Nice article - albeit by a normal human being rather than a serious scale modeler.
It's nifty to see some of the human beings behind the scenes. It sounds like most of the decision makers in the company are genuine model enthusiasts. Thirty years ago I don't think that was the case. When I was working in a hobby shop, in the late seventies, Revell was run by the widow of one of the company's founders. I have the impression that her dumb marketing decisions (the , and utter ignorance of the scale modeling concept, almost destroyed the company.
It raises some questions that the author didn't address. Do those various sales figures (e.g., the tiny sales of ship models) include Revell Germany kits sold in the USA?
As of a few minutes ago, the Revell (USA) website listed 62 ship kits. All but six of them are labeled "Revell Germany." The six exceptions: a 1/25 "Hot Rod Hydroplane," the old Monogram 1/35 "UDT Boat with Frogmen," the 1/72 PT 109 (from 1963), the 1/426 Arizona (1958), the 1/96 Constitution (1965), the 1/196 Constitution (1956), and, of course, the 1/535 Missouri (which celebrated its sixtieth anniversary last year).
That web catalog is a little weird. Many of the ships listed as "Revell Germany" are old ones that originated in the U.S. in the fifties and sixties. (The Missouri is listed twice: once as "Revell Germany.") The "German"kits also include an ex-Monogram kit (the Swift boat) and several that started life under the Italeri and Zvezda labels.
I know nothing about that "Hot Rod Hydroplane," and I don't know the original release date of the Monogram "UDT Boat." But the other four "Revell USA" ship kits are at least fifty years old. The big Constitution (which is observing its fiftieth birthday this year) is, if I'm not mistaken, the most expensive kit in the Revell range. Certainly the most expensive that doesn't have a "Revell Germany" label attached to it.
If those six kits are only responsible for 5 percent of Revell's US business, I'm not surprised. But maybe the 5 percent includes the "German" kits. The article doesn't say.
I wonder if any plastic kits are actually made in the USA any more. I doubt it. My impression is that almost all, if not all, of the actual molding is done in China and South Korea. Or does Zvezda mold its kits in Russia?