IMO, anyone who breaks the established rules in any human endeavor gains an advantage over those who do not and this applies in all aspects of human interaction, not just in business. IOW, it's not new versus old model or round versus flat model and it's got nothing to do with other dealers whining, as some in the thread have accused.
Not knowing the details of the rules makes it difficult to evaluate but based on comments from trueblue, NH has a territory based contract with it's dealers. Corriher and Tarheel broke those rules by selling on eBay, posting prices on the Internet, etc., and attracting customers from other NH territories. Yes, some of those sales went to customers in areas without a NH dealer, but some did not. By breaking the rules, they gained an advantage over dealers of other makes but also over other NH dealers.
A contemporary sports analogy is Barry Bonds, assuming the accusation of steroid use are true.
The established rules (model) of baseball prohibit steroid use. Bonds used steroids and gained an unfair advantage, both for him (homerun record) and the Giants (more wins). However, he did it at the expense of the other teams as well as baseball in general. Most Giant fans love Bonds, fans of other teams do not nor do fans of baseball, hence the push to put an * behind his name when he breaks Aaron's record.
Bonds and the Giants gained an advantage because they broke the rules not because they adopted a new model.
Baseball can react in one of 2 ways, change their rules (model) to allow performance enhancing drugs or enforce the rules of their existing model. The deciding factor should be what's best for baseball, not what's best for Bonds, the Giants or fans of the Giants.
Replace
- Bonds with Corriher
- Giant fans with Corriher customers
- Other teams with other NH dealers
- Baseball with NH
and it describes the topic of this thread.
Is a business model not based on dealer territories better or worse for NH? Who knows. It'd sure cost a lot of money to replace it but assuming it's better based on Corriher breaking the rules is a bad idea. Corriher didn't sell more tractors because of a better model, they sold more tractors because they created a different model by breaking the rules. If all NH dealers could magically switch to the Corriher model overnight, Corriher wouldn't have an advantage. The key is, from NH perspective, would NH sell more tractors? Obviously they decided they wouldn't.