If you listen around, you'll hear experts cited in our industry, too. Have
you never heard any of these?
"Synthetics are too expensive. They'll never sell."
"Synthetics are a fad."
"Oil should be changed every three thousand miles, even if
it's synthetic." |
Experts Don't Always Know What
They Are Talking About
by Ed Newman AMSOIL Marketing & Advertising
Coordinator
This article appeared in
National Oil & Lube News, March 1999
Experts perform a valuable function in our modern world.
Whenever we get into an argument, whether heated or as a diversion, it
isn't long before we reach for a forceful quote or two from an
expert. Experts strengthen our
confidence in views we've chosen to defend. Experts supposedly know what
they're talking about because they've got the inside track on specialized
knowledge. Experts are called upon to give us the final word in matters
both obscure and self-evident. And
sometimes experts are wrong.
Minnesota's recent governor's race is a prime example of the experts being
wrong. Polls consistently showed Jesse Ventura to be running third and the
pundits gave him no chance of winning. Jesse was almost always discussed
in terms of whether his candidacy would hurt Coleman more than
Humphrey. History shows us that
misguided predictions are nothing new. In 1876 an internal memo at Western
Union declared, "This 'telephone' has too many shortcomings to be
seriously considered as a means of communication. The device is inherently
of no value to us." According to
Dr. Lee De Forest, inventor of the vacuum tube and father of television,
man would never reach the moon regardless of all future scientific
advances. In 1949, Popular
Mechanics boldly asserted that "computers in the future may weigh no more
than 1.5 tons." Actually, there
have been a lot of embarrassed experts when it comes to assertions about
computers. The editor in charge of business books for Prentice Hall in
1957 said, "I have travelled the length and breadth of this country and
talked with the best people, and I can assure you that data processing is
a fad that won't last out the
year." Commenting on the
microchip, an engineer at the Advanced Computing Systems Division of IBM
said, "But what . . . is it good for?" This was in 1968. By 1977, the
chairman and founder of Ken Olson expertly demonstrated his prescience by
exclaiming, "There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their
home." I still remember hearing opinions of people who shared this
sentiment. The entertainment
industry has produced a few guffaws as well. "Who wants to hear actors
talk?" said H.M. Warner of Warner Brothers in 1927. Gary Cooper, in
turning down the leading role in "Gone With the Wind" said, "I'm just glad
it'll be Clark Gable who's falling on his face and not Gary
Cooper." And when the Decca
Recording Company rejected the Beatles in 1962, their in-house experts
assured management that, "guitar music is on the way out." Yeah, right.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. In fact,
misguided experts embarrass themselves in nearly every field of
endeavor. "Airplanes are
interesting toys but of no military value," said Marechal Ferdinand Foch,
Professor of Strategy of the Ecole Superieure de
Guerre. In 1899 Charles H. Duell,
Commissioner of the U.S. Office of Patents, declared "Everything that can
be invented has been invented." I suppose the inventiveness of 19th
century inventors left him pretty much blown away and incapable of
conceiving anything new. Hmmm. If
you listen around, you'll hear experts cited in our industry, too. Have
you never heard any of these?
"Synthetics are too expensive. They'll never sell."
"Synthetics are a fad."
"Oil should be changed every three thousand miles, even if
it's synthetic."
I suppose it does me little good to quote experts who think
otherwise. Recent tests at Mobil have demonstrated synthetic motor oils
with a three year, 25,000 mile life span. AMSOIL has had 25,000 mile drain
intervals for 25 years, only recently introducing a motor oil inside a
somewhat "normal" range, that is, 7500 miles.... which some insist is
still too long. Some "experts" are
saying, for example, that quick lubes will lose money if drain intervals
are extended. I beg to differ. Extending drain intervals may provide an
opportunity to make more money. Quick lube operators can begin to charge a
premium for a high end synthetic motor oil and a lower price for
conventional petroleum products. I
am well aware of the fact that you can easily use this argument to
discredit my views as a so-called "expert." In point of fact, I am not
asking anyone to take my word on anything. What I would really like is for
the industry, and you as individuals, to take an open mind approach to all
these things. Listen to everything. Question everything. Get informed.
Find out for yourself. I like what
Joe Haggard said in his October "As I See It" column when he said that we
"need to filter all the data that comes through our senses. There are a
lot of gems in the flow, but a lot of garbage, too." He went on to spell
out some of the criteria he uses to filter information. "Make a vow to
bypass all those inputs based on greed, lust or self-enhancement at the
expense of others. In short, have a strong conscience. Don't lie, cheat or
steal if ever influenced to do so by
others." We live in a very
complicated age. You, as quick lube owners and operators, are perceived as
experts by those who entrust their vehicles to you. You have a
responsibility to your customers to become truly informed so that your
advice is reliable and trustworthy. You certainly don't want to be
numbered with those who must later eat their own
words. Consider the words of those
drillers whom Edwin L. Drake tried to enlist in his project to drill for
oil in 1859: "Drill for oil? You mean drill into the ground to try and
find oil? You're crazy."
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