Since some years, the Baselworld fair is a festival for fans of Glashütte Original watches. The fireworks of new models presented there seems endless: fourteen new watches this year, without counting dial colour and case material variants; sixteen new watches last year, and I am not sure to have remembered them all. There were four new movements or complications in 2006, three this year. That’s wonderful, isn’t it?
To be honest, the continuing stream of GO novelties has reached a level where it starts slightly worrying me. Can creativity burn out too fast? Is that ultra-fast pace in producing new models really necessary?
I admit not being an economist, neither do I have experience in leading large companies. Even my two-person household is mainly managed by my better half, so I can frankly state to be an absolute nil in economic science. I am an experienced watch enthusiast, though, and think to know what people like myself, also called “collectors” prefer.
So what are the arguments against a never exhausting cornucopia of novelties?
One of the first reasons for a collector or fan to decide for a specific watch brand, is what I use to call “terroir”, or the “brand DNA”. When acquiring a watch, it should be a typical example for the brand’s style and tradition. Design experiments are attractive either for the die-hard fans, concentrating specifically on this brand, or for those generally uninterested in the brand, who like but this individual watch.
I have to admit missing a clearly visible theme or style in the GO novelties shown, especially those of this year. Somehow I have the impression the company intends to satisfy all demands, serve all markets at the same time. The result are watches that have barely anything in common but the brand name on the dial. The two most contrary designs presented this year may serve as illustration: Both, the reedition of one of the communist-era GUB watches, called “Sixties”, and the new Senator Rattrapante, which does not even distantly resemble any other member of the “Senator” family, will become very popular watches, no doubt. But would anyone guess that they are made by the same company, if they were not branded?