284 Winchester that never gained wide acceptance though, while bringing real performance gains to the consumer that should have been better marketed and accepted.

          The .30-06 Springfield before them became mainstay because it was the standard US military service rifle cartridge.

          Same with the .308 Winchester and .223 Remington later on. You start to see a back-and-forth game that developed between Winchester and Remington in the 20th Century.



          Fast-forward to the 1990s and 2000s and the proliferation of the AR15 in the wake of political pressure driving people that would never have purchased one, to everybody and their brother rushing to buy them because, "You never know when they will ban them outright, so get them while the gettin' is good."

          An enterprising wildcatter named JD Jones of SSK Industries developed the .300 Whisper on his own, chambering TCs and AR15s in it primarily for suppressed use, with a heavy emphasis on it being necessary to fit and feed from the AR15's magazine and action with nothing but a barrel change.

          After the .50 Beowulf in 2001, the 6.5 Grendel and 6.8 Remington SPC were developed in the early 2000s, one from a small company (Alexander Arms) working in conjunction with Lapua of Finland, while the other was done with the full support and backing of Remington in hopes that they would get a military contract for the new cartridge, since it had been advertised to them as something Special Forces was going to adopt.

          The big difference now from a market standpoint was that individual customers could drop a completely new upper receiver chambered in a new cartridge onto their existing AR15 lower receiver group, slap in a magazine, and enjoy more energy on-target than the .223 Remington or 5.56 NATO AR15s, which were largely prohibited by most States for being used for hunting deer and medium or large game.

          Ruger introduced the .204 Ruger with rifles to fire it in 2004.

          Hornady introduced the short action 6.5 Creedmoor in 2007.



          Remington later put in a lot of work on the .30 RAR (2008) to increase the power one could deliver from an enlarged upper receiver AR15 that still used AR15 lowers and most other parts for that reason.

          The market started to shift from one where rifle manufacturers get to determine the actions and cartridges for each new season every few years, to one where consumers could switch to their pet cartridge faster than you would normally see any market be able to respond in the later 1900s. Since the AR15 is so modular and doesn't require traditional gunsmithing skills, with a reasonable degree of mechanical aptitude, the home DIY builder can assemble an upper themselves in whatever cartridge they can get a barrel, bolt, and magazines for.

          So even though Alexander Arms made complete rifles and uppers in 6.5 Grendel, they weren't and still aren't a large company that is going to compete with rifle sales like Remington or Winchester. So what is driving the success of the 6.5 Grendel?

          * AR15 compatibility
          * Performance
          * Ammunition availability, especially affordable ammo and a lot of hunting load options
          * Steel case ammo

          If you'll notice, none of the popular US rifle cartridges outside of .223 Rem and .308 have enjoyed steel case availability other than 6.5 Grendel, until recently (Dec 2019) with the new Wolf .300 Blackout Polyformance.

          Anyway, the big rifle manufacturers who also make ammo aren't going to be champions of someone else's baby, and their norm is to fail at marketing most of the cartridges they introduce to the market, mishandle the execution of design and production of cartridges they do launch in many cases, and miss major opportunities to promote very successful cartridges that people have been begging for over decades. Look at the .260 Remington, for example. The .260 Remington and a wide line of Rem 700s and R-10s should be the flagships of the Remington brand. They don't even make many relevant loads for it. Hornady has better .260 Rem ammo, and the 6.5 Creedmoor is their golden child.

          So if a company doesn't even do a good job supporting their own children, we shouldn't wonder why they don't advertise much for our pet cartridges, and just let the market do its thing. 6.5 Grendel sells itself by being AR15-friendly, with actual performance gains that no other double-column magazine AR15 cartridge has been able to match. To beat 6.5 Grendel, you have to go to one of the WSSMs in a single stack, with a different upper receiver, and not enough room in the COL limits of the magazines and mag well to have a nice 6.5 WSSM AR15.
          Well written article sir.

          But then again grendel would be selling itself more better if even one company would put forward just a lil effort in marketing.

          That's the point I'm getting at. Remington 2 loads now nosler drops a new load a zero talk about them.

          Bet if you went to ar15.com and started a thread asking if anyone had tryed the 2 new Remington loads are the new nosler load. You would have a metric ton of post saying they didn't know anything about it.

          Comment

          • kmon
            Chieftain
            • Feb 2015
            • 2121

            #6
            Then there are a few like the 338 Federal that Sako/tikka are the bolt action guns for this round Federal standardized. It is gaining a following in the AR10 market (good thumper)

            Comment

            • kmon
              Chieftain
              • Feb 2015
              • 2121

              #7
              Originally posted by A5BLASTER View Post
              Well written article sir.

              But then again grendel would be selling itself more better if even one company would put forward just a lil effort in marketing.

              That's the point I'm getting at. Remington 2 loads now nosler drops a new load a zero talk about them.

              Bet if you went to ar15.com and started a thread asking if anyone had tryed the 2 new Remington loads are the new nosler load. You would have a metric ton of post saying they didn't know anything about it.
              Very true. I still see on forums about the Grendel not having much factory ammo available. I usually just send them to the ammo lit threads here and ask what are they talking about

              Comment

              • LRRPF52
                Super Moderator
                • Sep 2014
                • 9058

                #8
                These companies have huge SKU catalogs with far more demanding cartridges and market attention than 6.5 Grendel, although it is growing.

                Remington wouldn't be making it if it didn't make sense for them financially.

                They also have to make all the .30-30 Winchester, .308 Winchester, .270 Win., .30-06, .223 Remington, .300 Win Mag, 7mm Rem Mag, .243 Winchester etc. rifle cartridges that will fill the shelves of brick and mortar gun stores and the growing online ammo businesses across the US.

                It will take time for their marketing departments to set up photo shoots with light boxes, develop print and online promotional materials, coordinate with known authors, schedule deliveries of samples to those authors, and get a marketing effort going.

                It just takes time, and all the other cartridges and new product offerings need attention too.

                There's a lot of logistics to it on the back end that I've been able to peek into over the years to get my perspective, so I can empathize with both the consumer and the industry people that are tasked with these duties.

                A lot of the advertising happens on forums now via natural word-of-mouth, so as they introduce new cartridges with healthy demand, they sell as much as they can make without even running traditional ad campaigns.

                Look at how fast Federal sold out of the 90gr TNT loads, for example. They underestimated their demand for that SKU and I don't recall much of an advertising effort.
                NRA Basic, Pistol, Rifle, Shotgun, RSO

                CCW, CQM, DM, Long Range Rifle Instructor

                6.5 Grendel Reloading Handbooks & chamber brushes can be found here:

                www.AR15buildbox.com

                Comment

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