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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
Car Craft, Super Chevy, Muscle Mustangs no longer printed
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<blockquote data-quote="Kevins89notch" data-source="post: 16332495" data-attributes="member: 31255"><p>Back in the early 90's, JCPennys brought up online selling during a board meeting and decided it was too expensive to set up a website and people wouldn't buy online. I think Amazon started the following year or so.</p><p></p><p></p><p>....what I'm getting at is that these companies did this to themselves. They ignored social media and dug their grave.</p><p></p><p>MM&FF could have survived. Instead of dreaming of making the cover of the mag, people should dream of being featured in their weekly "weekend warrior" video put out on their youtube video each Friday. You know how 1320 interviews people, goes for a drive with them and shows their 1/4th mile pass? That's what MM&FF should have been doing. They could have hundreds of thousands of subs, doing live streams from major races, etc. Instead of Maximum Motorsports paying to have their ads in MM&FF, MM&FF vlog crew could be plugging them on how awesome their coilover setup rides.</p><p></p><p>The boostedboyz are some early to mid 20's guys in the middle of nowhere, who wrench on civics, put out videos a couple times a week and get a quarter million hits via their 750K subs.</p><p></p><p>Imagine MM&FF being the number one source for mustang videos, doing backstage videos at Steeda, press launch events for the 2020 GT500, interviews with old school Pro 5.0 racers from back in the day, live from SEMA, restoration videos where you get to see bodywork and how to install parts, etc, etc.</p><p></p><p>I'm in no way putting any blame on anyone, just pointing out that times changed, and they didn't....and now they are done. <img src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7" class="smilie smilie--sprite smilie--sprite3" alt=":(" title="Frown :(" loading="lazy" data-shortname=":(" /></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Kevins89notch, post: 16332495, member: 31255"] Back in the early 90's, JCPennys brought up online selling during a board meeting and decided it was too expensive to set up a website and people wouldn't buy online. I think Amazon started the following year or so. ....what I'm getting at is that these companies did this to themselves. They ignored social media and dug their grave. MM&FF could have survived. Instead of dreaming of making the cover of the mag, people should dream of being featured in their weekly "weekend warrior" video put out on their youtube video each Friday. You know how 1320 interviews people, goes for a drive with them and shows their 1/4th mile pass? That's what MM&FF should have been doing. They could have hundreds of thousands of subs, doing live streams from major races, etc. Instead of Maximum Motorsports paying to have their ads in MM&FF, MM&FF vlog crew could be plugging them on how awesome their coilover setup rides. The boostedboyz are some early to mid 20's guys in the middle of nowhere, who wrench on civics, put out videos a couple times a week and get a quarter million hits via their 750K subs. Imagine MM&FF being the number one source for mustang videos, doing backstage videos at Steeda, press launch events for the 2020 GT500, interviews with old school Pro 5.0 racers from back in the day, live from SEMA, restoration videos where you get to see bodywork and how to install parts, etc, etc. I'm in no way putting any blame on anyone, just pointing out that times changed, and they didn't....and now they are done. :( [/QUOTE]
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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
Car Craft, Super Chevy, Muscle Mustangs no longer printed
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