
Originally Posted by
Chewie
Businesses don't base their product prices on what generates a fair profit for them; they monitor the market and optimise them to make the most profit based on what the market will stand (what people are prepared to pay) and what they can supply.
Seagate will constantly map out graphs and analyse reports to work out what will maximiase profits while not leaving them with stock on their hands.
The most influential non-market driven price drop will be the age of their technology - when Seagate release new models (larger sized, faster performing, whatever) the older models will drop in price.
Computing hardware rarely actually gets cheaper to buy; you just get more bang for your buck. For instance, motherboards continually improve but the cheapest of the cheap always hover around the £30 mark.
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