Acquired - Rolex
Episode Date: February 24, 2025Rolex is a series of paradoxes. They sell obsolete and objectively inferior mechanical devices for 10-1000x the price of their superior digital successors… and demand is stronger than ever ...in history! Their products are comparable to a Hermès Birkin bag in price, luxury status and waitlist times… yet they produce over 1m units / year (roughly 10x annual Birkin production). They make the most universally recognized and desired Swiss watches… yet their founder wasn’t Swiss and didn’t start the company in Switzerland! If Rolex were publicly traded, they’d almost certainly be among the top 50 market cap companies in the world… yet they’re 100% owned by a charitable foundation in Geneva that (among other things) literally just gives away money to local people in the city.Tune in for one of the most fascinating and admirable companies we’ve ever covered on Acquired. We had an absolute blast making the episode, and hope you enjoy it as much as we did!Sponsors:Many thanks to our fantastic Spring ‘25 Season partners:J.P. Morgan PaymentsServiceNowFundriseHuntressLinks:The Renaissance of the Swiss Watch Industry - Marc BridgeHODINKEE - Inside All Four Rolex Manufacturing Facilities“If you were…” campaignWorldly Partners’ Multi-Decade Rolex StudyEpisode sourcesCarve Outs:BlueyAcquired on Armchair ExpertEleven ReaderMore Acquired:Get email updates with hints on next episode and follow-ups from recent episodesJoin the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Check out the latest swag in the ACQ Merch Store!Note: Acquired hosts and guests may hold assets discussed in this episode. This podcast is not investment advice, and is intended for informational and entertainment purposes only. You should do your own research and make your own independent decisions when considering any financial transactions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, David, what's on your wrist?
Well, currently on the wrist is my stainless white face Daytona that my dad gave me.
I think it was still quite popular when he gave it to me probably close to 15 years ago,
but not like it is today.
A strong choice.
I'm actually also wearing a Daytona that I am borrowing from a good friend of the show.
Love it.
Well, fun fact for listeners, the watch that David is wearing
is the one that I was wearing during the Morris Chang interview
when we wanted to foreshadow that this was our next episode.
Yes, and in front of me here now, in my hand, but not on my wrist,
is my other Rolex that my dad gave me a long time ago,
my Rolesor Datejust.
Dude, you gotta go one on each wrist.
You gotta...
Great. Great.
All right.
Who got the truth?
Who got the truth?
Is it you, is it you, is it you?
Who got the truth now?
Who got the truth now?
Is it you, is it you, is it you?
Sit me down, say it straight.
Another story on the way.
Who got the truth?
Welcome to the spring 2025 season of Acquired, the podcast about great companies and the
stories and playbooks behind them.
I'm Ben Gilbert.
I'm David Rosenthal.
And we are your hosts.
All you need for timekeeping is something that happens at a constant rate and some way
to count it.
It could be sand in an hourglass.
It could be a weight being pulled down by
gravity on a grandfather clock, slowly turning the hands, moderated by the tick-tock of
a pendulum. Or it could be a mechanical watch on your wrist, driven by a complex and beautiful
array of hundreds of gears and springs. Today, listeners, we tell you the story that we can't believe
we haven't already told on acquired, Rolex. Who? Rolex is a cascade of paradoxes.
It's one of the best known brands in the world, but despite that it's one of the
least known companies in the world. They're privately held by a charitable
foundation, the Hans Wilsdorf Foundation, so they don't have to disclose anything.
And really, they never do. They're one of the most secretive companies that we have Charitable Foundation, the Hans Wilsdorf Foundation, so they don't have to disclose anything.
And really, they never do.
They're one of the most secretive companies
that we have ever studied.
And David, check me on this.
I think they're even more secretive than IKEA or Mars.
Oh, yeah.
It's funny that the closer to the present day we get,
the less we know.
Totally.
They operate like an intelligence agency over there.
Yes, like James Bond, one might say.
Oh, or one might not say.
Listeners, they make watches that everyone wants to buy,
but nobody seems to be able to get
with famously long and opaque lists at retailers,
except of course, over a million people a year
actually do buy one, and for an average price of $13,000 each. That is until you
walk out of the store and then they instantly become worth more, at least for
a lot of the models these days. To your point about paradoxes of Rolex, this is
one of the greatest ones. It is absolutely one of the very very top top
tier luxury brands in the world and yet they also sell a lot of units.
Hermes doesn't sell
a million Birkins every year.
There's probably 10 times more Rolexes sold than Birkins sold, or at least on that order.
It's a success built on the back of craftsmanship, engineering and manufacturing, honed and perfected
over 120 years. It is one of the greatest brands in the world built meticulously and
so intentionally, David. And my favorite part of the paradox, this is the story of the greatest brands in the world built meticulously and so intentionally, David. And my favorite part of the paradox.
This is the story of the most successful Swiss watch company, but it wasn't founded in Switzerland
or even by a Swiss person.
No, no, it was not.
It's a 10 plus billion dollar revenue business performing a dead craft, obsolete by the digital
world.
They make a watch that can't tell the time,
as good as my Apple watch,
or even a $10 Casio for that matter.
So what is going on here?
How did Rolex become Rolex?
This is a story we've been giddy to share.
Oh, so excited.
Well, one big disclaimer upfront,
much like how our NFL episode wasn't about football
and our NBA episode wasn't about basketball,
this episode isn't really about watches. It's about the business of watches.
Yes.
If you want to know every time an episode drops, check out our email list. It is the
only place where we will share a hint of what our next episode will be. It will share corrections,
updates and little tidbits that we learned from previous episodes. That's acquired.fm
slash email or click the link in the show notes. That's acquired.fm slash email,
or click the link in the show notes.
Join the Slack, come talk to us about this episode
with the whole acquired community afterwards,
acquired.fm slash Slack.
And if you want more acquired between monthly episodes,
check out ACQ2, our interview show,
where we talk to founders, CEOs, and investors
who are building businesses
in areas that we've covered on
the show.
The most recent one was a very fun interview we did with a friend of the show, Guillermo
Rauch, the founder and CEO of Versel, about really the whole history of web development
frameworks and their latest and greatest product, VZero, a startup within a startup that lets
you code web apps from scratch in just English instead of a programming
language.
Yes.
Search ACQ2 in any podcast player.
And before we dive in, we want to briefly thank our presenting partner, JP Morgan Payments.
Yes.
Just like how we say every company has a story, every company's story is powered by payments
and JP Morgan Payments is a part of so many of their journeys from seed to IPO, or in
this case, never being public ever and beyond.
And listeners, this is not investment advice, but you can invest in this and you can invest
in many of the other great brands that we were going to talk about on this episode either.
There's something kind of remarkable about the companies we wish we could invest in,
but actually we can't.
So this show is for informational and entertainment purposes only.
David, where do we start our story?
All right.
Well, we start as is so often the case with these big old European companies back not
in the last century, but even the century before that on March 22nd in 1881, in Kornbach, Bavaria, about 30 miles
north of Nuremberg in present-day Germany, where Hans Eberhard Wilhelm Wilsdorf is born
to young Anna and Johann Wilsdorf.
And you might say, this sounds like a German name.
Bavaria wasn't a part of Germany, right?
Well, I was just going to get to that.
Technically it's not Bavaria anymore.
Technically it is part of the German Empire.
But this is a very, very recent development as the Count Otto von Bismarck had only just
10 years earlier convinced Bavaria to join forces and unite with Prussia to form the Greater
German State German Empire in the aftermath of the Franco-Prussian War where they battled
Napoleon III over in France. But as far as young Hans and his family are concerned, they're
Bavarian. They don't identify with this Germany thing. This is foreign to them. They are also
Protestant, not Catholic, which puts them in the great minority in Bavaria at the time.
Now I say all of this deep European history here for two reasons. One, because it's sort
of a fun story and calls back to our Hermes and LVMH episodes. And it's going to call
back very directly to those episodes in a minute here.
But also, I think it's important to paint the picture of Hans as even from birth,
he's kind of this consummate outsider. He doesn't really fit in in any sort of national or religious
identity in the either established or changing European order at the time. He doesn't really
have a country. He doesn't really have a country.
He doesn't really have a religion or a people.
He sort of floats between the seams of Europe,
which Rolex itself is going to do as we shall see in a very big way.
Yep.
Now, back to young Hans and his family.
His father, Johann, came from a line of successful ironmongers.
And very likely, Hans was destined to go into
this business as well.
However, when Hans is 12 years old, tragedy strikes, and both his father and his mother
die within a couple months of each other.
So he's orphaned, just like this should sound familiar, Ben.
Oh yeah, Louis Vuitton and Hermes.
This is absolutely freaking nuts.
The founders of arguably maybe the three biggest
and most significant luxury brands in the world today
were all orphans from the 1800s.
This is wild.
And I wonder how much of a statistical bias there is here.
If we were studying anyone from this era,
how many of them would be orphans because of disease and war and...
Yes, all sorts of stuff.
Just lots of people died for lots of reasons.
Yes, totally, totally true. But it's just so interesting, right? These brands, I mean,
much less so Rolex, but Hermes, LVMH are so steeped in this European history and the tradition of the nobility,
but it's actually these orphaned outsiders that founded them.
Well, I think there's a great point.
Rolex doesn't share that heritage at all.
This is not steeped in nobility.
This is not an artifact like a leather bag or a saddle that any kings ever had.
When you buy a Submariner or a Daytona or even a Datejust, you are not buying Swiss
history here.
You are buying 20th century modernity, as we will get into.
So in the wake of this tragedy, Hans and his brother and sister are placed in the care
of his uncles.
And the uncles decide that they are going to sell the family ironmongering business
to fund sending Hans and his siblings off to boarding school.
I see.
So Hans would later write in this amazing document that is essentially his autobiography.
It's the first volume of a four book set that the company published in 1945 for the company's
40th anniversary, the Ruby Jubilee,
Hans writes, our uncles were not indifferent to our fate. Nevertheless, the way in which they made
me become self-reliant very early in life made me acquire the habit of looking after my possessions
and looking back, I believe that it is to this that much of my success is due.
So Hans goes off to boarding school much of my success is due. Hmm.
So, Hans goes off to boarding school and becomes an excellent student there.
He excels in math, and he also excels in foreign languages, particularly English.
And while he's there in boarding school there in Bavaria, he meets a friend who is from
Switzerland and he develops an interest in that country and he no longer really has any family ties or anything to Bavaria anymore, doesn't really
care about Germany.
He's like, oh great, Switzerland seems like a good place.
I'm going to go live there when I graduate, which he does.
He moves to Geneva and he finds work there first for a large pearl merchant.
So this business was buying like raw pearls from fishermen and then selling them to the famous
Swiss jewelers there in Geneva.
And then he joins another local trading company in a adjacent industry to the jewelry business,
a firm called Kuno Korten.
Kuno Korten, turns out out isn't in just any industry. As far as Switzerland
goes, they are in the industry, besides banking. They are in the watch trade.
Well, you need something to bank.
Yeah, you need something to bank. Exactly.
A country can't just have banking as an industry. It needs a real economy to build banking on
top of.
Exactly. You start with jewelry, watches, then you get into banking.
And Cuno Cordon is actually a major player in the watch trade. Now, they are not watch
makers. They are watch exporters. So they are facilitating the trade of all these best
in the world Swiss watches out of Switzerland and into other countries around the world.
And at this time, this is like the late 1890s, CUNO is doing about a million Swiss francs
worth of business a year.
Now, I don't know exactly what the Swiss franc
to US dollar exchange rate was in 1900,
but today the Swiss franc is stronger than the dollar.
It's about one to one.
They're pretty close.
So call it a million dollars of business a year
in the 1890s, like this is big, they're a big player.
And it's important to remember too, it's not like watches were this little corner of the Swiss economy.
Exporting watches was a huge part of the Swiss economy and a huge employer in the nation.
Yes. Now, we're saying watches here.
It's important to note what were watches at the time.
They weren't something you wore on your wrist.
It was not wristwatches because basically Hans and Rolex
hadn't invented that yet.
They didn't exactly invent it,
but hadn't popularized it yet.
We're talking about pocket watches.
Yes.
That's what the industry was at this time.
And part of the reason is functional.
Pocket watches were bigger.
So the movement to accomplish a certain amount of precision
didn't require as little teeny tiny of tools
and you had more margin of safety in bigger watches.
And so whenever anyone tried to make a watch
and put it on the wrist at this point in history,
it was usually fragile or really inaccurate
or actually worn more as jewelry.
And so they actually didn't call them wrist watches,
they called them wristlets,
and they were mostly worn by women.
Wristlets, yes.
We'll get more into that later, and I know you're chomping at the bit to give you the
technical explanation of the crazy human craft and engineering that goes into watches.
It's amazing.
It's so unbelievably cool.
But back to the Han story for the moment. So the job that young Hans gets here at Kuno turns out to be pretty pivotal for him and
the future of Rolex.
He is a secretary, which means that he's answering letters from clients all around the world
and then responding and coordinating with them.
Because remember, he's really good at languages and what is his best language? English. So he's coordinating with
most of their clients in the British market in the UK. And he sits at this really interesting
choke point of the whole industry where he understands how all the producers are sort of
laid out and how the whole value chain works on the Swiss side of things.
He's seeing the market prices and price action happen
for all different types of watches from different makers
and different parts, et cetera, et cetera.
But he's also getting to know the buyers in Britain
who are not individual people.
These are retailers.
These are the jewelers in Britain.
These are the distribution points for watches. Yep. So he's getting
the perfect business market strategic background distribution relationships
for going on to ultimately found Rolex. But it's not just that he falls in love
with the business of watches there, he also falls in love with the objects and watches themselves
in their performance. So he starts this habit of he would take home batches of pocket watches
at night and he would run his own tests for accuracy on them, on the product that Kuno
Korten was trading in. So he would set them all at the same time and let them go overnight. And
then he would check them in the morning how much they were disparate from one another and check their accuracy.
And the legend goes that one day he gets the idea
that he's gonna take three watches that he's found to be
quite accurate in this whatever this recent batch that he's testing is
and he's gonna go get them tested at the local astronomical observatory
and have them measure these watches according to the strict
observatory timekeeping tests which are also called chronometer tests. So if you've ever heard the term
chronometer, a chronometer is a timekeeping piece, could be a watch, could be a larger clock, could
be all sorts of devices that has passed these astronomical observatory tests for being accurate enough for celestial
navigation. Yes, David, I'm looking down at this Daytona right now and it says Rolex, oyster,
perpetual, which all three of those words we haven't gotten to yet, superlative chronometer,
officially certified, cosmograph. A lot of words in there that we will get to but at the moment where
we are is chronometer officially certified. Yes and today this is like a
oh you know cool that's cute your mechanical watch is like officially
certified that it keeps good time. Back then this is critically important.
Celestial navigation if you're involved in anything in shipping the maritime
trade is critical. If you have a crappy timepiece you're involved in anything and shipping the maritime trade is critical.
If you have a crappy timepiece, you're going to go to the wrong place because you're using it for navigation.
And so to your point, observatory chronometer certification, no one's doing it for my pocket watch
that I can set to the local church bell or whatever whenever I need to reset it.
But young Hans has this idea.
He goes and does it.
And he, guess what?
These three pieces that he takes, these pocket watches, they pass the test
and they get certified as chronometers and he takes them back to his bosses at
CUNO and they're like, Whoa, well, that's going to market that.
Slap that on the tin, baby.
And it's this aha moment of cuno,
and then soon the rest of the industry realizes,
oh, actually, chronometer certification on pocket watches
helps us move product here.
Yep.
The other thing to realize here is we are in an era where,
this era would last the next hundred plus years,
but an era where having a watch is super important.
Yes. It's not a fashion accessory.
It's not a nice to have without a pocket watch.
If you are leaving your house and moving about in the world, you're lost.
It's almost like not having your phone today where you feel like I'm floating.
It's very uncomfortable.
Totally. It's even more than you're saying.
It's like a smartphone in that you need it to function.
But pocket watches are also like smartphones today
in that they're fidget devices.
If you're out in the world and you're waiting in line
or you don't know what to do with your hands,
you're in a socially awkward situation,
whatever, you take your pocket watch out,
you're going to open the clasp.
This is what people did.
It was just so ingrained in everyone's day-to-day existence,
just like a smartphone is today.
It's an essential tool for moving about the world,
which explains how it's such a huge industry
that moves the needle for the nation of Switzerland
and how there's these businesses
that can be exporting a million dollars worth
over a hundred years ago
and why
there's so much attention being paid to it. It's not a random accessory, it is an
essential piece of life, a tool. Totally. So after working at CUNO for a couple
years and liaising with the British market, in 1903 Hans decides that, hey, I'm
good at English, I like London, I might actually want to move there.
So he moves to London at age 22,
and he goes to work for another watch company
there in London locally.
We actually don't know the name.
I don't think anybody has ever found the name.
Mm-mm.
What, you and I read probably five books between us
and wasn't any of them.
Yeah, he works there for two years,
and he writes,
two things struck me most forcibly and wasn't any of them. Yeah, he works there for two years and he writes,
two things struck me most forcibly
about my new employers, this British watch company.
On the one hand, their commercial competence,
and on the other hand, their lack of specialization.
I soon gained confidence in myself,
and in 1905 at the age of 24, decided
to set up in business alone feeling that my
training and education had prepared me. So he strikes out on his own, starts his own
watch importing company there in London. But remember the specialization piece that'll
come back in a sec. So Hans is out on his own. There's one problem though, which is
in order to do what he wants to do, which is import Swiss watches and sell
them directly under his own banner where he makes and keeps the profits there in London,
he needs some capital in order to finance the buying.
Got to place the order.
Yes.
So through his lawyer, he gets connected with a local man in London named Alfred James Davis, who has some money
to invest.
So they meet through the lawyer, they hit it off immediately and decide to go into business
together.
And thus, in 1905, Willsdorf and Davis Limited, the world famous merchant watch trading firm
is born.
And yes, none of you know Wilsdorf and Davis.
However, Wilsdorf and Davis Limited is Rolex.
Yep.
As we shall see.
Now it's often said that, you know,
if you read anything about the history,
people will tell you, oh, well,
Davis was Hans's brother-in-law.
He married Hans's younger sister, Anna.
That is true, but I believe that didn't actually happen until after Hans and Alfred
went into business together. I think Anna met Davis through Hans.
But really it is Wilsdorf's company. It's kind of funny that Davis's name is on it.
I kind of get the sense he's mostly capital. Yeah, he's there a little bit, but it's almost
as if, you know, Atari, instead of being
Atari is Bushnell and Valentine. That's the equivalent here. I think that's right. And
obviously they get closer over time as they become family when Davis marries Hans's sister. But yeah,
I think this is Hans's business. He's running it. Davis trusts him. Yep. And so what is the business doing? Well the business plan when they get going is they're going to do what Hans has been
doing his whole career at this point in time, which is importing Swiss made highest quality
in the world watches into the London market where there is high demand for them.
And they're not selling directly to consumers, right?
No.
Just like back at Cuno Corton, the buyers are the retailers, are the jewelers.
No end consumer had any idea who made their watch at this point in time.
They would walk into the retailer, say, give me a fine Swiss watch, sir.
And the retailer would sell it to them.
And the retailer would take one out from the case.
You look down at the face of the watch.
The face of the watch has the retailer's name on it, and you're just trusting that the retailer bought
a good watch from some importer who bought a good watch from someone on the Swiss side
who managed to create a good watch by putting a movement and a case and all that together.
Now there's a little bit of detail in there where sometimes the importer would import
a fully built watch,
sometimes the importer would just import a movement
and then they would import a case differently
and then they would put together themselves.
But this was the craziest thing that struck me
is the retailer is the brand on the watch
at this point in time.
Yes, there is no brand for the product.
Right, so Wilsdorf and Davis is occupying the spot in the value chain where they are importing
the watches and then selling them to retailers to brand.
Yes.
Now you said there a minute ago something really important, which is there were kind
of two ways that this would happen.
You would either import fully finished watches from Switzerland, a whole product so to speak,
and either trading firm
like Wilsdorf and Davis would do this or Kuno Korten would export it, or maybe the retailers
would buy directly from Kuno Korten, etc.
If they were big enough.
If they were big enough, yep.
What Wilsdorf and Davis are doing is they're saying, well, Hans knows through his time
at Kuno Korten, all the best movement makers, all the best case
makers.
Right.
He operated one click up the value chain, sort of aggregating on the Swiss side.
Exactly.
So now that he's operating down on the importer level, one click down the value chain, he's
like, I can still aggregate all these producers and start building a watch myself.
Yes.
So he's not making anything,
but he is assembling the finished product.
So he would have watchmakers there in Britain
assemble the best movements that he would import
from Switzerland with the best cases that he would find.
And that was part of his value that he's adding
to the industry here.
And this is probably an important time.
There is so much lingo in the watch industry, and we're going to do our very best on this episode to demystify it.
Movement in lay speak is the whole inside that makes the watch tick and drives the hands.
Yep. Not the dial, right?
Correct. No dial, no hands, no case, no glass front.
And the movement, I think, like you said, is kind of the critical piece.
Absolutely. That's the hard thing.
Case is important, dial is important, hands are important, but that's all aesthetics.
And as far as performance goes, 100% movement.
It's like semiconductor production. If you're a movement maker, you're like TSMC here.
Right. Chronometer officially certified refers to the movement. Actually, in fact, only the
movements are tested, not the whole final case watch.
Not the finished watches, yes.
So David, who is he importing movements from and how does he meet said movement maker?
Well, that brings us to the other half of the Rolex equation, one Jean Agler, based
in Bien, Switzerland, which is in the mountains of the north of the country.
Importantly, not Geneva.
Yeah, not Geneva.
Geneva is in the southwest of the country in Switzerland right next to France.
So Agler runs this movement workshop up in what is then a tiny little town in the Swiss
mountains. And it turns out that he's actually kind of like a generational talent at watch
movement making. And in particular, what he's really, really, really good at is making movements
that are accurate and on par with the highest quality, most precise, most accurate movements
out there on the market,
but are also much smaller in size. He's making miniature movements. And Hans had gotten to know
Jean when he was working at Kuno Korten and kind of thought like, oh, hey, man, this guy's a diamond
in the rough up there in the mountains. He's as good or better as any movement maker.
And he's making these miniature movements before there's a real market.
It's almost like he's just doing it because it's the hardest thing he can think of.
Totally.
It's like his hobby horse.
I'm going to push the limits of human achievement of how small can I make this thing.
Yes.
I think it's probably known and respected in the industry, but wasn't a large player.
And Hans is like, oh, actually, this guy is my ticket to differentiation here.
I'm keeping his address so I can write him a letter when I get to
when I start my own company.
Yeah.
So here we are at the beginning of Wilsdorf and Davis.
Hans is importing these movements from Agler that he's putting into cases,
selling his watches here in the UK.
This is 1905.
This carries through this relationship for the next 99 years until Rolex finally buys Aguilar in 2004, where Aguilar is making the movements for Rolex watches.
And I don't think there's ever any real formal arrangement here.
It's basically a handshake deal.
Yep.
That's correct. We will make your movements handshake deal. Yep, that's correct.
We will make your movements handshake deal for 99 years.
Yes, all of Rolex, everything it becomes,
this is the basis of it.
And so they weren't exclusive yet.
So in 1905, they're placing their first order
and there's already a little bit of a dance
that's starting to happen where of course,
the front of the watch on the dial
is unsigned so the retailer can put their name there. This already is starting to rub
Hans the wrong way. He kind of feels like these are my watches. Why does the retailer
get to put their name on it? And so he goes to Agler and says, the ones we're going to
sell, these are Wilsdorf and Davis watches. I understand you made the movement, but we got to brand it somewhere.
And so he gets Agler to buy in on this idea
that on the movement, they're gonna put a W and D
and then also inside the case back
for whoever they're buying the case from,
they also inscribe W and D.
And so that's the state of things here in 1905
and those first few years after is there's a W&D on the inside case back on the movement, but not on the face of the watch.
Yep. Which gets into the type of watches that they're making here.
Now we're still in pocket watch land. The wristwatch vision hasn't really entered Hans's brain yet, even though Igler's specialty is these small miniature movements.
So remember what Hans said about his earlier British employers and their lack of specialization?
He continues in his autobiography talking about how he decided to do things differently
here at Wilsdorf and Davis.
Quote, I undertook the financial side and management of our concern.
From the very outset, our success was assured by our fundamental policy to trade only in specialty horological products and
especially in new lines. The first specialty we adopted was the traveling
watch called a portfolio watch, cased in the finest quality leathers. This line I
immediately placed in large quantities on the market, the range covering every
possible style and design.
So again, we're not at wristwatch yet, but he's like, the way that I'm going to succeed
and break through here is through differentiation.
Yes, to do something different.
It's like we always talk about the most important thing to build a huge successful business
is to do something different and unique that people have to come to you for and can't go
to the commodity markets. Now that doesn't necessarily mean you're right.
Yeah, because he's not right with traveling watches.
We don't tell any of the stories here on Acquired of all the people who wanted to do something
extremely unique and different and was not what the market wanted. But it's the classic,
you have to be contrarian and right.
Yeah. And you know, I don't know,
I guess reading what Hans wrote there,
maybe he was right.
It sounds like the traveling watch was a success enough.
He probably thought it was a success at the time.
Yeah.
So then as legend has it,
one day shortly after starting the company
and focusing on these travel watches,
Hans is reading an account of the second Boer War
in South Africa.
Ben, I never knew that all of my like European,
AP European history lessons.
I tweeted this yesterday.
I know, I know.
Who knew that our livelihoods would depend
on AP European history someday?
That's right.
Anyway, Hans is reading an account of the Second Boer War in South Africa.
And he reads that the soldiers that had fought had worn wristwatches so that they could coordinate
their movements and their firing times and all the troop movements even while they were
holding guns.
Do you know why in particular this war had them wearing wristwatches? Oh, I don't, I just assumed that the technology
had progressed enough,
because wristwatches existed at this point in time.
They just weren't thought of as serious watches.
That was part of it, climate.
Oh yes, of course.
They can't wear their jackets,
and so they can't reach into their pocket
and grab a pocket watch.
Of course, because it's hot there.
Yep.
Well, climate is gonna to become important again here
in the development of the wristwatch industry.
So the soldiers and officers there
would use these wristwatches because even though they weren't
as accurate as pocket watches, like you said, Ben,
you probably weren't wearing a jacket.
Even if you were wearing a jacket,
if you're engaged in battle, you're
going to stop, put your gun down, take your pocket watch out
of your vest, open the case? No.
The axis upon which you evaluate value is a different axis than when you're hanging
out on the streets of London.
Yes. Supposedly, as Hans is reading this, like a bolt of lightning, he has the key insight,
well, hell, it's not just soldiers these days. It's actually like a lot of people in the world that could benefit from having an accurate
timepiece on their wrist that they could just turn their wrist and look down and look at
instead of a pocket watch.
Now the funny thing is he calls Eglert, maybe he writes to Eglert, I don't exactly know.
He sends him a text.
He places the largest order in Eglert's company history, several hundred thousand Swiss francs,
for a bunch of these tiny movements. And the great irony of this whole thing is he's kind of wrong.
The time was not right for wristwatches yet. The Boer War was not the shove that the world needed
to say, whoa, wristwatches. The soldiers come back from the Boer War
and it's still kind of the wristlets era.
There's not really enough inertia
to make it take off everywhere.
Now it's kind of okay because Wilsdorf and Davis
is still this small company,
so they don't need that big of a market to address
to feed the needs of the business.
But it would be another 10 years before World War I happened,
and you had this incredible unfortunate tailwind saying,
oh my God, we need tons of wristwatches now.
Yeah, there does start to be a market
for serious timekeeping wristwatches,
particularly in the far reaches of the empire.
So Australia, South Africa, of course, after
the Boer War, and especially India, these are places where you're probably not wearing
a jacket or a vest that much. So this is the initial seeds of the wristwatch market for
Wilsdorf and Davis.
So interesting.
But Hans is like a true believer at this point in time. This is going to be the future way beyond just the empire.
People in Britain are going to want this too.
It's obvious to him why you wouldn't want to have to reach into your vest to bring out
your pocket watch.
He's like a zealot.
He's a total zealot.
So he's like, all right, we've got this killer product.
We're first to market.
We're basically going to invent this whole market.
We need a name for the product.
We need something that's going to make consumers know
to ask for this product for our watches.
We need to coin the term for the industry.
And he's inspired here by the Kodak camera, which by then
had been around for a while and was made not by the Kodak
company, but by the Eastman company.
And Kodak, I believe, was the first invented product brand name.
And it was a name that meant nothing.
Yeah, I think that's right.
And it intentionally meant nothing.
It was easy to pronounce.
It was easy to say.
You could see it once.
It was very memorable.
It worked in any language.
It was five letters. It had a great sound to it.
So supposedly, Eastman came up with the name Kodak with his mother using an anagram set.
And he said that there were three principal concepts that he was looking for in the name.
One, it should be short, easy to pronounce, it should work in any language, and it should
not resemble any other name or be associated with anything else.
Yep.
Anyway, Hans takes inspiration from this and he decides that he needs a Kodak for his new
wristwatch and he writes, I tried combining the letters of the alphabet in every possible way.
This gave some hundred names, but none of them felt quite right. It was one morning when I was
sitting on the upper level of a double-decker bus, powered at that time by horses,
driving alongside Cheapside in London
that a good genie whispered in my ear, Rolex.
He's good at myth-making.
Many startups are named this way today.
Totally.
And a few days after this fruitful journey,
the Rolex brand was filed and then officially registered
in Switzerland by Wilsdorf and Davis.
Now, this is a brand name.
This is not yet the company name.
It's Rolex by Wilsdorf and Davis.
So they trademark it in Switzerland.
A couple years later, they trademark it in London.
And you know, it's short.
It's easily pronounceable.
It's memorable. It's the same in every language,
but there is this one other characteristic
that makes it really perfect,
which is when you hear Rolex,
you can kind of think about rolling a crown of a watch,
you know, that little knob that's sticking out from it
that you use to wind the clock
It channels that and there's also the X
Kind of has a timekeeping feel to it
Also, it almost is like the tick tick tick tick tick tick tick a Rolex feels like maybe you're turning the crown
Until it hits the end or something like that. You can intuit the type of product that would be called Rolex
Yes, totally. So Hans is like, okay, great. I've got my Kodak name, got the brand, invent
this new category. How am I going to legitimize this with customers?
Well I have this one cool trick that I've used before.
Exactly. I have the one cool trick. I'm going gonna do the one cool trick just with wristwatches instead of pocket watches.
In 1910, he sends the first wristwatch movement to the School of Horology in Switzerland
to be awarded the world's first wristwatch chronometer rating.
Which is a big deal because people just did not think these things were accurate before
and without Agler they kind of weren't. Exactly. Now getting certified at the School of Horology
in Switzerland is nice and all but this isn't an astronomical observatory. This doesn't carry the
same weight as something like oh say the Royal Observatory there in England.
So Hans and Agler keep working on these products.
We're finding the movements.
Agler is getting better and better at making wristwatch movements that are truly great.
1910 goes by, 1911 goes by.
We're here in 1912.
Wilsdorf asks Agler specifically, hey, can you produce a wristwatch capable of achieving
an observatory timekeeping certificate?
And David, as you mentioned, the Royal Observatory, and Agler says, let me try and let me get
to work.
It still takes a couple more years.
So he works for two years.
And then finally, in early summer 1914, Hans takes one of Eglers' movements to the Kew Royal
Observatory in England, K-E-W-Kew, for testing.
Now Kew is not only a well-respected observatory for astronomical and specifically timepiece
testing there in England, it's where all the marine chronometers for the British Royal Navy are tested.
The British Royal Navy at this point in time.
We're talking the British Empire, the greatest Navy in the world.
And it takes 45 days.
They put it through the wringer to make sure that this marine chronometer is going to get
our soldiers, our sailors where they need to go.
And even more than that, it is of course affiliated with the other great observatory in England,
the Greenwich Royal Observatory.
Yes.
Which you know was where Greenwich Mean Time was invented.
We are talking like probably the most important timekeeping institution in the world.
Have you been there, David, to Greenwich?
No, no, I want to world. Have you been there, David, to Greenwich?
No, no, I want to go.
Have you?
There's an awesome museum with the history of timekeeping.
When I spent some time in London in summer,
geez, 15 years ago, I went and spent a day there.
It was amazing.
Oh, we got to go.
Yeah.
We'll stop by on our way to Geneva.
Perfect.
So again, here we are.
It's early summer, 1914. Hans has submitted this wristwatch movement
to Q. And after the 45 day rigorous battery of testing, on July 15th 1914, it comes back,
it is passed, and it receives the first Class A precision certificate known known as the QA, K-E-W-A, certification ever
awarded to a wristwatch, cause for great, great celebration and fanfare all around the
world.
Except that it is three weeks after World War I starts.
Yeah.
So between the time that Hans had brought the watch in for testing and when it finally
gets the certification, Archduke Franz Ferdinand is assassinated in Bosnia by a Serbian nationalist,
the whole rat's nest of European alliances gets triggered, and next thing you know, the
whole world is at war.
On the one hand, nobody cares about watches.
There's a war breaking out.
On the other hand,
Everybody cares about watches.
Right. Exactly. Right.
Exactly, exactly.
So World War I is truly the first crucible moment
for Rolex because it's the best thing that ever happened
to the company and the industry.
It made the whole world care about wristwatches.
Also, it's very directly the worst thing
because all of a sudden anti-German sentiment in Britain
goes through the roof.
Totally insane.
There's all sorts of horrible propaganda.
I didn't realize this till now.
Do you know why British people call German shepherds Alsatians?
Yeah, because they don't want to call them German.
It's because of this.
Yeah.
There's all sorts of racism against Germans in England and in Britain, which is utterly
ridiculous because the British royal family was German.
So Queen Victoria married Prince Albert.
Prince Albert was a German prince.
The whole British royal family was German.
This is when they changed their name to Windsor.
Oh, that's right.
Because before Windsor, their family name was Saxacoburgota.
Which isn't going to play well when you're at war against the Germans.
No, no, no, no, no, no.
Speaking of things that aren't going to play well when you're at war against the Germans,
you're not building a strong consumer brand in Britain in 1914 called Wilsdorf.
I mean, if the British royal family is rebranding.
Changing their name, yeah.
Wilsdorf and Davis also needs to re-brand despite the fact that at this
point Willesdorf is a naturalized British citizen. And feels no affiliation to Germany.
He really doesn't ever in his life consider himself German. Totally, totally. But this
is the birth of the company Rolex. So in 1915, they renamed the whole company after the brand name Rolex and the Rolex
watch company limited is founded.
Well, David, I was about to ask you, how does this become a Swiss watch company?
And the answer is definitely right around this time in World War One.
But before we tell that story, now is a great time to thank our
presenting partner, JP Morgan Payments.
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Ooh, perpetual.
I like what you did there.
Hey, you like that?
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Yes.
All right, David, so how are we getting to Switzerland?
How does Rolex become a Swiss watchmaking company? Well, obviously the anti-German sentiment
was part of it. I think if that were the only factor, Rolex probably would have stayed in
England. Yeah. At this point, Wilsdorf is a naturalized
citizen. His wife is British. The company is called Rolex now,
or they're working on it.
It would have been fine.
Yeah.
However, the other reason that World War II in Britain
is bad for business for the new Rolex company
is that Britain imposes a 33% import tax
on watches early on in the war.
That's gonna kill your importing business.
Well it's interesting I read that and yeah it's gonna make it tougher. It's
crippling but it's still you could run a business. You could figure out how to
pass those prices along to customers that's often what happens in the case
of tariffs. But one year later at the beginning of 1916 the British government
puts the nail in the coffin. They completely banned the import of
all gold and silver. They made it impossible for Wilsdorf to build this business based out of
Britain. Because a lot of times he's actually exporting the watches for sale in colonies,
or he's importing a movement, he's importing a case, or maybe he's taking a local British case,
putting it together, making a Rolex watch, and then it's getting shipped out somewhere else. And he's sitting there thinking,
I can't get these precious metals and I'm paying out the nose for these movements.
This is stupid to run my business here.
Yep. And I assume then as now, Rolex's margins in the precious metal watches are way, way,
way higher than in non-precious metal watches.
It's insane. A $10,000 watch becomes a $30,000 watch when... watches are way, way, way higher than in non-precious metal watches.
It's insane.
A $10,000 watch becomes a $30,000 watch when you add gold to it or platinum or whatever.
The Delta between...
It's like Apple selling memory.
Exactly.
Exactly.
Yes.
Interestingly, in the hype of 2020 to 2022, the precious metals were actually easier to come by as a customer because there was so much
less demand to go buy a 30, 50, $100,000 watch that those would kind of be lying around while
the steel ones were flying off the shelves and there were huge lines for them.
Totally. So on the back of this, in 1916, Rolex first moves the assembly of the watches
to Vienna in the Swiss mountainside
near where Agler is.
Which makes sense.
They set up an office and basically say, hey, you're making the movements next door.
We're going to put a case on them right here.
Yep.
And then be able to export from Switzerland now to countries all over the world and not
go through Britain first.
Ultimately, after the war in 1919, Hans moves both himself and the official company headquarters
to Geneva, where of course it still is to this day.
And even to this day, this is crazy.
Design, sales, marketing, and I think final assembly
all happen in Geneva while production of the movement
still happens up in the mountains in Vienna.
It's super interesting.
It would make sense if you are Britain to throw on some terrorists to finance your war.
You got to finance it somehow.
And at the same time, it also makes sense if you're a business operating in Britain
in this time to say, and I'm moving to Switzerland.
But there's this alternative reason to move the business to Switzerland.
And Hans knows it. If he's going to build a globally renowned watch company, he wants to do it in Switzerland.
This company becomes Rolex of Geneva, not just Rolex. Again, I'm going to look at this watch
all the way down at the bottom, Swiss made. Don't you forget it. Or you look at a Patek Philippe
Don't you forget it or you look at a Patek Philippe?
Geneva right there on the face of every Patek Philippe watch they are extremely proud of this
Geneva I love it. Geneva Ben Geneva
Oh, I'm gonna hear about that one aren't it?
It's okay. It's okay. We're ugly Americans here. Okay, so then the question is why
Does Geneva have this prestige? Why is Switzerland an amazing place for watchmaking?
Well, David, will you indulge me
and let me wind the clock back?
I actually thought you were gonna start the timeline
for this episode back in the 1500s.
I was shocked that you only started it in the 1800s.
So perhaps this is a good time to go and tell
the history of watchmaking in Switzerland story.
By all means.
Okay, great.
A lot of this comes from Mark Bridge,
who is the founder and CEO of At Present,
a marketplace for unique jewelry from independent artists.
Mark is one of David and my very best friends,
and insanely coincidentally,
and lucky for us and you listeners,
he wrote his master's thesis 20 years ago on the Renaissance of the Swiss watch industry
Amazing. He sent me a copy of it. We're gonna link to it in the show notes. It's awesome to have this resource available
Just very conveniently from one of our best friends
So all the way back in the 1500s Geneva was a center of activity for the Protestant Christian world
led by John Calvin.
And if you know anything about Calvinism, it is very focused on moral uprightness.
Yes. The Protestant work ethic.
Yes. One of these tenets was banning frivolous things like ornamental jewelry.
Local goldsmiths and jewelers instead focused on watchmaking, since watches served a real function in the world and were not frivolous
It was sort of this exception to the rule if you had that skill set
There's also human beings are human beings no matter what rules you impose on them. It's like, you know life finds a way
Status always finds a way
That's a hundred percent, right? So you've got the rise of Calvinism along with that religious reason
that's sort of causing this local pivot of industries. You have one of climate too. There
are these long harsh winters and so an industry that could be done indoors in a small physical
footprint was perfect. If you're gonna go pick a profession out of a hat to have in Switzerland,
mountainous country, long cold winter, like, this is a great one. And especially because it's so valuable at this point in time,
you can become an important player in Europe, in the European economy, making something that you can make in your climate.
Third, there's a cultural reason. So David, are you familiar with the term établissage?
Ooh, no.
Are you sure?
It's supposed to be Swiss, not French.
I was gonna say.
I've been to Geneva
and I've been to other places in Switzerland,
but I know very little about its culture and history.
Talk to me about terroir.
I know exactly what you're talking about,
but établissage, I don't know.
Okay.
Well, it's Swiss for establishment, basically. But what établissage, I don't know. Okay. Well, it's Swiss for establishment basically.
But what Etablissage means in this context is that it's this system, this
sort of economic system that they established in the area of the Jura
mountains, where very small independent companies, often one to 10 people, could
focus on something small, like a single component, And then you'd have dozens of these small companies
work together to create the finished product.
It's almost like a distributed manufacturing system.
Ah, so this is where Agler comes from.
This is why he's got the workshop in the mountains.
Itabli Sage, yep, exactly.
And so with this specialization of labor in small companies,
you could get really, really good at your tiny part, making, say, hairsprings that we'll talk about later, or these essential
elements of watch movements.
These tiny companies by artisanal craftsmen, these very labor-intensive companies, got
really, really, really good and pretty efficient at making their one thing.
So that's kind of the backdrop
of how the Swiss are producing things.
And lastly, in the late 1500s,
the French had been rising as a watchmaking powerhouse.
And when the balance of power changed in France
and the Catholics came to power,
the French Huguenot refugees
who had talents in jewelry and metalwork and watchmaking
fled to Geneva.
Yeah, these are the Protestants that got kicked out of France.
Yeah, that's exactly right. And so the Protestant safe haven of Geneva,
they brought their watchmaking expertise or if they didn't have watchmaking expertise,
that's all they could really do if they were jewelers or metal workers,
since you can't make anything too shiny and too off-putting. Yeah. So this is how Switzerland gets the reputation
as the watchmaking capital of the world.
Yeah, exactly.
Basically, this creates centuries of momentum,
especially in this distributed établissage system of how
Swiss watches were made.
I kind of think about it as this beautiful blend of French beauty and appreciation for aesthetic
and Swiss precision.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, it sounds like Switzerland itself.
It's a blend of French beauty and German precision.
I love it.
Well, that's definitely one big reason why Hans is like,
okay, we got to move Rolex to Geneva
to participate in this tradition
as we're now going to be selling to the world.
But the other reason is after World War I, they're like, well, we're going to be selling
to the world now.
Britain is still going to be our largest market likely, but every country in the world is
fighting or at least every European country has troops fighting in World War I. They're
all seeing the benefits of the wristwatch.
This is going to be way, way, way bigger after World War I.
I need to be able to serve the whole world.
So they want to be in a neutral country.
Yeah, yeah.
And you just experience like, oh, Britain puts these tariffs on and gosh, well, I didn't
really have a market for Rolexes in Germany before, but if I did, I wouldn't have been
able to sell in Germany.
And like, I don't want that to happen in the future.
Who's not going to put on a big tariff to finance a war Switzerland, Switzerland.
Yeah.
Super interesting.
You know what else happens in 1919?
Well, now that we've set up shop next to eggler for putting their
movements in our cases, it's time for us to get a little bit closer.
So Rolex and eggler arranged for a deal where in 1919-1920,
Erman Agler, who's the son of the founder, John, buys shares in Rolex, unclear what the purchase
price was, that seems to have been lost to history, and joins the board. So he owns about 15%
and so the board is Wilsdorf, Davis, and Agler. There's a second part of the deal,
which is Rolex actually buys shares in Agler too. And this one's less talked about, but
there were two companies that were big purchasers of the movements. It's Rolex and Gruen. And
both of them were watchmakers. Gruen, I think was American, was their second biggest client.
And both of them bought Agler shares also. Yeah, because Rolex did not focus on the American
market until after World War II. Correct. So the companies are a little bit more
joined at the hip, but still not an exclusive partnership. Yep, and like we
said before, I believe still even though there's this equity relationship,
there's no formal contract
governing the provision of movements here.
Crazy.
But, you know, it's in both their best interest to keep it going.
Of course.
So here we are now.
World War I is over.
We've had the chat GPT moment, shall we say, for wristwatches.
All these soldiers from countries all over Europe and the world experience the power
of having an accurate watch on your wrist.
They go home to their civilian lives.
They want to bring it into their life.
And who makes the best and most accurate wristwatch chronometer timekeeping pieces in the world?
Rolex.
And so of course they're going to buy Rolex.
No, that's not true.
No, no, no.
That is not what they're going to do.
It's Omega, right?
Well, I think it's lots of companies.
I mean, basically, the market went from the very early adopters in the British dominions,
far-flung reaches of the British Empire before to now like, all of a sudden, it's this giant
European wide market.
Most of it says they have no idea about Rolex.
They're like, Rolex, whatever. I don't know what Rolex is. Like I've never heard of such
thing before. So I think it was like everybody was now rushing in. And even
though Rolex had this history, probably had the best product, it just didn't
matter. Right. There was just massive demand for this new product category of
which there were many good options. And also there was massive demand but it was
kind of like search engines before Google.
The product still kind of sucked. You know, even really in many ways, the Rolex product.
Rolex probably kept better time than competitors.
They were QA certified.
QA certified, right? But if you're wearing a wristwatch, it's a lot more exposed to the world than your pocket watch.
And you talked a little bit about how complex and delicate these movements are,
and especially in a miniature movement that goes into a wristwatch.
Any dust, any water, any humidity that gets into the case is gonna jam up your movement,
and your watch is gonna fail.
Yep.
So I finally, you like had this aha moment
when I'm doing the research for this episode.
I'd always thought it's just ridiculous.
You know, you go look at the watch market now,
Rolex is all the other brands that like waterproof
to 57,000 million meters.
And I was just like, what?
There's no depth that exists.
David Rosenthal, watch aficionado, ladies and gentlemen.
Exactly.
But like, why?
Who cares?
And I was like, oh, this is why waterproof watches
are a big thing.
It's not about water, necessarily.
It's actually dust more than water.
It's dust.
It's humidity.
If you're waterproof, that's shorthand
for saying you're element proof.
You're durable.
Nothing is going to get inside
this watch and mess up your movement if water can't get in.
You could subject it in a hundred meters of still water and no impurities would get in.
Right.
You could throw it to the bottom of the ocean and it'll keep time forever, you know, et
cetera, et cetera.
Like, oh, this is why this is important.
Yeah.
And servicing was a big deal.
Like you had to get your watch serviced often
and the more dust and humidity and stuff got in there,
like it might just break entirely.
Yes, exactly.
Great, I like where you're going, David,
because there's basically three big pillars
of what makes a Rolex a Rolex,
or frankly what makes a good mechanical watch
a good mechanical watch.
There's Precise, so there's officially certified chronometer
and there's the other two.
What's the second one?
Oystor.
Yeah, so like I said, there's demand for these products, but they all suck because they're
not element-proof.
Well, Oystor is Rolex marketing speak for waterproof.
So there's this great race among high-end Swiss watchmakers to now produce a waterproof wristwatch. And a Swiss
case making company called Francis Baumgartner, which supplied cases to Patek and many other
great watch brands in the early 1920s, they invent a new case style called the Hermetic.
You'll notice that your Rolex does not say Hermetic.
The way they do it is they put the watch case
inside another watch case.
Oh, that's right.
This is the weird hinge thing, right?
It's like a scuba helmet.
They take a watch and they put it inside a scuba helmet.
That is waterproof.
So it works.
It does make watches water and element proof,
but it's big, it's ugly, and most importantly,
you have to unscrew the outside case, the seal, and take out the inside case every day
in order to wind the watch.
Right.
Because famously, the crown is the most dangerous entry point for water or dust, so you can't
leave the crown sticking out of the hermetic case or it would defeat the purpose.
Yep. So that's the state of play through the early 20s. And Rolex gets into this too. They buy cases from Baumgartner and they make these hermetic watches.
You can go find them. You see pictures of them in collector's books.
It's got a hinge on the left side and a little clasp on the right side that goes around the crown.
Yep.
And then, this is so awesome.
This is like a Forrest Mars moment from Hans.
In October 1925, two Swiss casemakers
file a patent for a moisture-proof winding stem
and button.
Ben, just like you're saying, it's
the crown of the watch,
the winding system and the button
where water is most on dust
or most susceptible to getting in to.
Yep.
And mind you, Rolex has been dying to solve this problem.
They had at least three failed attempts
to create a waterproof seal in-house.
Yes.
The whole industry has.
And Hans, like Forrest Mars, reads the Swiss patent filing
register religiously every day. He is reading all of the patents that are getting filed
in Switzerland. He sees this patent get filed and he's like, this is it, I got to get this right now.
He goes to the two guys that invented this
and he buys the patent and makes it exclusive to Rolex.
This turns out that this is the key component
to making a waterproof mechanical wristwatch
that doesn't need to be put in a jar.
Yep, and when I was reading this, I thought,
oh man, Rolex didn't actually invent the oyster case.
They just watched someone else do it.
But that doesn't really matter.
They saw that this was absolutely essential and Wilsdorf jumped right on the opportunity
and said, who cares who came up with the idea?
We're in the position to commercialize it, to roll it out across all of our watches.
I need to strike first.
This is his genius.
He's not a watchmaker.
And Rolex were not watchmakers until they finally bought Agler in 2004.
Hans' genius is he sees the vision for where the market's going.
He recognizes talent and innovation and he pulls it together and he makes it commercially viable
and marketable in a way that like this patent got filed in the Swiss patent register.
Any of the other watch companies who desperately wanted to solve this problem could have seen it too, but he jumped on it. I mean, really, he's like the Mark
Zuckerberg of his time. Oh, that's a good analogy. Yeah, I mean, this Instagram, you know, and then
copying stories from Snap. Hans doesn't care. He's like, I'm going to market this and I'm going to
make this the most successful thing possible. I don't care that we didn't invent it. Hmm. It needs to be in our product.
Yeah.
That's interesting.
For anyone who's a watch person who's sort of wondering what actually
was in the patent, it's essentially for the screw down crown.
The hermetic seal on the all oyster watches going forward,
and of course it's named the oyster because oysters seal when they're
closed.
It's a perfect thing to name it after. Everything works on a threaded system. So the back of the watch
screws into the middle part of the case and then the crown can screwed out also. So you have these
airtight, watertight threads that keep any impurities out. So in July 1926,
that keep any impurities out. So in July 1926, Hans and Rolex goes and registers
the product name Oyster.
This is really, really big.
And Hans is like, I am gonna go big.
Everybody in the whole world needs to know the Rolex name,
needs to know that we are the exclusive owners
of the Oyster system.
He prepares to spend spend in Britain alone,
annual expenditures of over 10,000 pounds
just on advertising for the oyster models.
Dude knows how to build a brand.
He's already naming components.
He's not just marketing Rolex.
This is Rolex, the only watch that has oyster. Yes. Oyster technology. A18 Bionic. Really the parallels to Apple are just incredible.
Oh. Four hours from now, I was going to make that point.
So he's prepared to spend all this money. He's got the product, but he's like,
So, he's prepared to spend all this money, he's got the product, but he's like, we got to do a big launch.
I don't want to just buy regular ads in the newspaper here.
So in 1927, towards the end of the year, the timing is right.
And that brings us to a young British woman named Mercedes Gleitz.
Now Gleitz was a secretary and bilingual stenographer in London, much like young Hans
was, back at CUNO, who happened to have a sort of unique hobby of endurance swimming
in the River Thames in her free time.
Which is insanely cold.
Very cold, and I assume even back then, quite polluted. But so be it.
And she was so good at endurance swimming.
Apparently she would swim for like 10 hours at a time
in the River Thames.
And so in October of 1927, she decided
that she was going to attempt to swim
across the English Channel.
Maybe even more cold.
Definitely cold.
Definitely pretty choppy.
And she did.
She became the first British woman to successfully do so that year in October 1927.
However, a couple days after she completed her swim, another woman emerged and claimed
to have also swum the channel, but have done it faster. And now it turns out that that actually was a hoax,
and Mercedes knew it was a hoax,
but in order to re-prove herself,
she decided to stage a vindication swim
that gets hotly covered by the press.
Which, mind you, she's doing this vindication swim.
She's already spent 15 hours swimming across the channel.
Yeah, it's a miracle she's still alive at this point.
Hans is like, oh, this is our moment.
This is exactly the spectacle that we need.
So he comes up with a brilliant marketing stunt
of he is going to get Mercedes to do this vindication swim
while wearing a new Rolex oyster model.
And what Rolex doesn't talk about to these days
is a footnote to history of,
it wasn't actually on her wrist.
It's on a, it's like a lanyard around her neck.
Yeah, it was on a small chain that she wore around her neck.
But nonetheless, this is an incredible stunt.
Nothing ruins a good story like data.
Let's just smooth it over.
I like the truth.
Yes. This is still featured promin over. I like the truth. Yes. Yeah.
This is still featured prominently on the Rolex website today.
Mercedes' photo is everywhere, but it doesn't matter.
I mean, at the end of the day, who cares if it was on her wrist or not.
Yeah. She also doesn't actually make it, but that doesn't matter either.
That's the other crazy thing. I think it was an especially cold day or especially choppy or something.
She makes it 10 of the 15 hours. So the design of the test is a little bit arbitrary. This
is a watch while it wasn't on the wrist and it didn't make it all the way from England
to France.
It was still in the water for a long time.
For 10 hours.
Yeah. Pretty good product testimonial, shall we say.
For a testimony. So Hans, after this event happens the next day,
he buys the front page of the Daily Mail newspaper,
which is a nationally syndicated newspaper
in Britain at the time.
I didn't realize you could do this back in the day.
You could actually buy the front page as an advertisement.
I think it was common. I think it was a while before the front page as an advertisement. I think it was common.
I think it was a while before the front page was actually dedicated to editorial and early
on it was very common for it to be a full page ad.
Yeah.
So Hans does this and proclaims the success and announcement of the world's first waterproof
wristwatch fully enclosed in its own case without a second hermetic seal around
it and the triumphant launch of the Rolex oyster.
So this is how Rolex tells the story.
After I had heard this told a few different times, I sort of expected to see this full
page ad written in a certain way.
It is kind of buried.
Maybe this is what the advertising style was back in the day,
but the big words are not, watch survives English channel swim. The big words are Rolex
oyster and it says Rolex introduces for the first time the greatest triumph in watchmaking.
Okay, I still don't know what it is. Then I see a picture of a woman's face. Then it
says send for this colored brochure. It's free telling you to send in for more information. Then there's four sketches of the different
watch faces you can get of the Rolex Oyster. And then it says the wonder watch that defies
the elements. There's words all over the place. You finally, finally get to the tiniest text
in the entire thing. maybe the second tiniest
font in this little corner, it says moisture proof, waterproof, heat proof, vibration proof,
cold proof, dust proof. Either Rolex hadn't found their groove in advertising yet, or
maybe people just read a lot more words back then. But if you put this up today, our tick-tockified brains would be like,
don't care, next.
There's way too many words
and they completely bury the lead
that she did a channel swim with this thing
and it survived.
It's hard to know how much of this is just
the state of the art in advertising at the time
versus Hans designed and wrote all that himself.
So one of his maniacal control things was,
I believe up until he died or pretty close to it, he did all the creative for all the
advertising.
Oh, I didn't realize that.
Yeah, we'll get to it later. But they do bring on the J. Walter Thompson agency before he
dies. Probably the rest of the company is like, all right, Hans, we got to professionalize
a little bit here.
And that's when they get extremely good, is in the 60s.
Extremely good, yes.
But I think it's fair to say there's two interesting takeaways here.
One, they hadn't found their groove in advertising yet.
But two, advertising hadn't really been professionalized in a way that we would see in the Mad Men
era.
Totally.
We're still before World War II here.
We're not yet in the modern world.
Yep.
The other thing that's really interesting
is there's something about this
that was sitting with me too doing this research.
This is a major, major, major moment,
the Mercedes-Gleit's moment,
the first brand ambassador of Rolex.
It's interesting that the moment and the person that Hans chose for this launch
was a woman.
Super interesting.
Back in 1927. Super interesting. Yes, the wristwatch was a ladies item before World
War I, but after World War I, really I would think the big market is the men's market.
It's interesting, I dug into it. In this era, Rolex still was primarily a ladies product.
The men's market was growing.
But if you look at their product catalogs,
really up until World War II, ladies models
outnumbered men's models two to one.
Whoa.
These are the little like Prince watches.
Yep, yep.
And definitely Hans's vision
was like a wristwatch is for everybody, men and women. But it's interesting that they
were really women's focused. And then we did a little more digging and asked some friends.
And even to this day, I believe the market of buyers for Rolex watches is basically 50
50 men and women, which is insane. I never would have guessed that, especially because much of my research was lurking on the
Rolex and watches subreddits, which are a very particular type of dude.
It comes across as a very male thing, at least the way that I'm exposed to watches.
I mean, you read the amazing journalism about watches on Hodinkee and the whole world around
appreciating watches.
It's kind of male focused.
It's like a Porsche 911.
Right.
It's amazing that Rolex's history index is so heavily to women and that even today they
move a lot of units to women, even though that's not where I come across Rolex in my
day to day.
Well, it's certainly not where the enthusiast market is focused.
Yes.
But it's one of the really unique things about Rolex.
So many of the other really, really high-end watch brands, with Cartier as an exception,
I think really are men's brands.
Oh, yes.
Whereas Rolex, yeah, it really is 50-50.
Amazing.
All right, so that's Mercedes-Gleitz.
That's the oyster story.
And that really is a huge watershed moment for Rolex and for the wristwatch industry.
And she's effectively the first testimony.
I'm not sure they'd come up with that terminology yet, but this is something that they would
lean heavily into as their means of marketing in the future.
They would hate you calling it a brand ambassador.
Yes, partner. It's Rolex partner is what they call it.
No, I think it's testimony. I'm pretty sure it's this like very particular word that they
wanted to sort of invent and have to themselves. And it's different than influencer marketing.
It's different than the way that someone appears advertising a perfume for a five-year deal. I think it's this very long-term oriented, you are a part of the brand and you are a part of the brand kind
of for your lifetime.
Flashing all the way forward, it's Roger Federer is the purest embodiment of this today, but
that is to come in the future. It turns out though, back to the product of the wrist watch, oyster was huge, but it had a problem.
Ben, like you said, the key to making it work,
you didn't have to have the whole scuba jar
that you enclosed the whole watch in,
but the crown had to screw down.
The crown had to screw down like a jar.
And so that meant that when you went to go wind the watch,
you had to unscrew the crown,
pull it out, wind the watch, expose it to the elements and then screw it back in.
Well, if you know anything about humans, probably at least half the humans on the planet are
not going to be exactly fastidious about screwing the crown back in.
Yes.
There are three pillars to what makes this a breakout product that enables the wristwatch
to really have its iPhone moment. And that third of being perpetual, of being self-winding,
is the magic.
Yes. And these things are so intrinsically linked. And I didn't realize until getting
so deep into the research, self-winding watches are kind of cool on their own,
but just like before I was like, waterproof, whatever,
why is that important?
Self-winding, yeah, seems cool,
but how hard is it to manually wind your watch?
That's what people were doing with pocket watches
for centuries.
It's actually because it's tied to the oyster
and the screw down mechanism.
If you forget to screw your crown back down,
you lose the element proofness of the oyster.
Yes. Oh, OK. I can't wait.
The way that the perpetual movement works is totally genius.
But before we do that, we want to thank good friend of the show, Fundrise.
The team at Fundrise is awesome.
They are CEO Ben Miller and tons of the folks there
are huge acquired listeners, just like all of you.
And since we first started working together three years ago,
Fundrise itself has gone through quite a transformation.
Longtime listeners may remember that Fundrise launched
its move into venture investing via an acquired sponsorship
back in 2022.
And at the time, Fundrise was primarily known
as the U. the US's largest real
estate investment platform for retail investors. And it wasn't obvious that this crazy idea
that they had to bring democratized investing to venture capital would work.
And fast forward today, incredibly, they have demonstrated that they can break into venture
investing in a big way. Ben Miller and Fundrise have invested in Databricks, Anthropic, Canva, Andoril, Ramp,
fellow friends of the show Vanta, Service Titan,
which just went public in December
and had a successful IPO.
Yep, it's genuinely awesome what Fundrise has done,
which is something that many people
have tried over the years,
but no one else has actually been able
to accomplish in venture.
They've taken a retail platform
that any American
can invest in and gotten pre-IPO access to some of the best private companies in the world.
They've created access to all the value creation that's been locked in these private companies
over the past decade plus as growth companies have been delaying their IPOs and staying private longer.
Yep. So when Service Titan went public, thanks to Fundrise, tens of thousands of regular investors
got to celebrate alongside VCs, LPs, and their employees.
Yep.
Just awesome.
We'll be talking about Fundrise all season long,
and you can go check out their full portfolio
that Ben and the Fundrise team are building over
at fundrise.com slash venture.
And if you're a growth stage founder looking for a great series
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This is a paid endorsement for Fundrise and all investments can lead to loss.
Our thanks to Fundrise.
So back to Oyster and leading into the need for self-winding and the perpetual element of Rolex.
If you can create a self-winding wristwatch, well all of a sudden,
the element-proofness of the Oyster works fine for everybody If you can create a self-winding wristwatch, well, all of a sudden,
the element proofness of the Oyster works fine for everybody
because nobody actually has to unscrew the crown.
You never have to pop out the battery
and put in another one.
You never have to charge your Apple Watch.
You name the analogy, but you just-
Set it and forget it.
Yep, you walk around all day,
your watch keeps perfect time-ish,
and it's waterproof, and
you never need to wind it.
Sounds like an amazing product.
Who doesn't want that?
That's a Steve Jobs-like product right there.
Okay.
Before going into the nuance of how Rolex's particular self-winding mechanism works, I
think this is a good time to explain how mechanical watches work at all, what the key
components are, and frankly, it's like alchemy.
It's one of the coolest things I've ever done to prepare for an acquired episode was
go learn how a mechanical watch works.
At a high level, you need two major components to make a timepiece.
First, a way to store energy, and second, a way to release that energy in a
predictable and precise interval.
Which seems like, oh yeah, of course you could do that these days with, you know, a battery
and electronics, but imagine doing that without a battery and without electronics.
Exactly. So yes, on that first one, storing energy, there is something called a mainspring.
Did you read about this in the research, David?
Yep.
A mainspring can store potential energy.
So imagine a foot long, skinny piece of metal
that you wind real tight
and you stuff into something called a barrel.
This looks like a film strip
that's kind of stuffed inside a film canister
that you'd see a stack of canisters
in a projector room at a movie theater.
That's sort of what you should imagine, a real tightly wound mainspring inside that barrel.
Now, interestingly, to your point, David, this kind of begs the question,
what is a battery? Right.
Yes, I said a battery. Technically, that is a battery. Right.
It's like a mechanical battery, since it's a way to store potential energy
to be used later.
Now, amazingly, the way a mechanical watch works these days battery since it's a way to store potential energy to be used later. Now amazingly the
way a mechanical watch works these days is so energy efficient that the mainspring can
store on the order of three days of potential energy to take the watch forward. It's amazing.
Amazing. Okay, so moving on, obviously this isn't sufficient on its own. If you just release
the mainspring in the barrel,
it would spin around real fast.
It would make all the gears spin
and you'd let all the energy out at once.
Break the watch.
Yes.
So you need something to control the energy release
from that mainspring and do it in slow fixed time intervals.
All mechanically.
Yes.
You need something to make the watch tick.
Hey-o.
Yes.
Watchmakers call this an escapement.
Now an escapement in a mechanical watch has two key components to harness that potential
energy from the mainspring.
One is a pallet fork, come back to that, and two is something called the balance.
So how does a pallet fork work?
Well, a pallet fork looks like a little T with teeth on the edges of the top of the
T. And it moves back and forth, a tick and a tock, like the pendulum of a grandfather
clock.
And as it flicks back and forth, it moves all the gears on the watch forward one tick
or one beat.
And there's this element that, this may be several steps down the chain,
where it's actually usually like the hour movement, right?
That then drives all the other movements off of that.
Kind of depends on the watch and what complications are in it, things like that.
But yeah, the important thing to know is when one beat happens,
when the pallet fork enables everything to move forward one beat,
what it's really doing is allowing what's called the escape wheel
to turn one click,
and that drives whatever else is in the gear train for that particular watch.
Gotcha.
Which some watches is, you know, just hours and minutes,
some watches is hours you know, just hours and minutes, some watches is hours and
minutes and seconds, some watches is date, day, moon phase, what you had for breakfast,
etc. Right. And with these complications, which are the sort of features, it's really amazing
because you can sort of think through what the algorithm would be to make such a complication.
But when you're thinking through it, you're thinking sort of like a programmer. You're saying, well, if this, then that, you know, if the date is 31 days.
Yeah, these are not computers.
Right. All of the logic is encoded mechanically in a gear train. It's beautiful.
Yeah.
So, where we left off here is our escapement, where we've got the pallet fork, and it's this little T,
and it's a tick and a tock.
It flicks back and forth and moves the gears all forward one tick.
So how do you get it to tick back and forth?
What is the mechanism by which this pallet fork goes tick tock tick tock tick tock tick
tock?
This is where we introduce a big hero of the whole mechanical watch story, the balance.
And the balance also has two parts.
There's a balance wheel and a
hairspring. And these two things are stuck together around the same center
point. So picture the wheel of a bike, that would be the balance wheel, kind of
like a hula hoop. And then the gears go around the same axle on a bike. You know,
you can imagine that you've seen the rear wheel of a bike. In this analogy, those gears are the hair spring and the outer wheel is the balance
wheel.
So that's what this component kind of looks like.
The hair spring looks really cool.
It is another coiled up piece of metal, although it's much looser and more fluid than the tightly
wound mainspring that we talked about earlier.
Unlike everything else that is incredibly tight inside a watch, this component, the
balance, almost floats and it moves with really low friction.
It's weird because it's the opposite of everything else that's in the whole watch.
And the way it works is the hair spring spins really fast in one direction.
And for anyone who's ever taken a spring and tried to uncoil it, you know, you kind of
note that it only goes so far and then it wants to go back to its resting position.
And then you try to go the other direction and tighten it a little bit and that doesn't
work either.
And it wants to go back to its natural resting position.
That's what's happening here.
So you've got the hair spring, which spins really fast in one direction and then the
energy that it has stored is overcome by the mechanical resistance of unwinding the spring
so it stops and then it spins real fast in the other direction. And this cycle goes back and
forth spinning back and forth tick and tock and flicking that pallet fork back and forth to continually release one
little interval of energy and one little advance of the whole gear train.
It is beautiful.
Amazing.
You can totally see why for the right kind of person, this is like a Porsche 911 or like
it's just catnip.
You can't get enough of this.
That's exactly right.
And you know, you end up with fancy names and proprietary things that Rolex makes in
the far future called a Parachrom hairspring that has these amazing renders and animations
and videos of how it works.
It's gorgeous.
Now, this happens really fast.
This isn't like I just described it, where you go really far in one direction, then you
run out of energy and then you come back.
This happens three, four, five, six times per second, depending on the watch. And that's if
you hold the watch up to your ear and you hear these beats, that's what you're hearing.
So the pallet fork drives that whole gear train, releasing energy that powers the hands and all
the other complications, the day, the date, etc. at exactly the right pace. So when you take a step back and you look at it all, the craziest thing is that it depends
on the exact physical properties of the metals that are used.
The time is literally kept by the physical laws of the universe, elasticity, tensile
strength, inertia, potential energy stored by specific materials. And they have this down to such a
precise science today that watches keep time, certified chronometers keep time within two
seconds per day. Bonkers. It's awesome. I just named four parts of a watch. There are 200 parts.
This is an oversimplification, but kind of the general concept of how a watch works.
Yeah. The other parts are also amazing. I mean, things like there are jewels in the watch because all of these gears need to turn on things that create friction.
And so you need extremely low friction things.
And well, it turns out that like actually rubies and sapphires that are milled into little nuts are the best way to do that.
And so they're actual jewel stones inside your watch
that are being used for a mechanical purpose.
And because jewels can be really hard minerals
and you don't want these things to wear out.
And so when you're slapping something back and forth
six times per second, you want to make sure that,
I mean, most Rolex watches don't need to go in for service
until every, I don't know, once a decade.
It's crazy that these things just don't wear out.
Yeah, I mean, gosh, the Daytona I'm wearing right now,
I don't think it's ever been serviced,
and it's at least 15 years old, if not more than that,
and keeps time perfectly.
It's so cool.
And this is a 500-year year old art. The idea of the
mainspring that applies energy to a escapement that has a balance wheel and a hairspring to
oscillate it back and forth. This isn't new. Every piece of digital technology, heck most analog
technologies are invented after this. Totally. So to bring us back to the perpetual on your Rolex watch, you can imagine that adding this
element of self-winding to the insane complexity that has been developed over centuries with
extreme tolerances that are already in these watch movements, not exactly a trivial thing
to do.
You can't just code it up in software.
No. And in particular, what we're talking about here is, remember I talked about the mainspring
that stores three days worth of energy inside the barrel all coiled up. There's a ton of resistance
on that. I mean, if you think about, if you pop open a crown on a watch and you go to turn it with
your thumb, it's kind of hard to turn. And so if you're going to come up with a self-winding mechanism, you need some way in which you
are using mechanical advantage to wind something that's already wound really tight, even tighter.
Yes.
So here we are in the late 20s. this time, a British watch inventor named John Harwood comes up with an automatic system
for watches.
Now, interestingly, that wasn't his end goal.
He was trying to create a waterproof system, just like Rolex was, and the way that he went
about it was he said, oh, yeah, like we were talking about,
it's the winding crown that is the weakest link
in the element proofness of a watch.
What if I just start by eliminating the winding crown?
Can I do that?
And supposedly he gets inspired one day
by watching children play on a seesaw.
And that gives him the idea for his method
of how he creates something
called the hammer system of a hammer going up and down and hitting different ends inside
the watch as the wrist moves around.
You can imagine that turning a crank, crank, crank, crank.
Yep.
So, he invents this system and just like his Swiss counterparts who invented what became
the oyster system under Rolex,
he patents it. Now, what he decides to do is rather than making a watch out of this,
he's going to create a company that's just an IP company and he's going to license this self-winding
IP to other watchmakers. Which he does, and a couple watchmakers out
there take him up on it and incorporate it into their products. However, it
doesn't prove too popular in the marketplace because a consequence of how
he designed the system, the manual winding capability and the crown is
eliminated entirely. So if your watch stops, if you don't wear it and you lose the charge in the mainspring,
good luck getting it going again.
You got to wear it for days or whatever to just get the energy back in there and then
you can set the time.
Oh, interesting.
So that's a pretty big flaw in this watch. But because of how the patent was granted, at least in the UK, he and his company end
up holding the rights to all self-winding watch technology.
Wow, that is broad.
In Britain, yeah, no matter what the method is, or at least that's my understanding.
Brutal.
So Hans, of course, in Rolex, sees this.
He knows he needs an automatic system for the Oyster to really unlock the potential
of the product and fully break the wristwatch product for the marketplace here.
But his hands are tied.
He can't do anything, at least in Britain, as long as Harwood has this patent.
And Hans knows that ultimately the method that Harwood uses is not good.
He's not going to license from Harwood because he knows it's an inferior implementation.
And then fortunately, fate strikes and the market does its thing.
And in 1929, Harwood's company goes bankrupt, probably aided along by the
stock market crash of 1929 and the entering into the Great Depression, etc. So finally,
the door is now open for Hans and Rolex to complete the product here.
Yep. And while we're here in 1929, just a quick reference point for folks. There was
an article published at this time that said you could get a Rolex for as little as $25
even if you inflation adjust that it's like 450 bucks today or for as high as a thousand dollars
which is 18,000 Rolex's top of their line today is a lot more than $18,000 and the bottom of their
line is a lot more than $450 but that gives you a sense of the type of wealth you would need in order to purchase
a Rolex at this point in history.
It was a meaningful purchase, but not a purchase reserved for only the elite class.
Definitely not.
Rolex at this point is not a luxury brand.
Correct.
It's going to transform into one over the ensuing decades. But no, now, you know, Hans was really, really focused.
And his genius and contribution to the field
was on creating the product of the wristwatch.
And he wanted the wristwatch to be on every wrist in the world,
which he achieved.
So here we are in the early 30s.
After a couple of years of work, Rolex finally cracks it
and patents their own rotor, quote unquote, self-winding system, which still to this day
is the primary method of self-winding across the entire industry. This is a perpetual rotor
at the back of the watch case that spins around in both directions and captures kinetic
energy as the wearer moves their wrist around.
And importantly, unlike the hammer movement, it spins 360 freely in either direction, so
it's not hitting anything.
One of the other problems with the Harwood system was when the hammer struck each end,
it made a noise.
Oh, really?
Yeah, yeah.
You'd wear your watch and go like clack, clack,
clack, clack, clack.
One of the initial marketing points for the rotor system,
the perpetual system that Rolex comes out with
is the silentness of it.
They call it the silent self-winding system.
Oh, that's really interesting.
It's genius.
You can imagine, and I'm sure people have seen videos
or photos of self winding watch.
Imagine a disc that sits around a center point and then you cut off half the desk.
And so what happens is whenever you're swinging your wrist around or because it's a near frictionless system whenever you tilt the watch at all the heavy side of the rotor falls down due to gravity to whatever side is lower.
And so you're just constantly all day, inadvertently spinning this perpetual rotor around and around and
around and using that to wind the mainspring. Yep. It's an incredible innovation and feat of
engineering stacked on top of all these other incredible feats of engineering that go into mechanical watches.
When they first start, you're adding a new layer to the movement when you do this in
the back of the watch.
It makes the watch back protrude a little bit.
Oh, the bubble back.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
These early oyster perpetuals that are first launched into the market are known by collectors
as bubble backs now because the back of them sticks out a little bit
onto the wrist off of the lugs.
It's so cool.
And the other fun thing about this is
it is legitimately an invention by Rolex.
Oyster was licensed,
the credit for how accurate they were
was really all Eggler's innovation.
This is the first time we're really seeing Rolex R&D
figure out some brand new breakthrough
contribution to the watch world.
Yep.
And once this is in place, these are the three key pillars
of Rolex technology and really all mechanical wristwatch
technology of quality from this point forward.
You've got the accuracy, the chronometer,
observatory certified. You've got the accuracy, the chronometer, observatory certified, you've got waterproofness,
element proofness via the oyster, and now you've got self-winding with the perpetual oyster
perpetual. Here it is. That's all here. Yep. So in 1934, they launched the full system,
the oyster perpetual chronometer, the bubble backs known by collectors.
And for the first time, they introduce a new look for the watches, a two-tone mix of steel
and gold for these new Oyster Perpetuals that they call Rolesor. It really just rolls off the tongue.
Right there on your wrist, David.
Right there.
Not on my Daytona, but it is on my Datejust.
This is the gold and steel mix that is now just an iconic Rolex look.
And that's where that center link is the gold and the outer two links are the steel.
Yeah.
Now you're talking about the bracelet there.
Bracelets for a long, long, long time are made by third party companies.
Rolex contracts them out.
But that look even goes onto the case itself.
Oh, okay.
The bracelet usually echoes the case, but combining gold and steel within one watch
encasement was a new look, shall we say, from Rolex at this time.
You know what else kind of carries through to today,
which is kind of interesting?
Rolex and just most tool watches have fluted bezels.
The flutedness is because it makes it easier to grip.
So when you need to screw the back off,
that was the original reason for fluting
was to give you a screw head effectively
to get leverage to pop it off.
Yes, love it.
So, okay, while we're in the early thirties, just to breeze us through a bunch of
other interesting stuff that's happening.
The first time the crown, the logo, the five point crown starts appearing is 1931.
1931 was a weird year because Rolex was just starting to figure out this
perfect product mix and at the same time the world is heaved into a Great Depression and the British pound is devalued so
exports out of Britain dropped by two-thirds. Crisis happened so Rolex is
looking to internationally diversify so they open new offices in Paris, Buenos
Aires and Milan. They organize these trips to South America, the West Indies, China, Japan.
They're really trying to figure out how do we stabilize things while the world is in
crisis.
But they've got the right product and market.
Yep.
I feel like there's an old Sequoia saying or at least a Mike Moritz saying that recessions
are the best time to innovate.
Because coming out of the recession, you're going to have the best product ready to hit the gas.
Right, and fewer competitors.
Yep, exactly.
I will say very interestingly, in 1932,
Omega released a waterproof watch, which is, I don't know,
half a decade after Rolex.
This is considered to be the world's first dive watch.
No one talks about this today.
You hear dive watch, you think Rolex,
but Omega had the first dive watch.
You think Submariner. Yeah. Oh, I've got some really, really, really fun World War II dive watch stuff in a sec.
Oh, great.
But before we get to World War II.
Okay. In 1936, I feel like this is a big moment and kind of exactly what you were saying.
As your competitors fall off a cliff due to economic hardship, there's an opportunity if you have the right
product that's working well in the market to kind of consolidate power. This is when
Rolex goes to Agler and says, hey, we want to take all of your production. And so Gruen
stops buying movements from Agler. This is where I think Rolex may have bought the shares
back from Agler, but again, we don't know and we'll never know, because no one at Rolex will ever talk about that. And this is also when Agler adds Rolex to its
name. The Agler manufacturer of Rolex watches. Yes. So take us into World War II. At the beginning
of the war in 1940, remember Rolex is in Switzerland,ing to the UK, which was still by far their biggest market, gets cut off.
Supply lines from central Europe to the UK are cut off after France falls.
And so Rolex and all the other Swiss watchmakers are like, well, shoot, okay, if we can't
get to England, we got to go find other markets to sell to.
This is like the beginning of COVID,
when all these companies were making up other products
and doing all sorts of stuff.
This is my very favorite sidebar piece of trivia.
Ooh, I have no idea where you're going.
So, do you know what Rolex did in Italy during this time?
I have no idea.
They're casting about, they're trying to find something.
Their retail partner in Italy gets a contract
from the Italian Navy to supply watches to their divers.
And so this Italian retail partner comes to Rolex
and is like, hey, we got a contract for dive watches.
Can you make dive watches for us? And Rolex is like, yeah, hey, we got a contract for dive watches. Can you make dive watches for us? Hmm.
And Rolex is like, yeah, sure.
We can do that.
We're sitting on our hands here at our factories.
Which is funny because this is like a decade and a half before the Submariner.
Yes.
Yes, yes, yes.
This is the first dive watch that Rolex makes.
Can you guess the name of the Italian retail partner?
Oh, I feel like it's going to be a, I don't know, car company.
No, no, no.
It's even more on the nose.
This is Panerai.
This is the Panerai watch.
Oh, really?
Rolex makes the Panerai watch.
So you know, anybody who knows Panerai, famous, you know, very art deco style dive watch,
they have two main models now, the Luminor and the Radiomir.
Yeah, Panerai was a retailer before World War II.
They weren't a watchmaker.
Whoa. And then after the war, Panerai kept going, making these watches. Isn't that amazing?
Totally amazing. And this also underscores another reason why Switzerland was such a
watchmaking powerhouse. This is a very engineering heavy industrial thing, and they didn't have
to devote any resources to the war because they were
completely neutral and so all of their crafts people and machinists and everything can keep
making watches. Yep and so here they are selling to the Italian Navy on the Axis side. Meanwhile,
the thing that they're most focused on is trying to figure out some way to start re-exporting to
Britain, selling to their old main market on the allied side. They do figure out some way to start re-exporting to Britain, selling to their old main market
on the allied side.
They do figure out later in 1940 how to get watches back into Britain.
They sort of launder them first through Spain and Portugal and then through the Strait of
Gibraltar get up to Britain.
This becomes critical because what is World War II that World War I wasn't? I mean, World War I made the market
for the wristwatch, right? But World War II made the precision wristwatch market super important.
If you're a soldier in the trenches in World War I, yeah, you need to coordinate movements and time
and whatnot. If you're a military service member in World War II, it is a very technical war involving a lot of technology involving airplanes, involving aircraft carriers.
And synchronized attacks.
All sorts of things, tanks, synchronized attacks, all this stuff, stealth. So the air battle of Britain, you know, is such a key moment in the war, a key all of these British Royal Air Force pilots, they're all wearing Rolex watches
because at this point Rolex make the best wristwatches,
the most accurate, the most weatherproof
to all the elements.
You know, you're going through all sorts of pressure changes,
going up, going down, you know, these cabins,
quote unquote, if you could call them that,
of World War II fighter planes,
there's no pressurization in there.
These watches need to be able to withstand a lot of elements.
Usually you're navigating by them.
You might be flying in the dark.
Wow.
Super, super important stuff.
Again, I would push back on it was just, I would suspect Omega is the
leading brand at this time.
Omega was thriving in the forties, fifties, even into the 60s in the Swiss watch world.
Yes, that is definitely true. Rolex weren't the only ones that were selling to both sides here.
Hmm.
But nonetheless, World War II is really changing the nature of what you need out of a wristwatch.
Hmm.
And air battles are maybe the most visceral, but then you start to think about all the other stuff
that went into World War II.
There's radio communications, there's radar,
there's early computing, there's nuclear weapons
and technology coming out of that.
There's scientists that are building all these things.
And time is like a really, really important element
for this stuff.
So you've really got this birth of a new military use case,
but then soon to be transitioned to professional need
for watches and for time in the world.
So interesting.
Well, coming out of the war is really when Rolex
starts to figure out their product lineup.
I mean, we talked about, oh, they had the perfect product
at the perfect time with this Oyster officially certified chronograph. Well what that looked like
in product form was all kinds of crap. They all said that and that's how they all worked,
but the cases were everything you could imagine. It's not like you could browse on their website
and see we make these six main families of watches with these
Subvariations underneath it was far from it. You look at these old
Advertisements and catalogs and you're like I don't even know what that thing's called
Because it just looks so different than everything else as they're coming out of the war
This is when they're starting to figure out Oh a standardized product lineup and not quite yet
But soon we're going to build brand around each one of these things and who it's for and what
it says about you if you wear this type of watch.
Yes, you are foreshadowing tool watches or sport watches, a watch for a specific technical
use case or more accurately a watch that says something about you as the wearer. That is the legacy of World War II to come on the product side.
But first, just on the market side, as soon as the war is over, there's no more European market.
Europe is in shambles.
Oh.
But you know what market there is?
Is America.
Mmm.
Yeah, you know who didn't have their cities all just destroyed and bombed to oblivion
and has disposable income and GIs returning home?
Yep.
You know, who is atop the new world order now?
At least on the capitalist side.
I don't think communists were buying a lot of Rolexes.
I'm sure there's some crazy stories about black market communist dealers of Rolexes
to Russia post-World War II. I'm sure that
happened.
There must be. I'm pretty sure Castro famously loved Rolexes.
I think he even wore two. There's like some photos of him where he's wearing two Rolexes.
Amazing. Amazing.
Yeah, I'm looking it up right now.
Nothing screams communism like multiple Rolexes on your wrist. Here it is.
He's wearing, I think it's a Rolex GMT and a Submariner on the same wrist.
Yes.
He referred to one as a backup in case the first stops working, but that's extremely
unlikely.
I suspect it's to keep Moscow time.
Or he just wanted to wear two Rolexes on his wrist because he could.
Yeah, right.
Exactly.
Okay.
Well, the non-black market for Rolexes after the war, if you're going to go somewhere,
you're going to go to America.
And Hans and the company devise just about the most genius three-putt scheme to get there,
imaginable.
Three-putt scheme.
Get this.
So in 1945-
Rolex would never three-putt. Tiger Woods wouldn't. Rolex brand
testimony. Yep. Okay. So 1945, right after the war ends is also the 40th anniversary of the founding
of Wilsdorf and Davis, the Ruby Jubilee of the company. For the occasion, Rolex launches their finest model yet,
the Datejust.
And this is the first modern Rolex.
Still an iconic watch sold by the company today.
Yep.
It's just beautiful.
I've got one here in front of me.
For a lot of people, if they don't picture a Submariner,
when you hear Rolex, they picture a Datejust.
Or a Daytona, but we'll get to when you hear Rolex, they picture a Datejust.
Or a Daytona, but we'll get to that.
And launched alongside the Datejust is the Jubilee bracelet, which is the iconic beaded
Rolex bracelet we all know now.
They name it the Jubilee.
Hans, you remember, he wants to get into the American market.
He initially wanted to call it the Victory bracelet, but his Swiss colleagues were like, that's not very Swiss.
We are neutral. So it becomes the Jubilee bracelet.
Beautiful. It goes great with a fluted bezel. It just adds a little more pizzazz to the
wrist.
Right around this same time, Rolex manufactures their 50,000th officially certified Swiss chronometer.
And just happens of course that that model is the new Datejust. So Hans decides that he is going to
give this very special Rolex watch to the Swiss general Henri Guisson who led Switzerland through
the war. National hero in Switzerland, the
Dwight Eisenhower of Switzerland, one might say.
What does that even look like to lead Switzerland through the war?
That's a good question.
A lot of sitting.
Well, remember, this is a three-putt.
This is just the first putt here.
So Guisson gladly accepts this great watch.
Well, Rolex is really ramping production here now.
So it turns out, you know, a few months later,
they make their hundred thousandth chronometer
that they have certified here.
Oh, this one goes to Winston Churchill.
This one, Hans goes to General Guisson,
you know, newly christened Rolex Convert and says,
would you please on our behalf offer this to your dear friend,
Sir Winston Churchill?
There it is.
Winston Churchill accepts.
Now Winston Churchill is a Rolex man.
Well, less than a year later,
Rolex makes their 150,000th officially certified chronometer,
once again, in the now, you know, new top of the line Datejust model. And who does Hans go to for this one?
Through not directly, but with some influence of the fact that his friend Sir Winston Churchill
wore it. He goes to General Dwight D. Eisenhower, American hero, leader of the allied forces, architect of the allied
victory in this new world order, and Eisenhower, because his good friend Churchill wears Rolex
as how could I not accept?
And so now Dwight Eisenhower becomes a Rolex man.
And then a few short years later in 1952, Eisenhower becomes president of the United States of America with his iconic gold Rolex Datejust on his wrist at almost all times.
Yes.
And this is the very first time that Rolex kind of gets the idea of what all of their
future marketing and positioning will be, which is those who command the world wear Rolex.
Soterios Johnson So at this time, Rolex finally brings on
a third-party advertising agency, the J. Walter Thompson advertising agency in New York.
Rolex and J. Walter Thompson in collaboration after Eisenhower becomes president, wearing his
Datejust, launch a campaign in the US,
almost literally what you said, Ben,
the tagline of the campaign is,
men who guide the destinies of the world,
wear Rolex watches.
They printed this.
Yes, yes.
That is on the advertisement.
All over magazines across America,
and maybe the world too, I don't know.
It's incredible.
Men who guide the destinies of the world wear Rolex watches.
Shameless.
Shameless.
So many things to say.
Obviously today that would be people, not men.
But it's also literally true.
You got Eisenhower, you got Churchill, you got Castro.
Totally.
Wearing Rolexes.
I'm gonna save for later in the 60s and 70s
some of their advertising campaigns,
but there are a few sentences that we just have to say
do show up that is along these lines.
There's one that is, when a man has the world in his hands,
you expect to find a Rolex on his wrist.
Oh, this is Don Draper. This is better than Don Draper.
A Rolex will never change the world.
We leave that to the people who wear them.
Oh.
I mean...
We can just end the episode here.
Now, that is brand positioning.
That is true brand positioning.
And the fact that they engineered getting one on the wrist of the president of the United States is so genius.
And interestingly, even though they started with Mercedes-Gleit's, this idea of like human achievement and accomplishment and the top of their field,
they aren't doing that in this era.
It is about the people who command the world. And they later on come back to achievement
and the people who are scientists.
And again, I'll save it for the 60s and 70s,
but this is a very clear positioning
of those who command the world.
Yep, yep.
Now the problem, I guess, with those who command the world
as just absolutely gangster as it is,
is ultimately you're talking about a small market.
Now it's great aspirational, you know, it helps the brand halo and whatnot, but more
people, especially as we enter the fifties and sixties, want to be Arnold Palmer, shall
we say, than want to be Dwight Eisenhower.
One final little product sidebar on the Datejust that I just love.
The original Datejust had the date window.
It's called the Datejust because it's a regular watch with a little window on the dial
that has the number of the date of the month in there.
In place of the three and, you know, if you're picturing one today,
you probably picture that magnifier that's sitting on this.
The magnifier, the Cyclops eye in Rolex marketing speak.
Of course.
So the legend of how that came about
is Hans' second wife, Betty Wilsdorf Metler.
His first wife, Anna, died tragically in 1944
right before the end of World War II.
And that is actually when Hans sets up the Hans Wilsdorf
Foundation and puts all of his ownership of the company into it.
Famously, he never had any family heirs. There was no one to pass the company to, so he creates
this foundation.
Yes. So his second wife, Betty, loved the Datejust. And still to this day, the Lady
Datejust, I believe, is the single best selling model in the Rolex catalog.
Well, yeah, they have like eight watches for men
and one for women.
Of course, that one's good.
50% are bought by women.
And you know, women wear some mariner's and stuff too,
but like, come on.
You're concentrating 50% of your sales
into one quote unquote model.
Yes.
So Betty loved the Datejust,
but had a tough time reading the small numbers of the date in the window.
So as the story goes, one day while Hans is getting ready in his bathroom in the morning,
he's wearing a Datejust and a drop of water drips onto it right above the date window.
And it magnifies the date.
I'd say you can't make this stuff up, but they made this stuff up. They made this stuff up. Yeah, yeah. And he shouts, I got it. I got it. It'sifies the date. I'd say you can't make this stuff up, but they made this stuff up.
They made this stuff up. Yeah, yeah. And he shouts,
I got it, I got it. It's like the eureka moment in the bathtub.
And that is the inspiration for the...
cyclops window of the dates just.
If you're at Rolex and you're listening to this
and you want to tell us, no, it really is true,
hello at acquired.fm.
We will happily come to Geneva and talk to you about it. Yes.
Okay, so Ben, as you were saying though, the Datejust.
It's a dress watch.
It's a watch that you wear if you are commanding the world,
you're wearing a suit,
and you are amongst other respectable people.
Yes.
But what Rolex kind of does from 1950 onward is,
yeah, of course we make that, but we want to make a watch that you can wear while
you're doing your extreme activity that's gonna look great when you show up
to dinner afterwards too. Yep. And that is the core of the brand today which gets
built in the 1950s under Andre. Sports watches.
It's sports watches. It's the Submariner, it's the Explorer, it's the GMT Master, it's the Daytona,
the modern sport watches. And like you said, these are very different than what
Churchill and Eisenhower are wearing.
Yep.
So Andre Heinegger, the second CEO of Rolex after Hans. Andre joined the company in 1948, right after the war.
And he was a former lawyer, I believe, by training.
And he first goes to South America
and runs the South American market for Rolex.
And then he comes back to headquarters in Geneva
and he becomes the director of marketing.
So he's the one who brings on J. Walter Thompson.
He's the one who does the Destinies of the World campaign.
And then in 1955, I believe he becomes
the director of watches.
And so bringing on J. Walter Thompson,
revamping the marketing message,
opening up the Americas market and really the US market,
that's sort of his purview here.
And then later on, he starts working with Mark McCormick and IMG, which is the talent
agency that we'll get into for the testimonies.
Oh.
What Andre realizes is that now here in the 50s and into the 60s ahead, all the technology and engineering
and innovation that went into Rolex in the 30s to perfect the product of the wristwatch,
that's no longer defensible. You mentioned Omega, but basically anybody else, certainly
any other Swiss company, can make a perfectly on-parity watch to what Rolex can make at this point in time.
There's 30 Swiss companies doing this. Yeah. Especially because of the établissage,
all of the component manufacturers are outside the brand. And so you just go around all the
component manufacturers and Rolex is a little different because they have Agler, but in general,
you can go around to find all the different tiny little shops that are making each of these components and buy it
and make a watch.
Totally.
So all the stuff that Hans was a genius at kind of isn't going to cut it in terms of
differentiation for this new era.
What Rolex now needs to do is move beyond what the actual product is on your wrist to more, what does it say about you
that you're wearing it, to the brand of the company itself, what a signaling is, what it means about
you. This is the first step towards becoming a luxury brand. And I don't know that Andre and
they were thinking about it necessarily as luxury yet, and it's
not really luxury yet.
It's much more lifestyle at this point in time.
It would later become luxury, but this is his real, real genius.
So from 1953 to 1955, Rolex, and again, Hans is still running the company. He dies in 1960. But Rolex, Hans, Andre, launch a whole suite
of wild new models, very different than the Datejust
and the Oyster Perpetuals that we were talking about before.
This is the Explorer, the Turnograph, the Submariner,
the Milgauss, and the GMT Master.
These are what are then initially called the tool watches,
but quickly morph into becoming known as the sport watches.
Yeah, the industry kind of refers to them
as sport watches or tool watches.
Rolex calls them professional watches,
which is kind of funny because it's like the opposite
of what a professional watch you would think
is like the Datejust, but they're thinking it as more of like a professional driver, a professional
race car driver so that's their... Yeah a professional pilot. Yes you'll continue to
see this in everything that is in the Rolex universe is we don't want to be
lumped into any sort of a category so we have to refer to something entirely
different such that we can't be put into a box.
They don't make sport watches, they make professional watches.
In the same way, there's something called the Rolex way.
Oh, you mean like the Vision Pro is not augmented reality?
Exactly.
Like the Rolex way, there's this YouTube video that they put out describing the Rolex way
and they just list all the things that they're not.
It's not limitless because that's too limiting. Everything in the Rolex
universe needs to be described in a way that it's too impossible for you to describe. It's
just simply Rolex.
Amazing. Amazing. Okay. So back to this suite of really world-changing tool watches, or
at least watch world-changing tool watches.
Professional watches, David.
Professional watches, I'm sorry.
First is the Turnograph as perhaps foreshadowed by that really great name there.
What a horrible name.
That's the least successful of these watches that they launch.
You're not going to be buying any turnographs from authorized Rolex dealers these days.
But David, if you look at a turnograph, what's the original one look like?
Well, it looks like the GMT-Master.
We'll get back to that in a sec.
So the key feature, the key professional feature of the turnograph was it had a rotating bezel
around the dial, around the face of the watch that you could use for timing different events.
And the way Rolex marketed this, as this was going to be for international business people
who were making international phone calls and needed to time the length of the phone
call.
Really?
Yeah.
That's funny.
Swing and a miss.
Swing and a miss.
Not exactly really a romantic lifestyle you want to be associated with.
Saving pennies on your, I guess at the time it was saving $10 at a time on your long distance
calls.
Yeah, sure.
But it'll come back.
The next least successful one is the Milgauss.
I love this watch.
I know.
This one is awesome.
This has a whole second life.
Yes.
It was designed in association with the engineers at CERN
in Switzerland, the particle accelerator,
for scientists who are working while exposed
to strong magnetic fields.
And the idea was that this Milgauss was so well protected
from magnetic fields that you could wear it
in these environments and it would still tell accurate time.
Which you can understand why this would be a big deal.
If you have a metallic hairspring that is the primary thing making your watch tick,
you walk into some of these environments that scientists are operating in and yeah, your
watch is going to speed up or slow down.
Yep.
So a little more romantic than timing international business calls in terms of the inspiration
for this, but not a large market for people who are scientists or you know aspiring to work in strong
magnetic field areas so they discontinued that after a couple years but
then they bring it back in 2007 it's awesome I mean it's got this like
lightning bolt secondhand on it yeah it's so cool and the colors are great
it's got this really fun orange.
I've been contemplating whether I want to get an Explorer
or a Milgauss.
And it's effectively the same watch,
but the Milgauss sort of has this very fun scientific origin
and look to it.
Right.
Ooh.
I can totally see you rocking either one.
It just feels me, doesn't it?
Yeah, it does.
You definitely have got the Explorer.
You know, you love exploring, you know, backpacking.
You've got that great iconic picture.
Is that still, is that picture of you and your dad still up in-
Oh yeah, behind me in my home studio.
In your studio.
Yeah.
Yep, backpacking.
That's Iceland.
Yep.
But I feel like the Milgauss might be more you.
I know.
Both great watches.
Oh, both great watches.
Okay.
That's number two. And then then the first really big one,
the Explorer, Ben, like you were talking about.
Which the story is so awesome for this.
So awesome. So supposedly, it is made in honor of Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay's
summit of Mount Everest, the first human summoning of Mount Everest.
1953, I think.
I believe it was 1953, yes.
And they wore an oyster perpetual up
that was sort of a prototype of what the Explorer would be.
Yep, all of these tool watches here,
sorry, professional watches,
all of them they prototyped in partnership with various people who were living these tool watches here, sorry, professional watches, all of them they prototyped
in partnership with various people who were living these lifestyles, doing these human
achievements.
Now, the legend is that Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay were working with Rolex,
wearing Rolexes, summoning Everest wearing Rolexes.
And that is in the marketing today, That is the lore around the brand today.
And importantly, both of them become official Rolex testimonies,
brand ambassadors, partners afterwards.
Yep.
So they will, for the rest of their lives, tell you how much they love Rolex.
However, Sir Edmund Hillary did not prefer his Rolex. He had a Smith's watch that he preferred to wear.
And I think the Smith's was the official outfitter of the expedition.
Okay.
And Rolex was not.
So I do believe both watches ended up on the summit. I think that it's likely whether it was on wrists or in backpacks or what the deal is. But it's just funny that there's super tightly associated with Rolex is that summiting of
Everest and like, they were interested.
It was sort of there.
Yeah.
But the Explorer designed for withstanding extreme pressure changes, being able to go
up to the summit of Everest and still work fine.
Gosh, imagine yet another modern endeavor
where timekeeping is critically important
and means the difference between life and death.
You need to rely on your watch
when you're summoning Everest.
It's a really robust watch.
There's not a lot of moving parts.
There's not a lot of complications.
There's not a spinning dial.
Easily readable in the elements.
Exactly.
Yep. So that's the Explorer. It goes on to
become iconic, extremely popular still to this day. Then there's the Submariner, an
equally fun origin myth story, shall we say. If you separated Submariner from Rolex, Submariner
may actually be a bigger deal. Submariner is its own whole franchise.
Absolutely.
Almost in the way that's like,
what if you separated the Dallas Cowboys from the NFL?
Who's the more important braid?
Like the sub is, if you're gonna get a Rolex
and you're intending to have multiple,
you kind of should start with the sub
because it's just so iconic.
You're right, it is really its own world.
It was Sean Connery's watch even before he started playing James Bond,
and then he wore it and, yeah.
Alright, alright, alright, let's get into it.
So the Submariner is the Rolex dive watch.
The professional diving watch.
As we talked about, not the first dive watch that Rolex made,
that would be the Panerai.
But that's not what you know. What you know is the Sub is a great dive watch that Rolex makes and
defines the category. Yes, works and is waterproof down to 100 meters in depth.
Not a lot of people who are buying these things are going down to 100 meters, but here we go.
Although I must say, I think this is an overlooked thing about this category.
That's 100 meters in depth if there were no pressure changes and you weren't whipping your
hand around. It's nice to have 100 meters of depth so that if you're going 20 meters in depth
and things happen, you might at some given second while you're whipping your arm around
or something weird happens underwater approach the, even though you're actually far from 100 meters below.
And to that point, I believe at some point,
Rolex starts actually testing their watches
to significantly greater depth
than what is advertised for this reason.
That's correct.
Most of them, I think, are at 10% extra margin of safety,
but I think the dive watches are an extra 25%.
Yeah, you don't want to be like,
oh, I've got a 300- meter depth watch and get down to 300 meters
and think you're good, but actually go to 305. Yeah. You know, a hundred meter waterproof watch
is nice even just for going in swimming pools. And I'm not sure I would want a 10 meter waterproof
watch. It feels dangerous. Yep. But it's not really about the waterproofness.
So around this time, 1952, 1953, much of popular culture is focused on a Frenchman named Jacques
Cousteau, probably rings a bell to many of you.
And Jacques Cousteau was the first world famous undersea explorer.
He actually invented scuba diving.
Oh, interesting.
Yeah.
He was a total renaissance man genius.
And in 1953, he's filming the documentary, The Silent World in the Mediterranean Sea,
that is going to go on to win the Oscar, the Academy Award for best documentary, I think
in 1956. But the whole world is watching these exploits, you know, discovering the depths of the ocean,
this whole alien world for the first time along with Jacques.
And he's doing so and going down in these machines while wearing Rolex watches.
Great.
So great.
Now interestingly, there's not an actual formal relationship between Jacques and Rolex.
And actually, Rolex was formally working with another undersea explorer who didn't become
nearly as famous.
But nonetheless, Jacques was a Rolex fan, was wearing Rolexes while doing all this,
as was much of his crew.
And then when the movie comes out, they're all wearing these Rolexes. And it's important to remember for people who
scuba dive out there, you have a dive computer these days. I mean, even I remember when I got
Patty certified, even your very first few dives, you're not wearing a dive watch, you're using a
dive computer. At this time, this was a legitimate tool that you needed. It's not going to tell you your depth the
way that a dive computer is, but in order to know your total bottom time and...
In the same way if you're summoning Everest, well even more so than if you're summoning
Everest, you really need a Submariner, a dive watch if you're diving.
This isn't cute, this is an essential tool to complete this extreme task.
Yes. So, you know, that's great for marketing here.
But then, 1962, the very first James Bond movie, Dr. No, comes out.
And as it is written in Ian Fleming's James Bond books.
Yes, because of course, Ian Fleming himself was a Rolex man.
Of course, James Bond wears Rolexes.
Now, canonically, I didn't know this till
doing the research, did you know that at least according to Ian Fleming canon, James Bond's
mother is Swiss and his father is British? Kind of like you might say Rolex itself is.
Oh, interesting. So, Sean Connery wears a Submariner in Dr. No.
And then Connery, I believe,
would wear subs for all of his Spawn movies.
And Ben, like you said, was in real life a sub guy himself.
I think that's right.
There is no bigger.
If you're trying to build a lifestyle brand,
one of the first lifestyle brands in the modern world,
like there's nothing better that you could do.
And this persisted from 1962 until 1995.
Yes, with GoldenEye.
Yeah, when Pierce Brosnan came in,
they wanted to refresh Bond's brand image,
and they chose Omega for that one.
Oh, wow.
Wow, that's really charitable of you, too,
the Bond franchise there.
No, it is.
No, come on.
Omega paid them a boatload of money for product placement.
They did eventually, but initially it was not a paid placement.
Really?
Uh-huh.
I was almost certain that 95 was when they decided to bid out all the stuff.
Well, let's put it this way.
If it was bid out, Rolex would decline to bid because Rolex does not engage in paid product placement.
Well, that's, I assumed, the only way that Bond would stop wearing Rolex.
I mean, I guess maybe you could make an argument that you're trying to reboot the franchise
around Pierce Brosnan.
Pierce Brosnan maybe is more of an Omega guy than a Rolex guy.
There's some weird line that they used around trying to reboot him with more of a European
modern flair or something.
Come on. No way. I don't believe it. They freaking bit it out. There's no way that James
Bond is not a Rolex guy.
And certainly eventually, Omega is paying a boatload of money to the James Bond franchise.
So much so that there's a bump in Omega sales every five years when a Bond movie comes out.
A huge bump.
GoldenEye was when BMW launched the Z3 coupe, right? So yeah,
GoldenEye was totally product placement central. And now Bond movies are like, you know,
the whole budget's covered by product placement. They only exist for product placement.
I don't know. One of the sources I found on watches of espionage.com details. Apparently the costume designer reached out to Omega
and was given for free a Seamaster.
And there's a, I think even a quote,
there was no product placement incentive in 1995 whatsoever.
I went to them and of course they were interested,
but it was no more than helping us.
They gave us watches for nothing.
It definitely turned into a backup theup-the-truck,
boatload-of-money thing, but the Omega fans will insist that it was a organic thing at first.
SID Well, okay. Maybe that's right. Anyway, the point is, from 1962 until 1995,
if you liked James Bond and you wanted to have a little bit of James Bond in your life too,
then you wanted to wear a Submariner on your wrist.
Yeah.
It's perfect.
James Bond does a lot of diving and then he goes right from, you know, diffusing the undersea
bomb with the Bond girl to then popping up and going to this high class dinner afterwards.
He's all wearing the same watch the entire time.
It's perfect.
It's perfect. It is.
Super fun little coda on the Submariner. A few years later in 1967, do you know the story
of the Sea Dweller? Which I believe is still in the Rolex lineup to this day.
It is. Is this the one that's like the super sub that's like a Submariner, but you can
go real deep?
It's the super sub. Yes. So Rolex develops this in partnership
with the French undersea exploration company, ComEx.
And there's this issue where helium
would get trapped in the watch in the Submariner.
And the pressure would break it as you're coming back up.
And so they developed the Sea-Dweller,
which is waterproof down to 600 meters
and has a special helium release valve.
This is ridiculous.
No person who is going to buy these actually
is going to use this stuff, except for COMEX employees
that are being issued them.
But it adds to the romance.
It adds to the, you know, like, this is a lifestyle purchase.
OK, if you're already taking us from Submariner to Sea Dweller, you got to take us to Deep
Sea Challenge.
This is the ultra version.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right, go for it.
So they develop a watch.
This thing is so thick.
You're not putting this on your wrist, but they design a watch and they said, well, what
if we take this idea of originally the Submariner and then the Sea Dweller and we make this thing called the Deep Sea.
And there was an earlier version of this before James Cameron, right?
Yeah.
Well, the Cameron one, I believe is the Deep Sea Challenge, which is a extra extra version.
And the challenge is the one that's the 11,000 meter, whereas the regular Deepsea is just regular old 3900 meters.
So you get the Deepsea for 3900 meters,
the Deepsea challenge to really get to the bottom,
the 11,000 meter.
James Cameron on a manned submersible
takes the Sea Dweller Deepsea challenge.
And it actually is, I think, all of those brands.
They include the sub-brand with the parent brand
in this thing, down to the Marianas Trench,
to the deepest part of the ocean.
And this thing is clipped onto the outside of the submarine
because it's useless to have it inside.
Humans would get crushed by this pressure
if they were on the outside
But the watch keeps perfect time keeps all the water out all the way to the deepest part of the ocean
Amazing and of course James Cameron testimony. Yes, of course, of course
so that's
Going down to the bottom of the sea very romantic
lifestyle
You know association by the way, isn't it interesting? All these are in English all these watches have English names of the sea. Very romantic lifestyle, you know, association.
By the way, isn't it interesting all these are in English? All these watches have English names.
Yeah, what's the market here? It's Americans. Come on.
So take us airborne, David.
Yeah, so we've gone down. Now we'll go up. That brings us to the GMT Master, the Greenwich Mean Time Master. So in 1955, Boeing launched the 707 commercial jet airliner
based on a Air Force air-to-air refueling tanker design.
I didn't know that until this episode.
Neither did I.
And the next year in 1956, Pan Am, the iconic American airline, begins flying intercontinental
jet flights with the Boeing 707 for the first time and the jet age for the consumer is born
and along with it, jet lag.
It's a new concept.
If you traveled across continents before, you didn't move fast enough that you experienced jet lag. It's a new concept. If you traveled across continents before, you didn't move
fast enough that you experienced jet lag. So Pan Am is worried about the effects of
jet lag on its pilots. The pilots are going back and forth all the time across the Atlantic
Ocean or the Pacific Ocean or whatever. And so they decide that the best thing to do is
to keep the pilots operating on their home time.
So let's say the pilots are based out of New York.
They need to operate on New York time even if they've just landed in London.
Okay.
And the way that they're going to do that is they're going to work with Rolex
and develop a new professional watch for their pilots
that can for the first time tell time simultaneously in two different time zones.
Amazing.
So Rolex takes the failed turnograph, which isn't selling well, but has the rotating bezel, remember.
Bidirectional rotating bezel, importantly, because the Submariner is just one.
Hmm.
Well, maybe not at first, but eventually becomes just one so you don't, you know,
screw up and do something you don't want to with it. Yep. And they change the markings on the bezel from 60 minutes or 60 demarcations that it was on the turnograph to 24 hours.
And then they add in a fourth hand on the movement that moves at a 24 hour movement.
movement. And so all of a sudden, you can now on one single watch face, keep track of two different time zones and the GMT master is born. You are the master of time with this
watch.
Legitimately, very, very useful. Whenever you and I travel for acquired, I set the complication
in the lower right of my Apple watch to be the home time.
Because it's just really nice to keep track of home time in addition to where I am right now.
Totally. So that's pretty cool. And eventually they launch two tone on the rotating bezel,
the most famous of which being red on one half and blue on the other half.
And this is the Pepsi model.
Yes. So cool.
They do all these great limited editions.
The Sprite.
The Batman. Gray and black.
It's great. The community comes up with little nicknames
for all the different color schemes that they do here.
Super, super fun.
Now, this is for air travel and jet travel.
But of course, the pinnacle of 1960s and 1970s romance up in the air is not air travel, but
space travel.
Yep.
Oh, yes.
Which brings us to the Apollo missions.
For which standard issue from NASA is the Omega Speedmaster.
Yeah, which again, I will say bolsters my case that in this 40s, 50s, 60s, Omega was
the big brand.
Like Rolex had a target in mind to beat and that target was Omega who was bigger.
Yep.
But even though Omega was standard issue on the Apollo missions, not all of the Apollo
astronauts chose to wear their
standard-issue watches. So if you go to Rolex headquarters, there is an
incredible signed picture from Apollo 13, you know, the Apollo 13 mission, the Tom
Hanks movie, signed by astronaut Jack Swigert, a character who's played by Kevin Bacon in the movie,
to my longtime friend, René Généré,
who I believe was Rolex head of communications at the time,
who enabled me to always be on time.
So Jack, and I think maybe some of the other astronauts too,
preferred GMT masters and were their GMT Masters during the Apollo
missions.
Interesting.
Yeah, because like you said, the Omega Speedmaster famously is the moon watch.
In many ways, it's the big blemish in Rolex's whole strategy of being the brand for people
who accomplished the greatest heights in human history.
But this is a great little way to slide in and take a little slice of that history too.
Yep.
And by choice, by the astronauts' choice,
much like Sean Connery.
Oh, what could be better?
Yes.
Not gonna wear this inferior product.
Ha ha ha.
Now, I'm sure this is Rolex's version of history,
but supposedly NASA reached out to Rolex first,
because they knew that test pilots preferred GMT Masters.
But there was a mix-up in Rolex's New York purchasing office that led to this mishap
of Omega being selected instead.
If you work at Omega, please contact us and tell us what is the real version of this
story because we know no one at Rolex is going to call.
So let's hear at least Omega's side of this.
Yes.
Okay.
So whatever the case, you know, this is all just building so much legend and lore and romance
and you know, the ultimate lifestyle brand here.
And like I said earlier, this really is the architecting of Andre Heininger.
And we talked about the J. Walter Thompson relationship, but I had mentioned Mark McCormick
and IMG.
And starting here in the mid-60s with IMG is when they really turbocharge and formalize
this testimony brand ambassador partnership relationship.
And they are doing two pronged here.
These professional watches are happening,
but they've also advanced their sort of dress line.
Yes, they've come out with the Day-Date.
Yes, the President, as it's nicknamed.
The President.
It was so ironic that the first president to wear a Rolex
wore a Datejust, not a Day-Date.
Right.
But future presidents wore Day-Dates.
Yes.
But anyway, back to IMG, IMG was the first modern talent celebrity endorsement agency
and really visionary of Mark McCormick to have founded in 1960.
So he brokered tons of celebrity endorsements and he works with Rolex and they sign the
big three, quote unquote, in the golf world. First Arnold Palmer, then Gary Player, and then Jack Nicholas.
And for their whole careers, I believe probably their whole lives,
they are Rolex men.
Yep.
And that is effectively the blueprint for everyone from Federer
to Tiger Woods forward.
Yeah, so Justin Golf, if you go forward, Tiger Woods,
Annika Sorenstam, today Scottie Scheffler, so Justin golf, you know, if you go forward, Tiger Woods, Anika Sorenstam,
today Scottie Scheffler, Jordan Spieth, Justin Thomas, Brooke Henderson, Lydia Ko, you know,
not everybody, but at least a large share of the best players are Rolex players. Well,
it's interesting because when you list them off like that, yeah, it sounds like a large
group, but I think the strategy is not a lot. The strategy is only the best. Yes.
A large share of the very best players.
And that goes for individual athletes, but it also goes for which events they sponsor.
I mean, I was talking to Ben Kleimer at Hodinkie and he pointed out that they don't just sponsor
PGA Tour.
They sponsor the Masters.
They're not going to really mess around much beyond that.
Similar to tennis.
Like, yeah, we'll do Wimbledon.
Well, and now they do all four Grand Slams.
Ah, okay.
So yeah, arguably tennis, especially post-Federer,
is even more iconic Rolex than golf is.
They partner with many of the top, top players in the world,
but Federer really was transformational.
Yeah, I think that's right.
I mean, I don't think the Federer-Rollex relationship
is quite like a Michael Jordan-Nike relationship,
but it's in that next tier of great athlete partnerships.
And there's a couple of really interesting things about golf and tennis specifically
for Rollex.
One, just the overall brands of the sport mesh very well with Swiss luxury watch companies.
But also, even going all the way back to the 30s and the Wilsdorf days, the Hans days of
Rolex, proving that you could keep accurate time while playing golf or tennis was like
a really key marketing message because you've got the shocks impacting the wrist of hitting
the balls all the time.
Think about that hairspring.
Think about that delicate balance wheel floating there carefully ticking back and forth hovering the vibrations I don't really
understand how it keeps working perfectly. Yep totally. It's also the type
of sport where you can be an elite top-of-the-world player for a very very
long time as opposed to other sports. I mean think about Federer's career, think
about Arnold Palmer's career, Jack Nicholas, you know.
These people had multiple decades of dominance
of being at the pinnacle of human achievement.
Yep, that's right.
So, that wraps up the iconic tool, sport,
professional watches of Rolex.
No, it doesn't.
Ha ha ha.
I don't...
So to speak.
There's a thing you haven't said.
Except for the model that both of us are wearing on our wrists right now, the Daytona really
created a market in and of its own.
Yeah, and completely changed the mechanical watch market period.
Yes.
The Daytona, through a complete accident of history,
as we shall see in a minute here...
created a phenomenon.
...created the modern watch collector market.
Yes.
And all of the crazy prices and auctions
and insanity that occurs today,
I think you can say really is all because of the Daytona.
It's one component of it, David.
I don't want you to oversell.
I've got a lot.
Okay, okay.
At least from the Rolex side of things,
the Daytona is what created all of it.
But before we tell that story.
Yes.
Now is a great time to thank good friend of the show,
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We have talked to listeners about ServiceNow's
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David sent you. Thanks ServiceNow. Okay so David the Rolex Daytona. Ooh, yes. The instant worldwide sensation.
Mmm, or not.
So, the Daytona, unlike all of Rolex's other watches, is a chronograph.
Or as they call it, a cosmograph.
Yes, because again, this is Rolex. We can't use industry standard terms.
So what is a chronograph?
A chronograph is a very fancy term for a stopwatch.
However complicated you thought a regular mechanical watch was,
now add in something like the Daytona,
where you also have a full seconds hand on the main dial
that counts seconds, and then another dial to count
minutes and then another dial to count hours all in addition to the regular watch function.
Yes, there are four dials on the watch face of the Daytona. Incredible. Now it turns out Rolex has
actually made a chronograph for a very long time.
This was the first tool watch that they introduced way back before World War II, before Andre
Heinegger, before anybody was thinking about this stuff.
And in large part, it looked like this, but there was no craze around it.
Yes.
So in 1962, Rolex becomes the official timekeeper of the then relatively new Daytona International Speedway in
Daytona Beach, Florida. And to commemorate this great moment, the next year in 1963,
Rolex officially starts calling their chronographs, which again they've been making for like three
decades at this point, Daytonas. They thought about Le Mans because they were also very closely involved with Le Mans, the
race in France. But to the name Rolex, this has to have international appeal and can't
have silent letters that Americans can't pronounce. What's better than Daytona? I can look at
the word, I can say it out loud.
And again, like we've been talking about, the market is America post-World War II.
Now what could be more American glamour in 1962
than Daytona, Speedway, fast cars, movie stars, beaches.
Yeah, 24 hour race.
It's perfect.
And then a couple of years later, one of the true leading man actors of the day, Paul Newman,
stars in a 1969 film called Winning about being a race car driver.
And after he stars in the movie, well, guess what?
He develops a hobby of becoming an actual race car driver. And his equally famous wife, the actress Joanne Woodward,
gifts him with a Rolex Daytona of his very own
for his racing activities
with the immortal inscription on the back,
drive carefully dash me.
You know, signed me.
You know, again, we've been talking romance, lifestyle, development, the brand here.
It's iconic.
You can't get any more iconic than that.
It's perfect.
Yes.
You can totally see how this would set off an absolute insane craze in the market.
Except to your point, it doesn't right away.
Except it doesn't.
There's so many of these moments in Rolex history, really in all the stories we tell,
where the company does everything in their power to align the stars perfectly, and it
doesn't work, but then a butterfly flaps its wings several years later and all of a sudden
it does.
Say in Italy?
So 1969 is when Paul Newman stars in this movie. It's sometime, you know, in the next year
or so after that when Joanne gives him this watch. Paul Newman absolutely is iconic at this point in
time. He's being photographed all over the world. He's a leading style figure. He's in magazines,
and this is his watch. He's wearing this watch. And he wears it for about 10, 15 years or so. And then one day in 1984, so long, long, long time later, lots of history passes,
which we will come back to. And one day in 1984, his daughter Nell has her boyfriend over. And Paul
asks the daughter's boyfriend, does he know what time it is?
And the boyfriend replies, I don't know.
I don't have a watch.
And Paul, on a whim, says, here, take this one.
It keeps good time.
And gives the boyfriend the watch.
The Paul Newman Daytona.
I actually didn't know this story.
Swear to God this is true.
This watch sold at auction for the most money ever.
Ever.
I think it was $17 and a half million.
Here, take this one.
It keeps good time.
And at the time, the market such as it existed for Daytonas,
the secondary market for Daytonas,
it was like a $200 watch.
So hey, I like the boyfriend.
Sure.
Have a watch.
I'm done with it. Man, to have been the boyfriend.
Because two short years later, in 1986, for whatever reason it is unknown, a bunch of dealers in Italy start snatching up versions of the Daytona
from the era when Paul Newman's Daytona was made.
And it's important to say here, in Italy, there is a real watch culture.
This is true in various parts of Europe at this point in time, in a way that in America,
there's actually not watch culture. They want to market to Americans. There's all this rising wealth
and people want to celebrate their successes and all that. And they're trying, but America
doesn't have a watch culture the way that Italy had both a collecting culture and a
style culture.
Which is why there are secondary market dealers in Italy.
Yep.
So one rumor is that around this time in the early 80s, Paul Newman had been on the
cover of an Italian-style magazine wearing the watch, obviously taken before he gave
it to the boyfriend.
And maybe that was the reason that people in Italy decided this is a cool watch.
Nobody really knows and nobody has ever been able to locate that magazine cover.
So who knows.
Hmm.
Well, for whatever reason, a butterfly flapped its wings and Italians thought that the watch was cool.
So, the dealers start buying up the quote-unquote Paul Newman-style Daytonas,
which is a specific style, was made for a couple years by Rolex in the late 60s, early 70s, and it had like an art deco style face to it.
Yeah, and a very particular color scheme that sort of featured red around the edges as well.
Yes, red around the edges, around the track where the minutes and seconds are kept, but
also very specific font.
Yep.
Also, we should say, we haven't said yet that on the Daytona, and really all chronographs,
there's a very cool feature which is around the edge and this sort of gives the watch
its signature design.
There is units per hour.
I don't know if it's logarithmic, but maybe I should work out the equation in my head.
Maybe it is logarithmic.
It starts at, on the version I'm wearing, 400 and goes all the way down to 60.
And what that means is if you press start and you drive one mile and then you press
the same button again to stop, wherever the second hand is pointed around the edge of
the watch was your miles per hour for that one mile that you drove.
So if I was able to drive, you know, one mile in one minute,
then it's gonna come all the way around
and it's gonna be pointed all the way up to the top
and it's gonna say 60.
But you know, it goes up to 400 because race car drivers.
That's awesome.
I actually did not know that that's what those numbers.
No, you gotta be kidding me.
You own this watch.
I know, I know, I know.
Well, you know, I haven't thought about this watch in 15 years.
Yeah, for anyone who's trying to figure out what's going on over in David Land,
David used to work in investment banking.
And this was a part of the uniform when you got out of college.
Well, here's the whole story. So, my dad is big into watches.
Has been for a long time, starting probably when I was in high school and college, he got really big into watches, has been for a long time starting probably when I was in
high school and college, he got really big into watches and watch collecting.
So like early before the market here in America.
Yeah, I mean, that's before it took off in any way in the US.
Totally.
And I thought he was insane.
I was like, why are you blowing all this money on watches?
Which back then it actually wasn't that much money.
Regardless, I graduated, I go to work in investment banking.
And back then, and I'm sure still
to this day, investment banking had a watch culture.
And my dad gave me a couple watches to wear, one of which was this stainless white face
Rolex Daytona, which is an incredible piece.
It was an incredible gift back then.
I was like, oh, this is super cool.
And all my colleagues, especially the senior bankers were like, who is this freaking kid?
This is not a, I got my first bonus,
so I went and bought a Rolex.
This was an It watch.
This is not an analyst watch.
I don't know if it was necessarily
a managing director watch,
but it was probably something that, like,
if you made VP, you would go get something like this.
Yes.
So it was odd for me to wear it.
And, uh, paradoxically, it actually killed my interest
in watches and desire to wear them, because I realized it was weird for me to wear it. Paradoxically, it actually killed my interest in watches
and desire to wear them because I realized it was weird
for me to wear this watch.
And then I was like, you know what?
I need to just stop.
So, especially when I got to the West Coast,
I was like, I should just not wear watches.
This is too much.
I need to get my bearings again.
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
So then I didn't wear watches at all,
nothing on my wrist until the Apple Watch.
And then when the Apple Watch came out, I've worn that every day since, until we went to
Taiwan and we were like, well, we should do a little Easter egg.
And we broke out the watches out of the safe.
So cool.
So the question going forward is, listeners, if you're listening to this a few months,
years in the future, the question will be, do I keep wearing this?
Do I go back to the Apple Watch?
What do we do?
I don't know.
We'll see.
Okay, but what you're foreshadowing here though is the hype over that Paul Newman dial.
Which to be clear, I am not wearing a Paul Newman dial.
Trickled out into the rest of the Daytonas.
It made any Daytona extremely desirable.
Just sticking with the Paul Newman models here in 1986, prices for some of these models shoot to like $30,000 plus.
In 1986 dollars.
Yeah, for a watch that Paul Newman gave away to his daughter's boyfriend two years before
and was worth $200.
Ben, you're right.
This one event didn't create the global watch collecting and investing market period, but
it was part of it. it was part of it.
Absolutely was part of it.
This was a huge moment of like,
oh, wow, these things aren't just purchases,
they're investments and you can trade in them.
Yeah. Put a pin in that.
There's a whole world of seventies and eighties.
That's this almost like parallel universe to Rolex
that we're gonna go into here in a minute.
Before we do that,
it's worth resuming our history of Rolex advertising because concurrent
with releasing all of the professional watches, Rolex expanded their aperture in their marketing.
It went from just men who guide the destinies of the world where Rolex to suddenly you've got these
scuba divers and these pilots and these race car drivers now with the Daytona and they're
wearing the professional watches for their craft.
We can probably sell a lot of watches by selling that lifestyle.
Yes.
So this is where the expansion goes from just commanding the world to human achievement those who sit atop their fields and in
1967 to 1970
There's this great campaign. They launched the if you were
Campaign in a big I mean Google this we'll put some links in the show notes, too
But Google this and I'm sure we'll tweet it so you can see it on our Twitter account
Big bold Helvetica font if you were flying the Concorde tomorrow, you'd wear a Rolex.
Picture of the Concorde, go in supersonic, picture of the GMT Master.
So great.
This is what these pilots at the top of their field are actually wearing.
They stayed a million miles away from features and it was all Lifestyle advertising this is the person you would be if you owned this watch
There's a version speaking at the UN if you were speaking here tomorrow
You'd wear a Rolex if you were climbing here tomorrow. Yes diving down to great depths taming oil well fires
I think there's even one where they're like walking in a volcano
It's just this brilliant campaign that again, this is the late 60s. It's
everything we've learned from the Mad Men era of advertising, completely the
opposite of the Mercedes-Gleit's era. We are leaning heavily into who could you
be? And I do think this was the very first sort of chip of what made Rolex a real
challenger to Omega who had been kind of the standard big Swiss watch brand. Rolex was really
the one to bring lifestyle advertising to bear. Also, I know I keep harping on this Omega thing.
Omega was actually worn by the soldiers in the Boer War that Hans had recognized.
So they had the history too.
They had the history too.
Yeah.
Yep.
Those incredible ads, that was really peak Rolex lifestyle era.
This kind of second era of Rolex, of moving beyond the product to selling the lifestyle.
And the Daytona was part of that.
And then in the 80s, when the Italian thing happens
and the Paul Newman thing happens
and the collector's market gets built,
it's actually, I think, the first real big move
that Rolex makes into the luxury world.
It did kind of create the one model in their lineup
where it had real hype around it.
And that just stayed true for decades.
I mean, even in, I don't know, 2010 or something,
you could walk into a jeweler
who's an authorized Rolex dealer
and you could just buy something out of the case,
which you cannot do today.
Yep.
You could buy a Submariner, you could buy an Explorer,
you could buy a GMT Master, you could buy a Datejust.
But you couldn't buy a Daytona. That's sort of from this 80s forward was always this spot
in their lineup where, eh, we'll have to call you about that one.
Today, if you want to buy a Rolex of any model, you go in and you put your name on the waitlist.
And then at some point in time, could be a couple months, could be a couple years, you'll
get the call
that your model is available.
The Daytona is, I think, the only model
where there is no wait list.
Oh, I don't think that's true.
Is that, is that not true?
No, it's impossible to say that
because they work through authorized dealers,
and so it's not up to Rolex.
And it varies greatly dealer to dealer.
I think they're actually called Rolex retailers now.
They changed it from authorized dealer,
but it's whatever the local dealer's policy is.
Interesting, interesting.
At least historically, it might be changing
amidst the insanity right now.
You know, if you go browse the forums,
the lingo that I read is the Daytona is not a wait list,
it's a wish list.
That's awesome. Most of the other models is not a wait list, it's a wish list. That's awesome.
Like most of the other models, if you want one and if you get on a list at a authorized
dealer, at some point in time, your turn will come up.
Whereas with a Daytona, it's like, yeah, you can express desire.
I have a few things to say on this, but let's wait till we get to the present day.
We have the entire watch industry is going to fall apart
and then get rebuilt from scratch.
And we have that in between where we currently are
and where we'll end up.
All right. Let's go there.
All right.
Take us back.
So this was a whole side quest that I did this episode.
Nice term.
Thank you.
Look at us getting all Gen Z.
David and I interpreted the assignment differently to... that I did this episode. Nice term. Thank you. Look at us getting all Gen Z.
David and I interpreted the assignment differently to...
Okay, well you were just pandering to Gen Z right now.
Do an episode on...
How would I know?
Side quest, interpreting the assignment.
I'm sorry, is this Gen Z lingo?
I don't even know.
I think it, I'm pretty sure it is.
Oh, anyway, we interpreted the assignment differently of do an episode on Rolex.
David viewed it as go as deep as possible on the entire history of the brand itself,
the company, the relationship with Agler and each of the watch models.
And I heard it as go fully understand the entire watch industry
and contextualize Rolex's role within it.
So here it goes.
Here's my best David Rosenthal impression for the Quartz
Crisis. And I have two huge thank yous for this section. Ben Clymer, the founder and
CEO of Houdinki. I spent hours pestering Ben and having phone calls with him. And I probably
read 30 things on Houdinki. I mean, in the modern watch era, it's the definitive place to read about watch culture. And secondly, to Joe Thompson. Joe is the journalist in the industry.
Most recently, he's the executive editor of Houdinki. But over the last 40 years, he has
written all the canonical pieces. He was the editor of Watchtime Magazine. He's one of
the only people ever to get an interview with a sitting Rolex CEO. He lived the quartz crisis firsthand and was flying around to Geneva
and Taiwan and Japan and reporting on it live.
So okay, you've mentioned the quartz crisis, also known as the quartz revolution.
Yes.
What is this? All right. So here we are in the early 70s.
The Swiss are riding high.
They're the undisputed champs of watchmaking.
That's where we left our heroes here.
At one point, the Swiss actually made up as much as 85% of the world's total wristwatches.
85% of the market they had.
This is in 1945, so it's right after
the war.
The analogy here is like TSMC in Taiwan. Making mechanical wristwatches is an extremely difficult
specialized skill.
Yes. They made 19 million of the total 21.5 million that year. Another thing to contextualize it, so you can understand what is coming and
how technology disruption will happen. This 19 million watches produced was by 2,500 individual
companies, 90% of which employed fewer than 50 people. Completely decentralized means of production. In many ways, it actually,
the Taiwan metaphor totally extends. It's like Switzerland was Hsinchu Science Park,
and these places all sort of needed together and collaborate. Yes. Yeah, I was going to say the
exact same thing. And so this is an industry built on skilled labor, fragmented across a ton of
suppliers, very little vertical integration. someone makes the movement, someone makes the hand, someone makes the case.
And all this happens in one of the most expensive labor environments in the world.
Yeah, Geneva ain't cheap.
It's kind of amazing that there was this labor-intensive industry in Geneva.
All right, so that was 1945.
Three decades later, in 1973, it's still going strong.
The Swiss peaked at almost 90 million watches made in 1973.
Up from 19 million 28 years before, they're now at 90 million watches handmade in this
crazy production process per year.
So we keep alluding to this quartz crisis, but the quartz was not the first revolutionary new
technology that was supposed to disrupt mechanical watches. There was sort of a half step along the
way to a technology that turned out to be a detour that actually wasn't the future.
David, do you know what that is?
Oh, I would guess like digital timekeeping, but that's quartz. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah, what else vibrates like a quartz crystal?
What do you think could oscillate to keep time something radioactive a tuning fork? Ah
That's a great weird thing in history and part of this also comes from Mark Bridges great research paper
the whole Swiss watch industry had been marketing that you can judge the quality of a watch by its timekeeping. And then suddenly, this tuning fork watch comes
out. They're no longer the best at timekeeping. Mechanical watches are worse than the tuning
fork watch. There's this crazy watch that comes out, the Bulova Accutron. In practice
though, the Accutron wasn't a disruptive technology. In the sort of Clayton
Christensen term, it was a sustaining innovation. It took the existing thing and made it a little
bit better. The watch is still required though hundreds of components and handmade craftsmanship
in order to make it. Yeah, so it's still difficult to make. Right, so this meant that the existing
companies would have to integrate into their own workflow to produce it, but there really wasn't a wide open window for some new entrant to use it
as a disruptive force.
That's the thing that you kind of need is can a new producer come in and take a radically
simpler approach.
Like say a Japanese company.
Right.
So Quartz.
Well, we all think of like, oh, quartz comes from Japan and Seiko, and then
that was this huge disruption of the SwitchWatch industry. People had been exploring quartz
technology for a very long time, and in fact, the first quartz clock was created all the
way back in 1927. Do you know where, David?
Oh, well, I know the Swiss themselves were doing big industry-wide consortiums.
Correct, but that was in the 60s and 70s.
In 1927, who possibly could be doing research with quartz technology to use for timekeeping?
I have no idea.
It's in America.
Cutting edge technology, research.
Bell Labs?
Bell Labs.
Oh, okay.
There we go.
In New Jersey, the first quartz clock is created.
Wow.
Now, unfortunately, in 1927, the Bell Labs quartz clock was the size of an entire room.
The ENIAC of clocks. Yes. Okay, so we've been describing
The quartz crisis. What is it? Well, how does it actually work? How do quartz watches function?
Instead of a mainspring that you have in a mechanical watch you have a battery pretty straightforward
Instead of an escapement
You vibrate the quartz crystal.
Quartz has this crazy thing where if you apply an electrical current and it's shaped a certain
way, they can vibrate at exactly 32,768 Hertz.
That's right.
I remember seeing that number.
It's weird.
This is called the piezoelectric effect.
And interestingly, that was discovered all the way back in 1880 in Paris. The other important thing you need to know about a quartz watch is
it requires an integrated circuit. The modern quartz watch is dependent on
using an IC to count the quartz vibrations and transform them from 32,768
Hertz to 1 Hertz to tick one second at a time.
Or if you're using a digital watch to increment the seconds by one each time.
So by the time you get to the early 70s, you've now got integrated circuits.
That's exactly right.
The first quartz watch that hit the market in 1969 from Seiko was dependent on the invention
and miniaturization of the transistor and integrated circuit before it
could actually happen. So that's why we're sort of stuck waiting from the 20s all the way to 69
before it can be used in a watch. So really the whole thing is Bell Labs. Exactly right. And
everything we've talked about so far is a manufacturing story. It's a craft story. It's
an apprenticeship story. This is a technology story. So amazingly,
as you pointed out, the Swiss did see this coming. Just like how Kodak famously invented
digital photography in their lab, the Swiss saw what happened with the tuning fork and
they wanted to be ready. So in 67, two years before the Japanese debut of the Seiko Astrone,
there was a quartz chronometer in a lab at CEH,
which is Switzerland's electronics watch laboratory,
that was twice as accurate as a mechanical watch.
They just didn't actually have an impetus
to be first to market.
Right, right.
Why would we, this is really dangerous for our industry,
we've made it.
Yeah, let's keep this in the lab.
Yeah.
So over to Japan, the Seiko Astron is launched in 1969.
You would not have guessed it was
going to disrupt the whole industry.
It cost as much as a new car, and it wasn't more accurate.
It could be off by up to five seconds a day.
So what's the big deal?
But just like semiconductors, they get on the learning curve.
Exactly.
That's exactly right.
It's a technology story.
It's based on semiconductors.
So the price value curve that it would follow actually looked a lot more like the early
PC from the Microsoft episode we did.
The fact that it's in watches because that's the consumer need that's being filled actually
isn't relevant for predicting how much better it's going to get.
You should be looking at the technology. So the quartz watch starts at this Toyota Corolla price
point, comes down in price 1,000x.
It used way fewer parts and required very little know-how
to assemble it.
You could invest upfront in machinery
and have very, very, very low variable costs and labor costs.
So for the first time in watchmaking,
you had economies of scale and operating leverage.
It was a technology product in an artisan market.
Yeah.
So this whole thing, once it gets going, happens so fast.
And in the early days, the Swiss industry
and a lot of makers, including Rolex,
released their own quartz models too.
Yeah, hold onto that for a second.
So here's how the quartz revolution went.
And the Japanese sort of think of it
as the quartz revolution.
The Swiss think of it as the quartz crisis.
By the end of the 1970s, you could get a quartz watch
for cheaper than a mechanical watch.
It was more accurate.
So here in 1979, mechanical watches are,
for the vast majority of scenarios, functionally obsolete.
Unless you are an astronaut or a
pilot or an adventurer who prefers a spring over a battery that could die, there is no
practical reason to ever buy a mechanical watch again.
And it's like the Olympics are being timed with quartz timepieces.
Right. And interestingly, Omega quartz at the Olympics.
Hmm. Interesting.
But obviously, this is not the end of our story. And mechanical watches would go on
to be a better business than ever 50 years later.
Very different, but much greater in revenue than ever before.
So there's this kind of wild thing
that our beautiful mechanical watch hero protagonist here
is now obsolete functionally.
So there were a few iterations of how this went.
The American firms tried to make quartz watches
with LED technology.
The Hamilton Pulsar came out in 72.
These were really cool when you look at them,
but in the long run, they were a complete failure.
You had to push a button to turn the LED on.
So it actually took both hands to read the time, one to wear the watch, one to push the LED on. So it actually took both hands to read the time,
one to wear the watch, one to push the button.
Some companies followed into the market starting in 74,
and will be very familiar to acquired listeners.
National Semiconductor, Fairchild Semiconductor,
Texas Instruments.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, there we go.
Yep. Then came the Stampede, Commodore, Intel, HP,
Hughes Aircraft, dozens of companies flooded in.
Wow. Hughes Aircraft getting into the market. Wow.
Yes. And these companies made integrated circuits. And so they thought, well,
we can make consumer products around them too, because we make the internals. But A,
they weren't great at building brands. These were all B2B companies. And B,
they were horribly commoditized.
This market immediately became commodity, had no barrier to entry, and all the profits
immediately got arbitraged out. So, LED failure.
The next step is twofold. One quartz movement powering analog watch faces.
And this started with the Seiko Astrone. This was the thing that the
Japanese did first in 1969. And the other branch, which every listener will know well, is digital
LCD watches with liquid crystal displays that ended up being vastly superior to LEDs since they
were always on. And these also worked on a quartz movement. Seiko, Citizen, and later Casio were
extremely successful for a time making these out of Japan.
So Hong Kong becomes the powerhouse for inexpensive manufacturing of all of this,
along with Taiwan, South Korea, and mainland China. And so by 1980, just a few years in,
I mean, think about this, 69, the Sacoastron launches, 75 is when the Swiss are going,
oh crap.
And then within four years, it's over.
Courts completely ran the table.
So by 1980, Hong Kong was already exporting 126 million watches a year, half of which
were digital.
Wow.
Switzerland at peak made 90 million.
And then boom, a few years in in Hong Kong has 126 million.
By 1981, the next year, Japanese watch exports surpass Switzerland.
Seiko actually was great at brand building, advertising, messaging in a way that the American
B2B semiconductor firms were horrible at.
And then 1985, just four years after Japan meets Switzerland, Japan's exports are 3X Switzerland.
Wow. And the absolutely incredible thing is now that you all know this, this is the backdrop
that the Paul Newman craze happens. Right?
So the Swiss market's global share would fall from that 85 at peak in 1945 to just 15 percent by 1980.
The number of firms fell from 2000 companies in 1960 to fewer than 500 in 1980. Just absolutely
destroyed. Quartz output accounted for only 3 percent of units in 1975. By 1979, 31% of new watches were Quartz powered.
Wow.
From 75 to 81, 82, you just have a complete running
of the table.
And at least for the old reason of why you would buy
a mechanical watch, there is zero reason
to buy that anymore, zero.
Yeah, so this is like massively impacting the entire Swiss economy, right?
Yeah, extinction event for this huge industry for them. There's a whole separate story about
the founding of Swatch Group and how many of the Swiss brands were sort of rolled together
or a bunch of them went bankrupt or they got sold off to conglomerates. But interestingly,
Rolex was independent. They were owned by a foundation. They sort of had no shareholders.
They also managed to resist joining the sort of Swiss cartel that was all sort of colluding on what's our national strategy here.
So they could sort of do their own thing. I mean, they watched. This certainly happened, they had a lot of fear around it, but they weren't as caught up as the rest
of the Switzerland companies that were all super,
super dependent on each other.
The whole watch world by volume became almost entirely quartz
and the market for time telling as a function
went entirely to quartz full stop.
But a new massive market emerged
that had been lurking in basically niche auctions, which was watch aficionados
who valued pieces for their complexity, their artistry, and their rarity.
And Rolex figured out how to build this enormous, bigger than ever before business in this completely
new market, A, of enthusiasts who drive the excitement, that's the auction house world,
but then B, in this lifestyle aura of success.
And this is where we told it as part of the Daytona story because that's where it belongs.
But the Italian affair, the Paul Newman affair is the luckiest thing that ever happened to
Rolex because this gave them the golden opportunity to do that.
Right.
This is finally kind of clicked in my head.
It's not that the mechanical watch made
a comeback. It's that there was an entirely new market that it turned out to be the perfect thing
for after their initial market got wrecked. Right. I think there's also another level of
nuance here too. Rolex was better positioned than most of the other Swiss companies because
they had already transitioned to lifestyle.
However, that would not have been enough
because eventually Seiko and Citizen
were also gonna transition to lifestyle companies.
And that in and of itself,
what wearing your watch says about you
isn't defensible in the long run
against technology disruption.
Wearing an Apple watch, what model, what style, what band says a lot about you too.
I wear my Hermes band on my Apple watch that says a lot about me.
But what is defensible is a luxury strategy.
And a luxury strategy expands to managing the entire market and overall brand management.
It's managing the secondary market and supply on it.
It's doing things like, oh, the Paul Newman craze is happening, let's pull the model
from the market.
It's vertically integrating to ensure absolute product consistency.
It's instituting wait lists.
It's killing or pausing your most successful products.
It's not changing your price in response to demand shifts.
A purely lifestyle company wouldn't do all of those things.
And I can imagine like, remember Fossil,
the US watch company that is now basically bankrupt.
They were a lifestyle watch company,
but they were not a luxury company.
Yep.
Yeah, that was sort of the fashion watch craze
where the quartz technology enabled a whole wave of
$25 watches where you could own five six seven of them and wear them with different outfits
That was an interesting market for like 20 years before technology kind of obsolete of that one too. Yep with the smartwatch
Interestingly, do you know what swatch stands for?
I always thought Swiss swatch group, but...
That's the common perception of it. It's second watch.
These watches are so cheap, you can have a second one.
Exactly. There you go. That is a perfectly viable lifestyle strategy.
These watches are so cheap, you can have a second one, and each one says something different.
It's a fashion strategy, but it's not a luxury strategy.
And it's still subject to a functional displacement,
like what happened with the Apple watch.
Yep, totally.
Okay, so we're at this like complete demise of Switzerland here.
We're like thinking about how it could get better in the future.
But there's a whole parallel story,
which is the renaissance of mechanical watches,
how they come to fill this new market to be this perfect product for a new market. But
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Okay, so a thing that I had a hard time figuring out
until really the end of our research process.
How did Rolex respond to the quartz crisis?
Yeah, we knew that there was this transition that happened to luxury and it was in response
to the quartz crisis.
But you go read all the stuff that's out there and nobody actually chronicles this.
No one connects the dots.
They talk about quartz crisis, creation of swatch group,
saving what's left of the Swiss watch industry.
And then separately, they talk about Rolex through the years,
building the lifestyle brand and all the race car stuff
and the advertising.
But Rolex was in Switzerland during the quartz crisis.
Right, right.
Connect these dots, please.
Yeah.
And the end of the story, spoiler alert, is Rolex is doing probably $10-plus billion in annual
revenue way, way more than any other company in the space.
Dude, Rolex is 30% of the revenue in the entire Swiss watch industry.
Right.
It's insane.
There's a lesson here.
Yes.
In part, the lesson is it is incorrect to describe markets by the products in them.
You should describe markets by the job to be done.
And the market of risk-based time telling was no longer available to the Swiss.
It entirely went courts.
But there was a market for something different
that the Swiss were great at
if they were sort of set up and positioned correctly
and managed correctly.
And I think that's the lesson here.
This isn't the high end of the watch industry
and the low end of the watch industry.
These are two completely different customer needs.
Totally different things.
There's an arc to this story.
Rolex sits back, they see what not to do, they see what to do,
and then they do it. Yes. So here's my attempt at chronicling what happened. And I would love
feedback from watch nerds, if there's anything that I missed here. But this is how it seemed to be
after reading five books, talking to Joe, talking to Ben, talking to all sorts of friends in and around the industry.
So there are three concurrent stories here, none of which are Rolexes. There's the Omega story,
then there's an unlikely corner of Swiss watchmaking with Blancpain, and then there's the auction houses. And once you get those, you then kind of get the Rolex story. So first is Omega.
They blew a lead in the ninth inning.
That's the only way to put it.
As you've been my foil throughout the episode here,
being like, actually, David, Omega was also big,
maybe bigger than Rolex the whole time.
Totally.
So coming into the 70s, they just had their watch
land on the moon in Apollo 11.
They're the sponsor of the Olympics.
They're an iconic brand and
Incredibly the Joe Thompson tipped me off to this in a study conducted by Gallup in
1978 they asked the question. Have you heard of Rolex eight out of ten Americans in
1978 answered no wow
Less than 20 years later, 8 out of 10 said yes. So Rolex did something
incredibly right between 1978 and 1998 to go from 20% brand awareness to 80% brand awareness.
So over to Omega. As late as 1977 in the quartz crisis, Omega is still the third largest watch
brand in the world behind Seiko the darling of the quartz revolution and
Timex which was the volume player on the American side of quartz
So in many ways they should have been Switzerland's most likely horse to ride this thing out, but they reacted extremely poorly
What did they do first a whole bunch of models?
What did they do second? A whole bunch of models. What did they do second? Go heavy into Quartz.
What did they do third?
Throw the kitchen sink at strategy.
What, just make a bunch of models, bunch of price points, really diluted the brand.
They licensed the brand out to other companies.
From afar, this just looks like panic.
Instead of thinking, what are we uniquely best at in the world and trying to lean into
that, Omega thought this Quartz thing is absolutely essential to get right. Instead of thinking, what are we uniquely best at in the world and trying to lean into that?
Omega thought this quartz thing is like absolutely essential to get right. It's the future. So we have to switch all of our production to it. And this is essentially what the whole Swiss industry
did. They either fell into this trap where they went bankrupt or got rolled up, Breitling, Hoyer,
you name it. The only issue that the big glaring one here in hindsight, is that Quartz
required a completely different set of competencies to do it well. A totally different culture,
a totally different headcount, and a totally different cost structure.
Yeah, like you were saying earlier, Quartz is a fixed cost, it's a technology business
with fixed cost leverage. Swiss mechanical watchmaking is a variable cost business.
They happen to both tell time, but the means of how they tell time, the two types of companies
that you need to build to get there are entirely different.
They shouldn't resemble each other at all.
So the other thing that killed them is that they had these agencies locally.
And so Omega would import their movements and then the agency could design their own
case to suit the local market.
Oh, interesting.
So there weren't international standardized models.
To build brand around.
Interesting.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That is a major luxury no-no.
Yes.
A Birkin is a Birkin, people.
Exactly.
Rolex, by this point, the late 70s,
they're importing whole watches.
They've got their core six, seven watches that people really find iconic.
And they're leading into this idea that you need one single global brand and product line.
It's so funny.
If you look at some of the real like enthusiast type historians out there, they sort of bemoan
that Rolex stopped innovating after the golden era in the 50s where they introduced all the
sport watches.
Right. And it's like, no, no, that's the point.
Yes.
They got the core product line up set and then they rode that horse.
Once you create the Porsche 911, you should just tweak the Porsche 911 once every seven, eight years.
And that way you can buy a 911 just like your grandfather bought a 911.
And that I think is a huge piece of what Rolex got right that a lot of other people
got wrong. So to close the Omega story, this is crazy. It's the company that governments
and militaries wanted to work with. It's the company that Rolex was trying to beat with
all their innovative ads and positioning. This is the first company to ever launch a
dive watch before the Submariner. And they rushed into here's how we fight the
quartz crisis head-on when they were just not built to be a part of that at
all. So this is the place where we see the divide where Rolex becomes Rolex and
Omega doesn't become you know they make cool watches but like it's not the brand.
They pay a lot of money to MGM to be in James Bond movies. Right. So that's Rolex sitting on their hands watching Omega and going, okay, don't do that.
But of course, Rolex had the cash to do it. You know, Rolex is a privately owned,
very successful, very wealthy company where they can take two or three years and see how it plays
out. If your ownership structure is different or you have debt or you're not as profitable,
you don't have that luxury. You don't have the margin of safety to do that. So, Chapter 2. Guy named Jean-Claude
Biver, he's an exec at Omega of all places, resigns out of frustration. This thing sucks.
They're so timid.
He's the Morris Chang of Omega.
Exactly. So in 1983, Biver buys Blancpain, which was popular in the 1950s but had kind of disappeared,
and he buys it with this idea that I'm going to resurrect this thing as a mechanical-only
luxury brand.
That's not the way that the rest of Switzerland was thinking.
They were thinking, how do we take our big, bloated, old world companies and ride it out
in this tech transition?
He's like, I'm just going to buy the brand. The goal is to do limited production, handcrafted watches, and the scarcity and the high cost
to make them will lead to these high prices. He picked up this brand, again, because everyone's
panicking for nothing. Inflation adjusted, I think it's like $16,000.
This is like the Bernard Arnault story, buying Louis Vuitton out of Busec.
That's exactly right.
He would later go on to sell it a decade later for 60 million Swiss francs.
Nice.
Which back then, that was real money.
Yeah.
So Biver comes up with this advertising slogan, marketing genius, to describe the essence
of the brand.
It's an old brandy bot. Here's the slogan,
since 1735 there has never been a quartz Blancpain watch and there never will be.
Yeah. It's a great slogan because quartz is 13 years old, 14 years old, but he invokes 1735.
You know, for the first few hundred years, it was impossible to have a quartz Blancpain watch.
Perfect.
So the idea is if you want to buy a commonplace machine-made quartz watch, go right ahead.
But if you value traditional craftsmanship, you buy a Blancpain.
We are selling champagne and caviar and they're selling calculators over there.
Rolex is watching this all play out and they're like, oh, that's the playbook.
Yes.
Joe Thompson has this great quote that it was a feat of jiu-jitsu to take the weakness
of the mechanical watch, the old technology, inaccurate, labor-intensive, expensive to produce,
and turn them into strengths. Old world craftsmanship supported by these artisans in
accord with 400-year-old traditions to make these rare, expensive masterpieces. So Blancpain and
Biverre, they should get a lot of credit for this move,
but in practice, they had nothing to lose. It's like a fun Hail Mary to try this approach.
I don't even think Biverre could have predicted how well this strategy would end up working
for Rolex. I think this was sort of a fun demonstration. Okay, Blancpain, the right
strategy at small scale with nothing to lose.
Chapter 3 Auction Houses
The mechanical watch renaissance really came first from auction houses.
If you think about what auctions do, they value things that are rare.
And for a long time this meant vintage pieces.
Old things mostly fall apart.
That means the ones that are surviving, we can pay a lot of money for them.
Well, mechanical watches, even the new ones,
are becoming rare.
The whole market's going away,
companies are going out of business,
and you've got these few extremely high-end producers
like Patek Philippe that could fetch more than ever
at auctions even new. So Patek ise, that could fetch more than ever at auctions even new.
So Patek is the poster child for this.
They came out with this thing called the Calibre 89.
Have you heard of this watch?
I am very familiar with Patek, but I have not heard of this watch.
So this thing, you're not wearing it on your wrist.
It is multiple pounds in weight, like you hold it with two hands.
It's the most complicated watch ever made.
Wow.
They required computer aided design to manufacture it.
The strategy in 1979, internally at Patek
was for our big anniversary celebration in 10 years.
So in 79 for 1989,
we wanna make the most complicated watch ever made.
It was something like 30 complications.
This thing made people go nuts, and at an auction house, it sold for over $3 million.
Landmark high.
It gets mentioned on Saturday Night Live in a skit for who would pay $3 million for a
watch.
Completely high watermark, completely kicks off this new craze
of complication makers. People see it and they think, oh, I have to add as many complications
as possible to my watch. They got a little goofy. And interestingly, Rolex never participated in
that. No, again, they do their own thing. Yeah. And they want to make best engineered, extremely
functional, extremely reliable, not the most
flair, not the most artistic, not the most any of that.
It is the 911 that you could have bought 30 years ago is the 911 that you have today,
but the one today is better engineered.
Yep.
So this auction house story from 1977 to 1985 is essentially the only interesting part of
the mechanical watch world.
And then it sort of sparks the idea that, hey, new mechanical watches, especially these
crazy complication ones can be really interesting too.
And so right around 1985, that's the same time that the Paul Newman dial goes nuts in Italy.
I really think a huge piece of the story is that the auction house market sparked the interest in
the new watches. It totally, totally did. It like highlighted rarity. Yep. Okay. So we've got Omega,
what not to do. We've got Blancpain, what to do at small scale with nothing. Okay. So we've got Omega what not to do.
We've got Blancpain what to do at small scale with nothing to lose.
And we've got the auction houses taking the used market for lack of a better
term and sparking the new market.
So what's Rolex doing?
Well, at first they explored quartz like everyone else, but very carefully.
The oyster quartz.
The oyster quartz.
It feels profane to even say that.
I kind of want one.
I actually think they look extremely cool.
Yeah.
They're very angular.
They've got this integrated band into the watch face.
I quite like it, but they poured a huge amount of R&D
into Quartz watches, but they didn't productize most of it.
They did these small runs of this Oyster Quartz, which was a very Rolex-y way to do quartz that a lot of people have called over-engineered.
But they pretty quickly got to this idea that if they wanted to lean into mechanical as
a differentiation, even though it was a worse timekeeper and emphasized brand lifestyle,
the incredibly complex thing that was going on in the mechanical
watch process, they should just lean into that and the romance of it.
And quartz just kind of violated their ability to tell that story.
So there's a great passage in the book Electrifying the Wristwatch, which is Lucian Trubes book,
it says, Andre Heinegger was a true visionary.
His opinion was that the originally very costly quartz would soon be banal.
This had already happened with transistor radios,
TV sets and pocket calculators.
Top quality mechanical movements
would always remain expensive and exclusive
due to the large amount of highly qualified labor required
for manufacturing these parts and assembling them.
The inescapable fact that a mechanical device
can only tell time
approximately could easily be hidden by writing
Superlative chronometer officially certified on the dial. Wealthy people don't need an instrument that tells time
They want a beautiful and exclusive object on their wrist. It's amazing. It's kind of like this full circle moment back to the
original wristwatch market,
which was as ladies jewelry.
Yes.
Where part of the signifying aspect of it was, I don't care about the accurateness of the time.
Right.
I care about its beauty and what it says about me.
That's exactly right.
The thing I was trying to dig on this is, was this a risk that Rolex took? Was it counterintuitive? And I asked Joe Thompson
about it. And he said, in the late seventies, every watch reporter knew one thing, mechanical
watches were doomed. Every company told you that, including all those in Switzerland.
It was a tremendously ballsy move to continue emphasizing the mechanical watch.
But they also were like Jensen or Morris, really like, well, yeah, I bet the company,
but I knew I'd be right. They took their time, they waited, they watched what not to do,
and then they saw the playbook with Blancpain of what to do.
Yes.
And then they hit the gas.
And they were starting to see what was happening in Italy, as you described.
The other thing that was making it take off in Italy is the Daytona became
part of a uniform, like for young men wearing a bomber jacket and a stainless
steel chronograph on your wrist was like a look.
All right.
I need to go get a bomber jacket.
Yeah.
Right.
Midlife crazies.
Here we go.
But yes, I think your thing about Jensen's exactly right.
I also think Rolex had a built-in hedge because of their independence and because of their cash position
Everybody else is just gonna do all the scrambly stuff fast
They're all super reliant on each other and they're all
overextended and Rolex is this incredibly conservative company
Yeah, we should say another word on that now.
So in 1944, when Hans's first wife died, he created the Wilsdorf Foundation.
He put all of his ownership into that foundation.
Much like the IKEA foundations that we talked about on that episode, the primary purpose
of the Wilsdorf Foundation is to ensure the continued operations of Rolex.
It's even more ironclad than IKEA, because IKEA is this rat's nest of all these different
structures and all these different country foundations that they're in.
Rolex is just one foundation in Switzerland, the most ironclad, privacy foundation-friendly
laws in the world.
Now, the foundation is also a charitable foundation and disperses huge amounts of money,
much of it locally there in Geneva. But make no mistake, they are not responsible for shareholder return,
profits, you know, number one is continued operations of Rolex.
They can have three bad years in a row and the CEO might not get fired.
Yeah.
And they're just playing a different game.
Yeah.
Very emblematic of this.
In 1978, right in the middle of the quartz crisis,
this is when Omega's throwing stuff at the wall,
they released the Sea-Dweller 4000.
More of the same.
You know, what should we do?
More of the same.
Let's go down to 4000 meters.
Right.
So Rolex sort of had this built-in hedge.
They would have been in great shape if they needed to go Quartz.
They had the brand.
They had developed the technology to do it well.
They had the product, Oyster Quartz.
Yeah.
They just sort of hoped it wouldn't come to that.
And also, as we've talked about, it would require dramatic change at Rolex
if it became a quartz company.
They really just wanted to be able to make their six watches.
I think if they had gone quartz, Rolex would be fine today.
That would be a way to build a good business.
But the way to potentially build a great business was to try this crazy Blancpain-esque strategy,
but at scale with one of the biggest and most successful
brands in the world.
And I think the important thing is they maintained the option to go play the other strategy that
Omega was playing if they really needed to, but they sort of just hoped it wouldn't come
to that.
Yeah.
And it didn't.
Yep.
So by 1989, it's extremely clear that their strategy is working. Along with Patek
Philippe, they had record sales that year. Record amidst this craziness. Patek was similar
to Rolex in their strategy. They had early exploration into courts, but they came to
the same conclusion. Our company is not going to be good at this, so we either need to die
trying or we need to really lean into this heritage,
handcrafted craftsmanship thing.
But it was actually an easier decision for them
because they're only making 9,000 watches a year
at this point.
Rolex is making like a hundred thousand.
Yeah, it really was, as you say,
a incredibly well-managed,
but ballsy decision on Rolex's part.
Yeah. Patek also, at least now, I don't know if it was the case back then, incredibly well managed but ballsy decision on Rolex's part.
Yeah.
Patek also, at least now, I don't know if it was the case back then, they're in a very
different part of the market than Rolex.
They're in the dress watch complication world.
Yes.
Listeners, we've been lying to you this whole episode.
Rolex is actually not a luxury company.
Oh, interesting.
I would totally disagree.
That is my opinion.
And it's arguably
not even a craft product. It's an exceptionally well-made industrial product with exquisite
engineering and amazing branding. But the luxury world of watches, it's Audemars Piguet,
it's Patek Philippe. These watches sell for 8, 10, 30 times as much as Rolex watches, and they produce way fewer of them.
Rolex is a industrial, engineered, beautiful,
consistent, reliable product.
It's not art or complications or fashion.
It's mass.
I mean, this thing sells a million one,
a million two products a year.
I agree with you. I think maybe our definitions of a luxury company are different.
If you were to define a luxury company as the most expensive, highest end items,
yes, totally agree. That is not Rolex.
That is Patek. That is some of the other low volume companies.
The reason I think that Rolex is a luxury company
extraordinaire is managing the market.
As opposed to participating in it,
to me that's what Hermes does better
than anybody else out there.
They manage the market.
They're in control.
They're in control.
And Rolex does the same thing.
Yeah, Rolex is in control.
Rolex is completely in control.
They could sell their products for much, much more
than they do, and they do not because it is the right long
term decision to do so.
And there's a whole bunch of other elements to the luxury
strategy that they manage with, which really comes
into the next CEO, Andre Heinegger's son Patrick,
who takes over in 1992.
And if we look at luxury versus premium,
those definitions we used on the LVMH episode,
it is absolutely luxury.
You're not buying Rolex for the features.
Right.
You're buying Rolex for what it says about you.
Yeah.
And they are a high volume luxury player.
Again, in comparison to a Patek or a Audemars
or something like that, yes.
I think the Birkin bag is a really good comp for it because price-wise, they're actually
pretty similar.
You can get a Birkin for, I don't know, $12,000, $15,000.
Like it's an insane amount of money, but relative to what they could charge or what the secondary
market prices are.
Totally fair.
All right.
Take us to 1990.
So everything we've been talking about managing through the court's crisis and this transition
to luxury, the auction houses, the Paul Newman craziness.
In 1992, Andre retires and his only son Patrick takes over as CEO.
He had joined in 1986 as commercial director right at the height of the Paul Newman craze
and all of this that we've been talking about
What Patrick really did within?
Rolex was he vertically integrated the company. He presided over most importantly the aegler acquisition in
2004 for rumored roughly a billion Swiss francs
Rolex buys aegler and makes it officially in-house.
But the other thing that he did that people talk about, he consolidated all the factories,
every physical location where parts that went into Rolex watches were made, whether those
were in-house Rolex made or a third party supplier, from call it 30 different locations
throughout Switzerland down to four, four big, massive consolidated sites where they own and produce everything in house.
This is super important and all in service of this luxury strategy of brand management.
And I owe a big thank you to James Dowling, one of the co-authors of The Best of Time,
which is a great Rolex history.
I mean, he's actually working on a new book that's going to come out in October, The Rolex
Legacy.
He helped me understand this.
Ben, what you were talking about a little while back about what Omega did, where you
had the core movement, but then you had different end models and cases and products in different
regions around the world.
That is the absolute opposite of what you need to do as a luxury company.
It can't be like, this one's better than that one or different levels of quality or these
imperfections here.
And it's like, absolutely not.
That is critically important because all the clientele that are buying these products are
global clientele.
They're comparing it against one another.
You can't sweep this stuff under the rug. In the watch industry, because of Ben, what you were saying, that
there was this history of all of these fragmented different little suppliers who are providing
all these different parts to the different end brands, you had a wide variation in quality
among products. And Patrick said, we need to make sure every Submariner
that comes in a Rolex box is of uniform quality.
So he shrinks the suppliers from 27 down to just four.
Yep.
Rolex bought their bracelet maker.
They started forging their own metals in house,
gold, steel, you name it, proprietary stuff
beyond just
their famous 904L steel. And they brand it. Rolex nerds all recognize Rolesor and Oystersteel
and Everose. They already had a lot of control over their future from before, from their
private ownership, but now they really do because production is also in their own hands.
Yeah. And this also starts to build into the lore, you know, just like Hermes has,
oh, we have artisans that we train and we have our own schools and our own pipeline.
And there's 8,000 people that work in ateliers that we've developed in France.
Rolex now has the same thing in these four mega sites.
They have their own technology, their own people, their own machines.
When was this? 2015, I think they invited their own technology, their own people, their own machines. And when was this 2015?
I think they invited four bloggers, Ben and James were two of them to
come and tour the facilities.
Yeah.
Ben Clymer has this unbelievable piece on Houdinki about his experience.
Right.
And you read these pieces and you'd see the photos and you hear them talk about
all of our machining, all of our tooling we make in-house custom.
And we've designed these facilities to be able to fit,
like there's this one giant hallway.
And Benner James was like,
why is this hallway so big?
And like, oh, well, we designed it so that the width
of our biggest machine that we have,
we multiplied that by two
so that we can get bigger ones to the future.
It's all about vertical integration. And this creates that uniform two so that we can get bigger ones to the future. It's all about vertical integration and this creates that uniformity and that
myth and that uniqueness of what you're buying when you buy a Submariner or a
Daytona.
It is so true.
I mean, after I read Ben's piece, I kind of took a step back and thought, huh,
Rolex actually is the highest quality thing.
Yep.
It's the brand, but I mean, who else makes their own machine that is going to open and close the clasp a
Thousand times in just a few minutes to test it right who else is forging their own metals who else makes all their own movements
Who else is?
quietly inventing new components of the watch and then not
Advertising them because they just wanted to make it a little bit better even though they kept the reference number the same
They're going to absurd lengths to make these things the highest quality engineered and
produce products in the entire industry or in any other industry too.
Totally.
So that's sort of the product and production side.
And that's the story of Patrick's time as CEO.
In 2008, sadly, he develops a health issue and ends up passing away way too young.
They transition leadership first to Bruno Meyer who had been the CFO,
and then in 2011 to Gian Riccardo Marini,
who was a 40-year Rolex veteran and had come up through Italy.
This is kind of weird to have two new CEOs in short succession.
Over 90 years, they had three CEOs.
That kind of speaks to the ethos of small iterative changes
over long periods of time.
One other company has had three CEOs
in the better part of a century.
Yep, and I think it was just sort of a accident of timing
that they then had these two CEOs
for relatively short tenure
and just was because they were older,
but they were both long-term Rolex veterans. And what they do together through 2008 and the
financial crisis, I think is the other side, the demand side of the equation that cements in my
mind Rolex being a luxury player is the financial crisis was huge for the watch industry in sort of a
counterintuitive way.
And I remember I lived through this as a banker on Wall Street right out of college.
I graduated in 2007 and that first year that I was on Wall Street before the
crash was the height of watches.
It was sort of borderline okay for me to wear my Daytona because it was good times,
you know.
But everybody was spending their bonuses on Swiss watches. The craze was on. Then the crash happened and all that
dried up overnight. You know, austerity was the name of the day. And that really, really hurt a
lot of other watch brands who then cut their prices to try and save revenue.
Rolex didn't do that.
And zeroed out ad spend.
Yeah, Rolex didn't cut prices, didn't stop
sponsoring the US Open.
So this is another spot where if you're Rolex, you're like,
well, how long is this financial crisis going to last?
Five years?
What's five years?
It's probably more like two years.
We don't have shareholders.
I don't need to make my quarter. I don't need to make next year. We have enough cash cushion that we can ride this thing out
So we're gonna make the right
Five ten twenty years bets and this is all noise
So interestingly Rolex actually massively doubled down on their marketing spend in the US
During the 2008 financial crisis, while everyone
else is not only cutting marketing spend, but cutting prices on existing products in
stores to move inventory, as you said.
The first time I saw this, I was like, who at Rolex?
I mean, how did they make this decision?
How could you possibly make this bet?
And then as you start to learn more about it, it's kind of the obvious move.
There's a secular thing that's happening, which is the American watch aficionado market.
It really wasn't a thing until the early 2000s, but it was really starting to take off.
This is when Ben founded Houdini.
Exactly.
Enthusiast blogs, YouTube channels.
I mean, not yet in 2008, YouTube channels,
but here's an example.
Rolex and other Swiss watch brands
used to throw these events
to generate interest in their watches.
And it would be for one person we talked to
called them old fuddy-duddies, who would show up.
Or they would be for Chinese tourists
and they would have them in the Chinese language.
That's how small America's watch aficionado market was
in the early 2000s.
By 06, 07, 08, it's really taking off.
And so it's just the logical move to double down on this.
And in retrospect, it looks like so ballsy,
but given Rolex's unique position
versus what everybody else could do,
the opportunity is there for the taking.
Advertise hard. Go get that new customer.
Right. So, here's the thing.
This was the easy half of the decision for Rolex.
Was to double down, keep going during and after the great financial crisis.
That's easy. Of course. Text textbook, playbook, the thing to do
when you're in a position like Rolex. The hard thing was the watch industry did a hard bounce
back up in the next couple of years once Zerp kicked in in response to the financial crisis.
As crazy as things felt in 2007 in the watch market, By the time you get to 2011, 2012, 2013,
we're way beyond that in excesses.
And so many of the other brands
totally did this whiplash seesaw thing
where they were pricing really high,
trying to become exclusive before 2008.
2008 hits, they panic, they cut prices,
they cut marketing spend.
Now the market comes roaring back
and all of a sudden they're raising prices back up
again and trying to cash in on the good times.
What does Rolex do?
They stay the course.
Same thing.
They don't raise prices, but they control supply.
Yeah.
Well, they raise prices slowly every year.
It's a modest price increase every year that kind of sets the floor.
And frankly, if they do it over enough decades, everybody just believes forever
that these things are gonna appreciate
because it's almost like they're the Fed
and they're guaranteeing a certain rate of return
on these things.
There is this really awesome New York Times article
in the last couple of months talking about this dynamic,
how all the other luxury houses over the past couple of years
during the post-COVID craziness, really raised prices and price gouged themselves out of the market once the reset happened and
Hermes didn't. And Rolex followed this exact playbook over the last 10 years of not price
guidng themselves out of the market, but intentionally limiting supply, letting the secondary market go nuts, and then keeping an even keel for themselves.
And then, now that there's been a bit of a reset,
they're stronger than ever, I think.
All right, so...
This is a question I was sort of had on my list to ask you.
A very, very common narrative about Rolex right now
is they have burned all of their biggest
fans. These wait lists have gotten out of hand, the authorized dealers are being
disrespectful, they are intentionally limiting supply, have they gone too far in
their unavailability? I think it's a really good point. One dimension where
Rolex historically
has been very different in their strategy versus Hermes
or other luxury companies is they
don't control the last mile of retail
on the customer relationship.
They've always had the authorized dealer model,
as we talked about.
So right now, or at least until recent times,
these crazy wait list things are actually sort of somewhat out of Rolex's
control in a way that Hermes or Louis Vuitton or Chanel or the like, they're managing their
own customer relationships. Rolex doesn't have their own stores. And this was one of my really
big questions as I was doing the research, like, why? It seems obvious they should have their own
stores. This works so well for LVMH, and Hermes, and et cetera, et cetera.
Why doesn't Rolex do this?
Historically, at least, the key difference between Rolex
and other luxury houses is Rolex is a one category company.
Hermes can have their own stores because they sell furniture
and they sell ready-to-wear, and they sell jewelry,
and they sell handbags.
So like, even though in any one category, they sell a lot less of a given skew, like far
fewer Birkin bags than Rolex sells watches, the totality of all the products they sell
allows them to support or retail a dedicated owned and operated retail footprint.
Nah, I don't buy this.
You don't buy this for a second?
Okay.
Well, I do think this is changing now. Rolex has 1500 authorized dealer locations. And if all 1500 of those were
Rolex stores, they would absolutely do a great job paying rent. Yes. They don't need to sell a whole
bunch of other things to lure people into the store to. Well, I think that's true now. And I
think that's why they bought Boucher in 2023. Okay.
All right.
Let's have that debate.
Now let's come back to scarcity.
Okay.
Okay.
So why buy Boucher?
2023, they spend a rumored $5 billion.
Five?
Five.
Yeah.
That's what I read.
I mean, nobody knows the details of the transaction, but to buy one of, if not their largest single
retail partner, the jeweler Boucheret.
And they have a hundred year old relationship. This was one of the first
retail partners for Rolex in the super early days and actually this alliance
plus the Agler Alliance helped them stay out of the Swiss cartel. So in many ways
they have Boucher to thank for
their independence and their freedom while the rest of the industry was panicking.
So they've got this like tradition.
But the question is, everybody jumps to,
shouldn't they own their own retail?
They own their own everything else, shouldn't they own their own retail?
Why? What are the reasons?
Well, there's control over the buying experience
and to your point, list management.
Yeah, as waitlist management becomes more important, I think that becomes more critical.
Yes, that's legitimate. There's eking out every dollar of margin and there's getting full
visibility into data on customers, which actually is interesting. They don't get that today. They
don't have their customer's email address or names or addresses because
that data belongs to the authorized dealer. Rolex doesn't actually know who's buying
their product or who likes their product, which is kind of crazy for a modern company
of this scale and size.
One thing that's elephant in the room to me with all this is all these authorized dealers
sell other brands too. Boucheret sells Omega. And Boucheret uses the fact that they're a Rolex dealer to attract those other brands
and to attract the customers who will buy a bunch of stuff in the store. Once you have
Rolex, someone in the research put it to me, you're a made man.
Yeah. But historically, Rolex has been like, that's fine. Sell Petech, sell Audemars, sell
Omega in the same physical location. Will that change
now?
Right. Okay, so just walk through the logic tree. Rolex mostly didn't need to take on
the burden or the fixed costs or the complexities of owning retail. Rolex dictates terms to
retailers on how their products should be sold, displayed, marketed. They have exacting
standards and over time, retailers actually have less room to differentiate their own to retailers on how their products should be sold, displayed, marketed, they have exacting standards.
And over time, retailers actually have less room
to differentiate their own brand and experience.
And increasingly you walk in and you're like,
oh, is this a Rolex store?
And Rolex doesn't have to take on managing the store.
They have 16,000 employees doing 10 billion a year in sales.
Amazing.
This business is so efficient from a headcount perspective
and everybody talks about it like it's craftsmanship. It's high economies of scale production.
Like yeah, there's people working on these things, but there's a tremendous amount of machines
and they don't have to operate the stores, but they mostly get all of the good parts of a highly
controlled retail experience without having to also be
in the very crappy retail business.
I mean, industry-wide, third-party retailers make a 37% gross margin after they mark up
from the wholesale price.
That's their margin.
For Rolex in particular, it's lower than average because Rolex, you only get to keep 33 to
34%.
I've heard that actually went down 1% this year.
Rolex kind of gets to have their cake and eat it too by not owning retail stores and
having all the benefits of as if they did, at least over the last 30 years or so.
I think your points are valid about they are increasingly kind of wanting that customer
touch point, especially as it
comes to things like wait lists.
Yeah.
The thing about Rolex in pursuing this strategy until now, at least, they don't necessarily
do things for the gross margins.
This is a foundation-owned company.
They do things for long-term strategic reasons. And I think if at least you buy the premise that if they were to operate their own retail
locations they would be pushed by customers to have more things in those stores than just
the six or seven core Rolex models, which you probably can't walk out of the store
holding one of them anyway. You're just going there to sign up for a wait list, which you probably can't walk out of the store holding one of them anyway.
You're just going there to sign up for a wait list,
which again is a very different experience
than the Hermes retail experience.
You can't walk out of there with a Birkin,
but you sure as hell can walk out of there
with a scarf or a piece of furniture
or Apple watch strap, et cetera, et cetera.
It is astounding that Rolex has had the discipline
to remain just a watch company.
Imagine the opportunity to become a fully diversified luxury company.
Rolex jackets, Rolex sunglasses, Rolex fragrance, Rolex, you know, you name it, Rolex luggage.
Why are they not in the luggage business?
You could make 904L steel carry-ons.
Right. You know, make Ramoa look like child's play here. Why are they not in the luggage business? You could make 904L steel carry-ons. Right?
Make Ramoa look like child's play here.
And I suspect that this is part of the reason
not to have gone directly into retail.
Maybe.
I don't know.
I don't think so.
You think Rolex is going to give in to customers saying,
I wish I could buy other things in this store,
or ignoring the free money.
I could be way off base here, but just like really imagine like, okay, what does it take
to operate these retail locations?
These days, you're competing for physical space with LVMH.
So you are in the most expensive, highest rent, highest end places on earth.
Yep. And again, you may not necessarily care about your margins and maybe you can take that hit
and they have tons of cash.
Maybe you can even buy the real estate.
But just as a shopper experience for the people that are now visiting those locations, they
want to go and they want to have an experience, right?
And they walk out with product.
And so if there's a Rolex only store and all all there is is the six, seven, eight models there
that you cannot walk out of the store with,
what is it doing?
It's a high-end bonobos.
Right, yeah, it's a high-end bonobos.
Except you have no idea when you'll get the call.
Right, exactly.
Now compare that to a Boucheret, where, yeah, you
can't walk out of there with Rolex,
but you can walk out of there with a, I don't know.
A whole bag full of Tag Heuer's.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
And it's a non-exclusive market.
Anybody who's a watch collector isn't just a Rolex collector or like just
because you buy a, maybe I'm sure there's some people, but I think for a lot of
people who love Rolex, they're also going to own a Panerai or they're going to own
a whatever and that doesn't hurt their relationship with Rolex.
Yeah.
Fair.
So the question kind of remains, why did they buy Boucher? Yeah.
So here's my supposition. Yes, it will help them improve their economics for watches that
they sell through Boucher, but not why they did it. Yes, it will help them improve leverage
over other retailers, but they didn't need that. They already do things like, gee,
it would be nice if you wanted to remain a Rolex authorized dealer if you sunk a whole bunch of
capital costs into rebuilding this part of the store to make it better. Oh, no, no, we mean you.
We would like you to do that. We will get back to you this December if we're going to renew the
contract for next year for you to stay a dealer or not.
But let us know in those renovations.
They have all the leverage, all of it.
So I don't think it's like, oh, now we own this retailer and they didn't need that at
all.
Yep.
Okay.
Yes, it will also let them have a tighter grip on watch allocation and the customer touch
point.
Waitlist management, which I agree is a huge liability for them right now.
But they didn't need to own the ADs to do that.
Yeah, they had the leverage to take control anyway.
They could easily have said, hey, in the contract for next year's renewal, we're putting in
a clause that you are no longer allowed to maintain waitlists on your own for customers.
We're centralizing that.
And if we catch you doing it, you lose your license for the next year. Great point
They absolutely could have done that now, maybe they didn't feel that was ethical
They're like look, it's the dealers business and we have to let them run their business
But you could solve this without buying
someone who represents 8% or whatever Boucher is of their total sales I
Honestly think the biggest reason to do it was so no one else buys it.
Boucher is a 100 year old relationship. The family didn't have anyone to pass it to.
They're looking to sell. Rolex is a very private company. They don't want anyone else owning an
asset that has a lot of visibility into Rolex itself since they sell so much of Rolex's inventory.
They don't want a public company to own it and start reporting how many Rolex
watches were sold that year through that. I mean, that'd be horrible for Rolex.
And I'm sure LVMH would have loved to have owned Boucheret.
Absolutely. I mean, they own Sephora. You don't think they want to own Boucheret?
Yeah.
And Boucheret also comes with what's the, Ternot, the American retailer,
which I'm sure Rolex doesn't really wanna own Ternot,
but here they are.
So I think it was so no one else buys it.
Yeah, I think you're probably right.
I do agree though.
I mean, the reason that people are all up in arms
about this, I never got the call from my authorized dealer
and the whole waitlist thing is because waitlists
were only really a thing for until honestly like 2015 for like
steel Daytonas. The rest of it you could just buy. It's this whole this new notion of having
the privilege to go spend seven to twenty thousand dollars on something and getting told no by the
local jeweler. That's crazy. Most of the time they're going to say,
yes, absolutely, let me walk you to the checkout aisle.
So because it's kind of a new motion,
the old way of doing it,
they basically didn't have the infrastructure
to have a properly managed...
I know you are taking out the luxury strategy
and you're showing me the page of...
May I please remind you of anti-law of marketing number six,
dominate the client.
And number seven, make it difficult for clients to buy.
Oh, also number five, do not respond to rising demand.
But honestly, until 2015, you could just buy a Rolex for most of them, except for the ones
that they deliberately wanted to use as, hey, this one's hard to get.
I should just be able to walk in and buy a sub, you know?
Yes.
And so that's how customers feel
because that's how it always was.
And then each AD is using their own
mystical portal of waitlist,
which really means how many Instagram followers do you have
or are you famous enough for me to allocate one of the six
that I get to sell this month to you.
And so it's a customer hostile experience.
If Rolex was just put in the contracts, guess what?
We're managing the list and we're going to actually manage it
and we're going to publish how it works.
I think they can earn a lot of customer goodwill
and they wouldn't have to go buy a bunch of retailers
and figure this whole thing out.
Totally agree.
They absolutely could do that.
Yeah.
whole thing out. Totally agree. They absolutely could do that. Yeah. I will say, I don't think Rolex wanted to be in the luxury business. I think they wanted to be a lifestyle brand. I think they
wanted to have fantastic engineering. I think they wanted to continue making things a little
bit better every year. They wanted to have the very best brand they could with customers.
They wanted to have the very best brand they could with customers. But I think global luxury kind of happened to them.
Yeah.
And they didn't really have a good choice after the quartz crisis other than to do this.
I heard an anecdote that Richemont and in particular Cartier decided that they were
going to start acting like a luxury watch brand and they sort of reconvened the watch industry around them in a luxury way. An example being to
compete with Baselworld or the Basel Fair, Richemont started their own thing
in Geneva and they said look the industry gathers here in Geneva now and
we're gonna be fancy about it and no one's eating bratwurst anymore on the
show floor. We're gonna sell watches to customers with champagne and caviar and a presentation ceremony. And so if you're
not doing that, guess what? That's what watches are now. I don't think Rolex was the driver
of that, I guess is what I'm saying. I think the industry went that way and they happened
to be the most prestigious high volume player in it. And so they're sort of trying to figure
out what it means to be an accidental luxury brand.
Hmm.
I can totally believe that.
I mean, go back to Hans Wilsdorf, right?
That was totally not his vision for the company.
His vision was a Rolex watch on every wrist.
Yep.
Okay.
So now that we're over in scarcity land, I want to revisit the question.
Have they gone too far in their unavailability? Well, the main reason, I honestly believe this, that they didn't ramp production
to meet customer demand isn't positioning. It's not, we're a luxury brand, we don't
do that. It is, they don't want to destabilize the business. Good times come, bad times come. We do not want to be the brand that ramped 20% in one year and is now slashing MSRP,
which lots of watch brands have to do, and it embarrasses their customers who just bought
it at full price and now suddenly it's 20% off.
That's a horrible way to destroy your brand.
Cartier overproduced watches in 2016 and had to destroy hundreds of millions of dollars
of inventory.
This kind of thing doesn't happen to Rolex.
Very incremental, slow increases to production over time.
That's the thing that has served them well.
They never want to be anywhere close to the line
of what the real demand is.
There's sort of this business physics lesson here.
It's very hard for a business to ever get smaller
than its largest ever.
Yes, it's like a down round in venture backed companies.
Yeah, customers don't like it, employees don't like it.
It's hard to shrink your overhead to rational new realities
after bubbles pop.
It just doesn't feel the same as when it was always
your biggest, best year ever.
And I think Rolex just really doesn't want to ever be in a position of that.
So they're like conservative to a fault on slow modest increases in production, slow
changes.
And when there's a bubble and a whole bunch of new fans of your brand come in, it's like
an immovable object meeting an unstoppable force.
Like they're just not going to meaningfully ramp.
The biggest thing they did do is they started this new production facility
construction that will be open in 2027 or something.
But even that, I don't know, that'll be maybe 10%, maybe 15% bump
when that comes online.
But I think they're torn right now because they
don't want to have all these customers whose demands they can't meet.
But they also don't want to risk destabilizing the next hundred years.
Yeah.
New demand is actually like a risk if you're taking a very long-term view.
Yes.
And managing valuable customers who want a long-term relationship with you and who are
angry while you're trying to protect your own stability is hard.
Which coming back to the wait list, I think this is the positive justification for a waitlist.
Making sure that those people who become clients and buy your products and participate in your
brand really want it and aren't just there because it's the hot flavor of the week and
they're going to be gone next month.
Right.
And Rolex cares about that, but not as much as like a Patek Philippe.
I mean, Patek Philippe, they want to make sure that they are appeasing
the collectors and the true fan.
Like Rolex, I think they acknowledge that they're very commercial.
They're here for the, the, the executive who got a promotion and the doctors
and the dentists and the lawyers and the finance guys, that's their bread and
butter, and I don't think they want to lose the brand patina with that huge volume of material wealth
in aggregate.
Yeah.
James Dowling again put this to me in a really good visceral way.
The typical Rolex buyer is not comparison shopping with Apatek or any other brand. They are comparison shopping with,
do I buy this Rolex or do I upgrade my 911?
That's interesting.
One more rumor I heard,
and this should totally justify,
Rolex isn't happy that they're not able
to make enough watches.
Like I really maintain this.
Steel Daytonas, sure.
Rainbow, whatever, sure.
Those can maintain rare,
but like Submariners should be on shelves
or at least two weeks later,
you should get a call about it.
I heard that in 2020 to 2022,
they asked employees to come in six days a week
instead of five to meet demand.
Wow.
So if that's true,
that's a pretty telling symbol about how they feel about it. Hmm. Wow. So, if that's true, that's a pretty telling symbol about how they feel about it.
Yep.
And now is a good time, I think, to bring up, there's one more piece of Rolex, the corporation
and the story, which for the longest time, I think both of us were totally puzzled by.
And when we were in Taipei to interview Morris in January, we went into
Taipei 101 and we were walking around in the shopping mall. We walked by Tudor.
Well, it was an authorized dealer that had both Rolex and Tudor, which I think a lot
of ADs or maybe all ADs, if you take Rolex, you have to is Tudor? Tudor, like the British royal Tudor family, is Rolex's sub-brand.
Sort of. Technically, it's another company owned by the Hans Wilsdorf Foundation, but
in practice, yeah. Sure. This is Rolex's sub-brand. And Ben, to your earlier point, if you're
going to make an argument that Rolex does not want to be a luxury company, a textbook violation of the luxury strategy is to have
a sub brand.
Right.
And so we're like, what the hell is this Tudor thing?
Why do they have it?
And if you look at the Tudor products, a lot of them like are the Rolex products.
Dude.
Okay.
So Tudor was started by Hans Wilsdorf in 1926 with the stated purpose to be a more
affordable brand to Rolex while maintaining high quality standards.
And originally they actually were Rolex cases and bracelets, but with off the
shelf movements from a third party vendor, ETA, which is actually now part of
Swatch Group versus the ones that Rolex was getting from Agler.
You'd look at it and it would look like a Submariner.
Totally. You walk into a Tudor would look like a Submariner. Totally.
You walk into a Tudor authorized dealer,
you go on the website and you're like,
wow, that sure looks like a GMT master
and that looks like an Explorer
and that looks like a Submariner.
Right.
Yeah, even today it almost feels like knockoff-y,
except that the Rolex knockoffs are shockingly good.
You'd go a decade owning a knockoff and not realizing it.
Yeah, yeah. So for the longest time, you know, I decade owning a knockoff and not realizing it. Yep, yep.
So, for the longest time, you know, I at least I think you were too like, well, what is going
on here?
And then we realized the real limiting factor to Rolex production is movements.
Movements are the hard thing to make.
And all their movements are eggler movements, you know, now in-house Rolex movements.
Tudor does not use eggler movements, does not use Rolex movements.
They use third-party movements.
This is funny.
I hadn't had this insight.
Yeah.
So, Tudor is kind of the release valve here.
They can ramp up production of the Tudor, quote unquote, Submariner, GMT Master, Explorer,
whatever with third-party movements, and that's okay.
Hmm.
But what do you mean release valve? Customers can't get a Rolex so they get a Tudor?
I think that probably rarely happens, but to Hans's original vision of I want everybody
to be able to own a Rolex, this is the way that they can have that happen.
I don't think that's it.
I don't think they care at all about that.
Here's my logic. It is a shockingly low percent of Rolex's production,
less than 1%.
If that were true, they would sell
they would sell a lot more.
tutors in volume.
Let's take a Black Bay.
This is sort of the tutor sub mariner, $4,000.
Most people don't know or care about the Black Bay. And if they walk in thinking they want
a Rolex, they're not walking out with a Black Bay. They sell so few of these things. So what are they
doing? I think it's kind of an innovation lab. It's a way to protect Rolex's brand. Because if
there's something new and interesting that might be a fad
That customers seem to be caring about in the watch world
Tutor can go and implement it and they can figure out how to produce it if it's a flop, that's fine
The watch aficionados who know about tutor expect them to come out with weird stuff that flops
But if it's durable then Rolex might get it in five to ten
years with even more polish and thoughtfulness. They've tested all sorts of stuff with Tudor,
dial colors, ceramic bezels, titanium watches. A lot of these now are slowly making their way
into Rolexes. And I think the key thing is they can use Tudor to go and compete with Omega, Tag Heuer in the mid
market and Tudor basically can punch up so that Rolex doesn't ever have to punch down.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I heard a great phrase that the shield protects the crown.
The Tudor shield protects the Rolex crown, which makes total sense.
It's so that they don't ever have to risk doing something dumb, chasing a competitor with Rolex and Tudor can always
go figure it out.
I love it. It's like we used to think about the LP show.
Right.
It's our innovation lab.
And we still think about ACQ too that way. This is like, if this is something we find
interesting but we wouldn't do it on the main show or it's we just don't have a place in
our lineup for it. Yeah, it makes sense. And it still
provides value for all sides. Like it's still great for listeners. It's still great for the guest.
It's still great for us. Yeah. Yeah. But what is it? It's less than 10% of our show is listenership.
It's a great experimentation ground. Yep. The real watch nerds will tell you that they actually love
tutors. Even though it's a $4,000 watch, the movements are incredibly high quality.
And I think consumers actually might be getting a pretty good deal on Tudor watches. I mean,
if I go out tomorrow and buy an Explorer that's whatever MSRP is for $8,000 or something,
Rolex is making phenomenal margins on that thing. Tudor, they don't sell that many of them. So at a $4,000 price point,
that's only $2,500 wholesale for a very high quality movement. And there's not a lot of
them made. So economies of scale are really low. So whatever the fixed costs are, there's not that
many watches to amortize those across. And I think there's actually pretty significant
upfront fixed costs. So I don't know, I'm sure they're not losing money
by having Tudor, but it's a great deal for customers.
Yeah.
You're totally right.
I like your rationale better than mine.
Well, we both had a lot of good conversations
to try to figure this out
because you and I were texting each other.
We were like, what are they doing?
This is the worst luxury company ever.
Yeah.
Okay, well, to wrap up at least the history here, level set us on today.
What is the company today?
All right.
First of all, no one knows.
Yeah, right.
But there's a lot of really good ways to guess.
And two great shout outs here.
One is to our good friend of the show, Arvind Navaratnam. He, as usual, did an amazing long form write up of the business of Rolex,
and he found awesome public sources of data.
We'll link to that in the show notes.
Secondly, the industry report that everyone kind of refers to is this Morgan Stanley Lux Consult report,
who sent us a copy in preparation for the episode.
So we did our own ways of trying to guess at these numbers in the shape of the business
today and then we kind of looked at the Morgan Stanley one and thought okay
what's the most reputable well-connected person who's networking with all the
dealers coming up with? I would bet all this is within 10 to 20 percent of right.
So I think they make about 1.1 million watches a year, maybe a little higher.
Morgan Stanley said 1.24.
So think 1.1 to 1.2 million a year.
Yep.
Sounds right to me.
For revenue, think about it as around $11 billion in revenue that they do in sales.
So the interesting thing is to start to look at market share.
The share of the Swiss watch market that Rolex has by revenue is completely insane.
Morgan Stanley and Lux Consult estimate it at 30.3% of the whole Swiss watch industry.
No one else even comes close.
Cartier and Omega have 7.5% each.
Truly the number two and three player are at,
what is that, a quarter?
Yeah, the number two and three player
are at slightly less than half of the scale of,
combined of Rolex.
Yeah, exactly.
Patek Philippe is at 5.6%, again, by revenue.
Patek Philippe makes fricking expensive watches,
and they still only are at 5.6%, again by revenue Patek fleet makes freaking expensive watches and they still only are at five point six percent one sixth of
Rolex out of RPG is at five percent and they just have massive fragmentation down from there Rolex makes something that
Isn't crazy expensive, but it's pretty expensive and they sell the absolute crap out of them on a unit
Spaces so that was revenue that we just talked about units
They make something like 15 times the number of watches that Patek Philippe makes
22 times Audemars Piguet
It's crazy people even talk about these brands like they're in the same sentence just based on the volume of output
Yeah, they're totally different segments of the market. Yes in terms of price
Totally different segments of the market. Yes.
In terms of price, Rolex's average selling price,
not Rolex's price, but what the retailers sell it for,
is around $13,000.
Audemars Piguet is $48,000.
Vacheron Constantin is $38,000.
Patek Philippe, $40,000.
I mean, totally different categories.
This is part of my argument that
Rolex really isn't luxury at all. They have hit the sweet spot in the market. If you think
about a curve, like an X, Y axis, they have found the sweet spot where you can maximize
revenue where you just sell an absolute ton of watches that let people express something
about themselves, but you stay away from that insanity of the true luxury market
that limits you to a very small number of production.
So they're almost like their own thing entirely.
Yeah.
And it's interesting, right?
The secondary market really lets them do this, I think.
Because even though the model lineup of Rolex has remained stable for so many decades now, or relatively stable for so many decades,
because of the minute changes in all the reference numbers in the models, you actually have
incredible scarcity and rarity for-
For people who care. You segment the market.
Yeah, certain flavors and that can become the multi-hundred-thousand-dollar watch market for Rolex, the multi-million dollar watch market for Rolex.
They can participate in the same thing that Patek and Audemars, et cetera, are participating
in.
Just do it through the secondary market.
Aaron Ross Powell Or even special editions in the primary.
I mean, you look at the rainbow dial Daytona.
Pete Slauson Oh, the emoji watch.
Aaron Ross Powell Right.
Pete Slauson That thing is pretty baller.
Aaron Ross Powell They can do these extremely, you know, they play in Patek Philippe land, both to your
point in the secondary market, but also in their sort of limited edition special watch
market.
Yeah.
But I think if they weren't as strong a player in the secondary market, because obviously
they don't really monetize that directly, I think they wouldn't then have the permission
to go put out these special editions that sell for a couple hundred thousand dollars in the primary market.
Right. The thing they've done so genius and beautifully well is to create something that the whole world knows about,
that everybody looks at as a sign of success, that you've made it, that you're like those divers and you're like those pilots and you're like those explorers, if
you have one. And because it's universally agreed upon, as global wealth grew, they basically
just got to index it.
Yeah. Think about it, right? Like I certainly don't want to imply that a Rolex is not a
lot of money. It is a lot of money that is inaccessible to the vast majority of people. Yep.
However, let's say you work a solid white collar job in America these days. You get
a big promotion, you have a big life event, you have a kid, etc. Is it reasonable that
you could purchase a Rolex?
It's right on the edge of unreasonable, which is exactly where they need to be to have this
market.
Exactly. If you make sacrifices, you can probably do it, depending on what your salary is.
Yeah. I mean, truly, since the 1950s, there is a wealth class that has emerged, doctors,
lawyers, finance people, recently tech people, if they can really figure out that market,
that absolutely can go buy a 10 plus thousand dollar watch
if it's the thing they choose to buy.
Yep.
Like a Porsche, a 911 is not,
it is completely inaccessible.
It is a impractical car for 10 times as much money.
Yep.
It's a pretty sweet little market to have
that it's this almost unreasonable thing
that a whole lot of people can buy.
And to your point about the confoundingness of luxury, I still maintain that it is managed
in the same fashion as the world's best luxury brands. However, it kind of sounds a lot like
a BMW to me or a Mercedes. A Mercedes or a BMW, again, most people can't afford them and don't buy them or lease them.
But for a lot of people, well beyond the 1%, if it's something you really want in your
life, there's probably a way you can make it happen.
Yeah.
Well, most people finance BMWs, but nobody's well, I think people probably finance Rolexes.
I think there's ways to finance Rolexes.
Yeah.
It's interesting.
I did some thinking about allegories to other categories,
like handbags, or fashion, or cars.
It's quite tempting to say that Rolex is Louis Vuitton
and that Patek is Hermes.
But Rolex isn't quite Louis Vuitton.
That's not giving Rolex enough credit.
No.
It's not managed like LVMH at all.
Yeah, they are very careful stewards
of the brand in a way that Louis Vuitton will slap it on t-shirts.
My best comparison that I think I came up with
is Rolex's Porsche.
And I know there are different categories of price,
but cars are expensive things.
And you do need one anyway.
It's real scale manufacturing with a high quality engineered
product with extremely good margins
differentiated by their brand.
You stick to six core models, you iterate and refine each one of them once or twice
a decade.
The Submariner is the 911.
You can buy what your grandpa had 50 years ago and it still looks like that modernized.
And it's actually a pretty good comp to call Patek Philippe Ferrari.
Yeah, totally.
We don't care what you think.
We are making this for us.
We are making it for collectors. We are making it for collectors.
It's very small volume production, very small volume production.
It's five times more expensive.
Totally.
Yeah.
And that's a completely different market.
Ferrari, Lamborghini, you're talking a million dollar plus cars is a very, very different
thing than an $80,000 car.
Right.
Bottom line of what I'll stick to is Patek is Ferrari and Porsche is Rolex.
And it's a really good business to be in.
Yes.
Yes.
I mean, it's kind of ideal to your point.
They have found the ideal point on the curve here.
I think that's it.
They multiplied two pretty big numbers together instead of one
big number and one small number.
Yep.
And the way it manifests in watches is unique
and different than other markets too.
30% of the Swiss watch industry,
other categories don't have this kind of outsized winner.
Even in handbags where Louis Vuitton is so,
I mean, they print money, print money,
somewhere around 20%.
I think Rolex defines the category of
Watches Hermes doesn't do this. Louis Vuitton doesn't do this. Porsche doesn't do this. Those are all much more fragmented markets
Yeah, totally and for people who think we're like blow and smoke here of how is Rolex not a you know, high-end luxury
Rolex we were just saying average price of 13,000. You look at
Richard Mille. I mean, this is like a 280,000, maybe 300,000 average price
point. Jacob & Co., 100,000. Audemars Piguet, that we were just talking about,
Van Cleef, Patek Philippe, Vacheron Constantin, Blancpain, Piaget. These are
all meaningfully more expensive average price points than Rolex.
Rolex is the name you know, but it's not the most expensive watch by a mile you could buy.
And there's 15 other brands that are higher end.
But success in America and owning a nice watch is a Rolex.
Yep.
I think that's what's so amazingly unique about this company.
Yes.
OK, so employee count, they have about 16,000 people worldwide.
About 9,000 of those are in Switzerland.
I had a lot of fun trying to size this market,
trying to figure out Swiss watches versus watches.
The Swiss watch industry is something like $35 billion wholesale before the retail markup
across all players, including the super high end and Omega and Swatch and everyone else.
Rolex does about 11 billion of that 35 billion, which we've talked about.
Holy crap.
The work that's very interesting is when we zoom out from just Swiss watches.
Switzerland produces 2% of the world's watches.
2%! Yeah and everything else is a $10 piece of crap. And to put some real numbers on that,
Switzerland makes 17 million watches a year and most estimates are that there are between 700
and 900 million watches made in the world every year. Seven to 900 million, including smartwatches,
cheap $25 watches, you have it.
So this 2% of units sold that happens in Switzerland
accounts for 45% of the dollars in all watches,
smartwatches, Timexs, all the stuff that's made
in Hong Kong and China.
I mean, 2% of units are made in Switzerland and 45% of the revenue is captured there.
Totally. Apple alone ships way more Apple watches every year than the entire Swiss watch
industry. Way more.
Oh, absolutely. Estimates on the smartwatch industry are like 80 million smartwatches a
year. Yeah. And I think Apple, depending on the year, does like 30 to 50.
Yeah. It's funny, this 17 million watches, that includes a whole bunch of swatches and fashion
watches. Switzerland makes a lot of quartz also. It is true that 45% of the dollars come from 17
million watches out of seven to 900 million, but it's actually
even more concentrated than just that 17 million because none of the quartz watches contribute
that much to the revenue.
To make that point specifically, 86% of Switzerland's watch export comes from mechanical watches.
That whole move in the quartz crisis to lean hard into mechanical really, really, really
worked from a dollar perspective.
So 40% of all watch revenue in the world came from Swiss mechanicals.
Mechanicals.
Amazing.
So then you start to look at net profit.
Well Rolex has 30% of the Swiss market by revenue, but probably even more by profit.
Oh yeah.
It's totally an Apple situation here.
Morgan Stanley and Lux Consult estimate that of the $35 billion in total revenue for Swiss
watch manufacturers, there's about 11.8 billion of total profit, implying that the industry
wide operating margin is 29%.
Do you think Rolex has an operating margin of just 29%?
Hell no.
And frankly, there's a lot of people in this category who have negative operating margin.
There are these big conglomerates that are trying to get into watches.
They're not generating a lot of profit there right now.
There are a lot of estimates between 30 and 40%.
I would bet it's way closer to 40% for Rolex's operating margin.
My best guess is that while they account for 30% of the industry's revenue, it's in the
neighborhood of 40% of the total Swiss profit.
Yep.
Totally agree.
They're also so vertically integrated except for retail that you have to imagine that ultimately
that would create a better profit structure too.
Has to be.
So then you get to balance sheet.
This is truly anyone's guess.
They're spitting off something like three,
three and a half billion dollars a year, maybe more,
maybe four.
Yep.
And they've done, call it two to three billion
for at least a decade or two.
And so it's not crazy to think that they've piled up
$50 billion plus in
cash even before investment returns.
It's totally an IKEA situation. There's tons and tons of cash sitting there.
In an IKEA, we can see it in annual reports. I have no idea what Rolex's assets look like.
So the Hans Wilsdorf Foundation, of course, doesn't publish any numbers publicly, but
they have said and people have estimated that they give away around 300 million Swiss francs
every year, which by your numbers would be about one-tenth of the cash that the business
is generating.
Or less.
And still, that makes them one of the most active annual dispersing foundations on the planet.
It's unbelievable and it's a very broad base of philanthropic initiatives, environmental,
science, arts, and it's not like they're just doing things that help Rolex.
This is like a very legitimate charitable foundation.
Not to mention, it seems like they're just giving money away all over Geneva.
Yes, this is the coolest thing about it.
A core part of the mission of the foundation
that Hans put in its bylaws
is to help the city and people of Geneva.
And so I think they've found sort of over the years
come to a belief that the best way to do that often
is just giving people money.
If people need money, family can't make rent,
have a health issue come up or something, they can apply for grants and they'll just give them money and they
don't make a big deal about it.
It's pretty interesting. One thing they definitely do with their money, again, I think it's safe
to just ballpark there's 50 billion before investment returns sitting there, but again,
plus or minus 50%. They own some of the most
expensive real estate in the world. They own their own buildings in Switzerland. They own
in the Bond Street house area in London, some really, really prime real estate in Milan,
in Melbourne, in Tokyo, famously in New York City. There's a gorgeous building that they're
building about a block from Rockefeller Center and Radio City Music Hall. I mean the old
Rolex building was nice. This new one that's gonna be done next year, the
architectural drawings look unbelievable. In Manhattan. I mean they own a building
in Manhattan. Hey you gotta put the money somewhere right? Real estate is a good
place as any. They own a lot of real estate in Geneva.
They own a big service center in Dallas, the school in Pennsylvania.
Hilariously, they just bought the building where Omega has their flagship store in Geneva.
So Omega makes a rent check out to Rolex every month.
Amazing.
That's not in the category of asset management, but it is in the category of spite.
I don't know.
Yeah.
It's pretty funny.
Yeah.
100% safe assumption that there's a boatload of money sitting there.
Yep.
So that's the shape of the business today.
The question is, how would you value it?
If this were a publicly traded company today, you could look at it based on a sector multiple
of other watch companies, but come on, applying the swatch multiple is not the right way to value
Rolex. Maybe Patek Philippe, since it's also a vertically integrated, very strong brand,
but it's privately held. We have no idea. Patek Philippe is very Rolex-y in a lot of
ways, other than the fact that they're multiplying a big number by a small number instead of
two pretty big numbers.
You could look at conglomerates like LVMH or Richemont, but there's too much other stuff in there.
I mean, Rolex is a pure play mono brand with the leading brand in the sector.
There's only one comp for this business.
There's maybe two with Porsche and Hermes, but I think you're right. That's Hermes.
I'm assuming that's where you're going. That's where I was going, yeah.
Porsche trades at 15X earnings,
Hermes trades at 60X earnings.
And my best estimates on Rolex's growth rate
is actually in the same neighborhood
as Hermes's growth rate.
And Hermes's margin profile is also pretty similar
to a 40-ish percent operating margin.
Yeah, that's where this business differs from Porsche.
Right.
I actually think if growth rate's close,
and if the operating margin's close,
and if it's a single premium brand that's
the best in the sector is the same,
you totally could value it at what Hermes is valued at.
Which is roughly a 20x revenue multiple.
Or a 60x earnings multiple.
Right, but we have no idea what Rolex's earnings are.
But I think you can kind of back into Rolex's earnings being like in the neighborhood of
three to four billion a year.
Yeah.
Pre-tax, pre all this stuff.
I think.
But you're right.
Maybe you just put it on the revenue multiple.
Well, okay, here would be an argument for putting it on the revenue multiple.
Again, not that you could ever do this because this business is never going to trade, but
there are a million things that Rolex could do differently to improve their operating
margins and they're just not going to.
There's the long-term aspect of like, well, if they were to do that, then that would erode
their positioning in the space.
Right.
So all this to say the range is too wide to just give you a single number and say, here's
what I think Rolex is worth. But there are plausible scenarios all the way from 40, 50 billion to 200 billion.
I agree.
Before assets.
Yep.
That's just enterprise value.
Yep.
Before any cash they have in the balance sheet, real estate, who knows what other investments
they have.
This is insane.
There's no way that this business is worth 40. I don't know if
it's worth 200, but it's worth 100 plus. Zero doubt in my mind. And before assets, I mean,
keep in mind market cap includes assets. And so if this thing were to publicly trade listing
with its assets, it's probably top 50 companies in the world. Yeah, I mean, again, Hermes has a 292 billion euro market cap and depending on what the assets are within Rolex, yeah.
There's a chance this thing's worth more than American Express or Goldman Sachs or Adobe or Pepsi or Disney or Qualcomm or AT&T.
Kind of like the Rolex business better than a lot of those businesses.
All that to say this all feels profane because.
Ugh, they would never.
Yeah, can't trade this thing.
Yeah, I think the issue if I were to buy any shares of Rolex would be that I could never
do anything with them because I could never sell the shares.
Well, you'd have to ask yourself, why am I getting these shares?
Who is selling them to me?
Is it a fake?
Which by the way, we didn't talk about that.
I don't think it's worth much detail, but I think actually for a long time, the fake
market was great for Rolex.
Interesting.
Just that Rolex certainly was, and I'm sure probably still is the most faked, certainly
watch brand if not any brand in the world. And I think that was good for them, not so much recently.
Because it raised awareness while they were still...
Raising awareness and then building the prestige of the brand.
I'd say like 90s and maybe early 2000s, probably a good thing. You go to New York City to hope
to get to Canal Street to try to buy some fake
Rolexes on your trip to New York. I think that's totally right. Exactly. It just adds to the myth
and the legend. Yeah. But now... Now, yeah, probably not a big deal. It's also so weird that these fakes
are so good. I mean, you can go to like reasonably reputable online retailers and not be sure that
you're getting an authentic Rolex. I mean, a lot of times it's like the wrong movement
in the right case or part of its counterfeit,
but not all of it.
All right, should we move into analysis?
Yeah, let's do it.
All right, power.
So this is where we use Hamilton-Helmer's framework
of seven powers to analyze what is it that helps a business
to achieve persistent differential returns,
or what makes this business more profitable than their closest competitor sustainably?
So branding.
Quite the task for us here.
And should we just move on or?
Just for new listeners, these seven options are counter positioning, scale economies,
network economies, switching costs, process power, branding, and cornered resources.
I think the interesting thing is to stack them against who is their closest competitor.
And in some senses, it's Patek Philippe.
In some senses, I would say it's Omega.
Yep.
In some senses, it's Apple.
That I completely disagree on.
I'll go to the mattresses on Rolex.
It's not a time telling device.
This is nothing to do with function.
Totally agree.
However, there's only so much real estate space
on your wrist.
And most people are not gonna wear two things
on each wrist.
Right.
I've been dual watching all week,
one on each wrist and it's a little much.
Oh, do you feel a little funny?
Feel a little funny.
You're right.
It is competitive for wrist real estate.
And it's kind of irrelevant that they both tell the time.
Yeah. Neither of them tells the time.
Right. One is a piece of craftsmanship on my wrist and the other is notification center.
Yes.
Totally. And fitness.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. That is actually a huge reason I wear my Apple Watch.
And I've worn it every day to bed for nine years.
Same. Yeah.
Just that instrumenting of both calories and sleep.
Yeah.
Same every day for years and years.
Yeah.
Okay.
So that's competitive, but interestingly, I don't think about the prices of those.
Since they don't achieve the same function, I don't compare their prices.
So when you're thinking about what enables Apple's profits versus Rolex's profits
I mean if I go buy a Rolex I will pay about 10 times more than I paid for my Apple watch
Yeah
In some ways this is a silly exercise because the whole point of the last god knows how many hours here is they actually don't have any
competitors
So there's nobody for them to counter position against.
Right.
I think the interesting thing is to think about in the 40s,
50s, and 60s, what was the source of their power?
What activities were they performing
that gave them power?
Because today is almost boring.
It's just branding, I think.
Yeah, branding and just category ownership.
Yeah.
There just is nobody else.
In 1985, it was interestingly like capital structure.
Why did Omega do dumb stuff and Rolex didn't?
That doesn't really fit into this framework,
because that's not about strategy.
That's about tactics.
That's a failure of execution to make the wrong decision.
Yep.
Okay, so I think maybe the more interesting question is,
rewind back to the lifestyle era, post-World War II,
when they're launching all the professional watches,
the sport watches.
Was that counter positioning versus the rest of the industry?
I don't think so,
because I don't think they were doing anything
that the rest of the industry couldn't.
I mean, they were executing really well on a brand strategy that was really cohesive
with their product strategy around the professional watches.
But I don't know that their competitors couldn't do that.
There was some structural reason why they couldn't.
I mean, Quartz was counter positioned against Switzerland, but I don't think Rolex was counter
positioned against other Swiss tactics.
Yep. Good point. I agree.
The only other one I could see on here is once they hit escape velocity in the 90s,
the scale economies is a big one. I mean, the reason why they truly are among the very highest
quality watches in the world is because they throw their scale economies around. They do absolutely unreasonable things to engineer and build and test these watches that other people
in the industry just can't. Yep. And they're leverage over retailers, you know, too. I think
at the end of the day, though, I maintain that we can debate the semantics of luxury products,
price points, et cetera. This company company has managed the best luxury companies,
and that playbook exists outside of seven powers.
I know, it is.
The goal of managing a successful luxury brand is to manage for the long-term.
By the long-term, I mean centuries.
So you're actually willing to sacrifice huge amounts of profits to do so.
Oh, right.
It would be wrong to look at this year's or even the next five years operating profits
when analyzing a business like this.
Totally.
You almost want to have a worse margin structure at any given moment, especially during the
good times.
If it strengthens your intangible asset.
Huh, that's an interesting insight.
Okay.
Playbook.
Playbook.
If I were to pose the question to you,
how does Rolex have 30% market share of dollars
when the next highest only has 7.5%?
What's the main reason?
Why are they able to have such a massive lead
in this industry?
And maybe let me lead the witness with like a little bit of what I'm stuck on.
When did Rolex actually take risk?
Because typically outsized winners with outsized rewards
come from doing something risky or counterintuitive at the right time.
A lot of the time I think Rolex just made a rational decision.
And executed better than anyone.
Yeah.
I'm thinking about the, you know, the three putt to get on the wrist of Eisenhower.
Or had really good ideas.
Or the lifestyle marketing and yeah, working with both J. Walter Thompson and IMG and the,
you know, testimonies. Yeah, they just did better than everyone else. And that advantage compounded over time.
Right.
It wasn't, was it really a risk how they played the courts crisis?
I don't know.
They just, they looked around and they were in a privileged position where they had the
resources and the structure to do that.
And same with 2008.
Did they take a risk?
Not really.
They did the logical thing and they had the structure and resources to pull it off, to
go hard into marketing in the United States.
I think a lot of the time they just had resources and structure that let them
find these opportunities to do a rational, logical, low risk thing and
continue to pull away from competitors.
Maybe it's a little dangerous to speak for Rolex because Rolex doesn't speak and nobody speaks for them.
But I suspect if they were to answer the question,
they would say some version of continuity.
Mm, yeah.
Not that there haven't been major changes
in different eras of the company,
but they have stuck with a strategy and a positioning and a product
lineup and a culture longer than just about anybody else.
Yeah.
You know, I was reflecting on the question.
The one time I think they really did take risk was the wristwatch order from Agler.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
That's not the answer to why they have 30% market share today, but that was huge.
Yeah, that's kind of the only real bet the company move.
And when they did that, that huge order, I don't think we talked about this, it was the
order that they placed was for five times the capital that they had in the business.
God.
So either it was a multi-year order or they financed it and probably both.
Yep.
And I'm sure Agler extended them some credit.
Yep.
Huh.
But yeah, since then, they made really, really shrewd decisions executed immensely well.
I think that's the answer.
Feels very Swiss.
Yes, it does.
All right.
Another weird playbook question I have for you. Occasionally they do these weird exceptions to the rule,
like the jigsaw puzzle day date with the emojis.
PAUL Yes, yeah, the emoji watch.
RIDGEN Or, uh, Domino's pizza deal.
PAUL They've got just enough whimsy.
RIDGEN Is it whimsy? Is it, like, it's not a cohesive weirdness. That's the thing. You look at Hermes and you're like,
oh, all of the fun that you're having is the same sort of fun. This is like once every 10 years,
they make a befuddling decision that doesn't seem super impactful on their strategy. So,
I guess it was fine. Yup.
Tudor with Tiger Woods as the spokesperson. Why would you blow Tiger Woods on Tudor?
There's just occasionally these very odd, like, how did this make it out the door things
about Rolex?
And I don't really have an answer for how that happens.
Yep.
Sometimes I think it works really well.
I don't know sales numbers, nobody does, but the relaunch of the Milgauss.
Awesome.
Great decision.
Yeah, totally.
It's also funny that the way that they do product naming, man, the Milgauss used to basically
be a Submariner and when they relaunched it, it was basically an Explorer.
The only thing it has in common is the name and the fact that it can go up to a thousand
gauss.
Similar to the Explorer II, completely new watch different than the Explorer.
The GMT Master 2, basically a GMT Master exactly.
What does 2 mean when they release a sequel to a watch?
How come the Deepsea Sea-Dweller is both a Deepsea and a Sea-Dweller?
Their product naming is confusing. Yes.
Alright, we touched on smartwatches a little bit. Their product naming is confusing. Yes. All right.
We touched on smartwatches a little bit.
It's worth a minute of analysis here.
The Apple Watch comes out in 2014.
Fascinatingly, and I'm not sure if this is counterintuitive or not, I don't remember
2014 thinking about the watch industry because I didn't, but it was the best thing to ever
happen to Rolex, Audemars Piguet, Patek, et cetera.
A huge amount of awareness raised for the category.
Oh, now I wear a thing on my wrist.
Oh, I spent hundreds of dollars on the thing.
Would I be open to spending thousands of dollars on the thing?
Huh, I never even thought about that before.
I've had a smartphone for a long time,
and so I haven't been wearing anything on my wrist.
Yeah, sure, maybe.
Oh, other people I look up to are doing that. Okay yeah I guess I'm potentially into
going up one level even from a smartwatch. I mean it was this very
strange progression that definitely helped them. However it destroyed low-end
luxury. Long Jean Tissot, Tag Heuer, anybody that was making a quote-unquote luxury
mechanical watch between $500 and $1,000, why?
Toast.
Complete toast. It doesn't signal anything. I spent the same amount of money on this obsolete
thing that I could have spent on an Apple watch. Why? Are you stupid?
It's funny. There's a great New York Times piece before the Apple Watch that quotes a
source at Apple as saying that Johnny Ive was bragging around the company about how
the forthcoming watch from Apple was going to destroy the Swiss watch industry.
Really?
Well, I guess the addition, they really did think they were playing here.
Right.
Well, it's hilarious because he was both 100% spot on and 100% wrong.
He was spot on that, like you were saying, this sort of lower fat end of the market in
the Swiss industry to the extent it even existed after the quartz crisis.
This was the total final nail in the coffin.
But for the tie end, like, apple Apple Watch edition, you know, gold Apple
Watch, get out of here. Right. Yeah, it's crazy. The Apple Watch, it's weird how they managed to
decimate the low end, but no one took the edition seriously. The Apple Watch addressed a completely
new market. So high end watch people weren't going to buy an Apple Watch period. But for all the new people who were willing to buy an Apple
watch, there was no reason to buy a $10,000 watch.
Yep.
And for a small subset of those people who bought Apple watches,
it then became the gateway into the high-end mechanical watch
industry.
And again, because of the way the market works,
it doesn't matter that that's a very small number of people.
Those very small number of people
are spending a lot of money.
Yep, that's exactly right.
The other thing that it destroyed
is the fashion watch industry.
We didn't touch on it this episode,
just because it was one more story that we couldn't fit in,
but the whole swatch-
Swatch group is an amazing story, yeah.
Fossil, who else?
Guess.
I mean, in the 90s, these quartz watches
suddenly made $25 watch as possible.
And like that market went entirely away with the Apple watch.
The fossil watch stock went down 99% since the Apple watch came out.
Yeah, that product category doesn't exist anymore.
You know, it would be amazing and will never happen.
You know how car manufacturers, except for Tesla, would be amazing and will never happen. You know how Car manufacturers except for Tesla have carplay and Android auto. Yeah, there needs to be Apple watch play for high-end
Swiss mechanical watches
Never gonna happen, of course, but I would love that. I don't even understand what you mean by that
Where Rolex to get the fitness tracking? Oh
Oh, that's funny.
The question is, is there someone at Rolex who's working on this?
Do they treat it the same way they treat quartz, or do they feel entirely safe?
Is there a research lab somewhere that's trying to figure out what a Rolex smartwatch looks
like?
I'm sure there is, and they're never going to release it unless they absolutely have
to.
No, those people must be pariahs around the building. You know, it brings up this interesting, talking about smartwatches kind of makes me remember
this moment that we didn't talk about was when the smartphone came out and really when
cell phones came.
So think like the popularization of cell phones 2002-ish, 2003-ish and certainly by 2010 when smartphones were popular, that was
the moment you didn't need a watch anymore.
Yeah.
But in the very recent history, pre-2005, you needed a watch.
Everybody needed a watch.
And now it's just a thing you don't need.
There's no more functioning alibi for this category.
Everybody needs a car.
Yeah, you can go spend a lot of money and buy a 911,
but you have the functioning alibi of,
I needed a car, and I wanted a car I liked driving.
Or like a handbag.
Tell that to your spouse.
Look, I needed this because I need a purse.
I got to carry stuff with me.
Yeah.
Nobody for any reason needs a watch.
It has no functioning alibi anymore.
And so it is a pure display of, I feel like a better version of me when I wear this.
And that's the only reason why I'm owning this thing.
And like, oh, I love the gears.
And like, and I do, truly.
Like the engineering is so unbelievable to me,
but it's a much weaker, thinner alibi
than these other categories.
but it's a much weaker, thinner alibi than these other categories. Which probably also is no accident that it coincides with its real takeoff as a luxury item.
Yeah. Okay. So in the vein of a functioning alibi, here's a question I have for you.
Why did this become the status symbol associated with success?
This 200 geared steel thing that I wear on my wrist.
Like why not something else? What was it about this object?
Easy answer. Obvious.
It was for basically the entirety of the 20th century the only acceptable form of male jewelry.
Mmm.
Not to say that the women's watch market wasn't
all so big and important, it was, but it kind of also bled into the jewelry market.
In the man's world, this is men's jewelry.
Yeah, you could wear your wedding ring and your watch.
It was the only broadly socially acceptable form of jewelry for men.
Hmm, that's interesting. And for a long time it was, well, you need to have one.
Yeah, there's an alibi. There's a functioning alibi.
But there's not for jewelry,
for the practical man who doesn't need jewelry.
So I was a little bit setting you up.
So then the follow-up question is,
can a status symbol stay a status symbol even after you get
a hundred years away from the last time it had utility.
30 to 40 years is one thing. I remember my parent. I remember my grandparent. But what
about five generations after anyone really legitimately believes that the utility of
a watch is justified?
Right. Is there a risk that this becomes a version of the home telephone or something
like that at some point? Or the fax machine?
Or of a... I don't think pieces of technology.
Yeah, maybe that's a bad analogy.
I'm trying to think of something else that had utility then became a status symbol. Then
we got so far away from its utility that it just failed
to be a credible thing that people decided to use for their status anymore.
It just became too thin of an alibi.
Well maybe to my previous answer, maybe over time these just become bracelets and jewelry.
Hmm.
Yep.
I could see that.
I don't know.
I don't know the real answer to this, but I'm trying to think of other... I don't think it's happening anytime soon though. Yep. I could see that. I don't know. I don't know the real answer to this, but I'm trying to think of other-
I don't think it's happening anytime soon though.
Right. All right. I've got just two more. One, we talked a lot about slow iterations and don't change the line too much.
The real answer here is that it helps your customers feel smart.
There is great value in the fact that when I look down at my wrist and you look down at yours right now, the thing that they're selling today is pretty much the same thing.
And because of that, it means I made a good decision 20 years ago when I bought this.
And of course I didn't buy this one and you didn't buy that one.
You feel really dumb if you bought a turnigraph.
Yes.
And you feel really dumb if you bought the iPhone 3G and then two years later, the iPhone 5S is out and
you're like, whoa, that was a dumb decision to buy that product or at least that now I
own something that's not valuable.
It helps Rolex's long-term value to help their customers feel like they made a good decision
when they bought the product.
Yep.
So then the last one, have you ever heard the phrase former Rolex employee?
No, I'm sure that's by design.
Yeah, I only did once in the research.
You start working at Rolex and you stay there.
And it's a loyalty thing, but it's also an incentives thing.
I think they pay very well, great benefits, great perks.
You're at the best company in the industry.
This works really well for their secrecy.
And they're actually doing cutting-edge stuff. It's not like you're just sitting there, you know, cranking the machine every day.
That's right. It's absolutely right. Although, I mean, I'm sure a lot of people are sitting there doing the, you know, final finishing of their 10,000th Submariner they've done final finishing on.
Oh, yeah. But it's constantly changing, the parts that are going into it, how it's doneiner they've done final finishing on. Oh, yeah.
But it's constantly changing,
the parts that are going into it,
how it's done, you know, all of it.
Yeah, yeah, that's true.
All right, quintessence, time to land the plane.
Ah, land the plane.
I had this blank, I often have this blank going in
because I feel like we sort of arrived there
throughout the episode.
Mine is Rolex is positioned at the perfect point on the curve of price and quantity.
They are the most optimally positioned supply demand curve company I think we've ever covered.
Hmm, that's interesting.
The curve being supply and demand,
I was thinking of the curve of units and price,
but I guess that's sort of the same thing
as supply and demand.
Yeah, I think it's sort of the same thing.
Yeah, that is certainly how you get 30% market share
by revenue.
That's certainly how you produce $10 billion a year
making watches.
That makes total sense.
And how you have a wait list years and years long
for most of your models while also making over a million
units a year.
Yep.
They make so many people think they are buying something
very special.
And they are.
And they are.
And that's why I have great admiration for this company.
We've thrown a lot of missives here and there,
but we should just say this is is an unbelievable fantastic company that makes a
Remarkable product and the strategy and execution by which they've executed that is best in the world ever
I have one more addendum of Hendix that I did write down ahead of time to my quintessence that I will say before I
Hand the floor over to you, which is um, there's no way to know for sure. Of course, he's been dead a long time
So it could be way off base But as best as I can tell to you, which is, there's no way to know for sure, of course. He's been dead a long time.
So it could be way off base. But as best as I can tell, Hans Wilsdorf seems like he was
a really great dude. And that's not always the case of protagonists that we cover or
founders that we cover here on Acquired. Like, I mean, sometimes we cover actual Nazis. But
I could be wrong. Maybe he was a big jerk and that's just been lost to history because there's not that much out there. But he
seems like he was a genuinely good person. I get the sense, really loved and
was devoted to both of his wives and then devoted himself to the company and
the legacy even though he never had children. And then putting the foundation
together obviously was in very large part motivated by the long-term legacy
of the company. But also like this foundation gives away 300 million Swiss francs a year, a huge portion of it
just directly giving money to people in need in Geneva in their hometown.
Like that's amazing.
Yeah.
He also made a star out of this secretary in London, Mercedes Kletz in 1927.
Like he seems like a genuinely really good dude.
It's pretty cool.
People ask us every now and then, do you have to be a certain type of person to found a
company like this?
Still yes.
Well, I think you have to be crazy.
But sometimes people ask, do you have to be ruthless or do you have to be a bad person
or whatever?
And I think it's just on this dimension, it's just a microcosm of the world.
Some people are good, some people are not good.
Well, you just have to be extremely something.
And that extremely something has to fit well
with your product and your market and your timing.
Yes.
But that something is variable.
Yep.
All right.
I've got a quintessence, and then I've
got a fun notion to leave you with.
I know it's blasphemous to put things after a quintessence,
but.
Hey, I did it, you can do it.
My quintessence is that calling this the high end
of the watch industry or the middle end of the watch
industry or whatever is just wrong.
Mechanical watches are an industry today
that serves an entirely different job to be done
than they ever served in the past.
And this is a new industry that has nothing to do
with telling the time and is just goofy to compare
to other quote unquote parts of the watch industry,
like the smartwatch, the quartz watch, the fashion watch.
They look the same, so we call them watches.
Yeah, they both occupy risk real estate.
Right, but we should define markets by the actual job to be done for customers and it is so so so incredible
They're coming out of the quartz crisis
This company found a completely new job to be done for their product and had kind of positioned themselves
they're the previous two decades with the
Professional watches the tool watches and the advertising.
Yeah.
Could not agree more.
So here's the thing to leave you with Rolex.
Interestingly is the watch you want when you start getting into watches,
but then it's also the watch you end up at after you study the whole industry.
Yes.
Yes.
You go through these exotic steps along the way on your journey with more
artistry, more complications.
Certainly you'll find more expensive price points, but when it comes down to the most exquisite engineering quality serviceability for a mechanical watch that is precise, waterproof and self-winding.
Amazingly, the brand with mass appeal that all the newbies want that sells a million a year is also the one of
the highest quality.
Yep.
A different version of this that I read somewhere, I don't remember where in the research was
Rolex is a company that the more you study it, the more you like it.
Yes.
I didn't want to record this episode because it meant I was going to stop researching.
I mean, truly, like I've loved just bathing myself in this industry and this company and
their products.
Well boy Ben, do I have good news for you because if you decide to go down the watch
rabbit hole, it is deep out there.
The watch product blogs and Houdini and everything beyond it.
Oh, I also came to this realization.
When you describe this curve, like when you start it's Rolex and when you finish it's
Rolex and it's a company that owns this category and all that, the comp is Apple.
If you go to Rolex's website and you click any watch, it looks just like an Apple product page.
The named components inside the proprietary Parachrom hairspring, akin to a neural engine or a liquid retina display.
I mean, their YouTube channel looks exactly like Apple's high gloss promotional videos, products whizzing through space, plunging into water. The product
is both mass produced and high margin. There's a big brand premium, but it's also the highest
quality engineering in the industry. Their financials look so good because they found the
spot on the curve that lets them multiply two large numbers together, the large number of units
and dollars per unit.
You know, billionaires have iPhones, people buying their first smartphone have iPhones.
And unlike handbag or car categories, the phone and smartwatch do have a single company
that defines it, Apple.
Yep.
Rolex and Apple are mirror image companies in a lot of ways.
Totally.
Well, I guess we got to do Apple now.
I guess so.
That is not going to be one episode.
No.
And in retrospect, this one shouldn't have been either.
I don't know where we would have broken it up though is the thing.
Yeah.
Eh, pre-course crisis post, but here we are.
Thank you listeners.
Yeah.
Thanks listeners.
This was a blast. It really was.
David, I have one piece of trivia for you.
Oh, before carve-outs?
Yes.
Can it top my Panerai trivia though?
That was pretty good.
I'm pretty proud of that one.
Rolex has gotten so sophisticated in its manufacturing
that they actually use ultraviolet lithography in making their watches.
Hell yeah.
It's not an etching silicon because God forbid they should ever get anywhere near a semiconductor.
It is etching a very specialized and precise type of gear that in the Rolex Daytona ensures
the teeth are perfectly meshed together. So when you start your chronograph,
there's no jumping around, there's no accidental tick back.
It just starts exactly right.
Oh, that's amazing.
I actually have one more piece of trivia for you too.
Oh, light on me.
David, what watch company holds the record today
for the watch that's gone the deepest in the ocean? This has got to be a trick question, right? Like, I mean, of course, Rolex, it went down the...
But I'm assuming no.
Omega. But to Rolex's marketing ability, guess what watch everyone thinks it is.
Right. Wait, how did Omega go deeper? I thought Rolex went down the trench. So as you know, the Rolex Deep Sea Challenge happened in 2012.
And in 2019, the Omega Seamaster Planet Ocean Ultra Deep Professional went 20 meters deeper.
What did they do?
Like drill a hole in the ground at the bottom of the trench?
I think they found a deeper part of the trench or something.
Okay.
This is just this is the most classic,
classic Omega versus Rolex thing in the world.
If you technically look at something,
it doesn't actually sit at the top,
but for all intents and purposes, they do.
Amazing.
Yeah.
All right, carve outs.
Carve outs.
I just have one between the incredible amount of research
for this episode and my entire
family of ladies all being very, very sick with the flu over the last week plus.
I have literally had zero time for anything else in my life.
So I have a carve out that I don't think I've ever made a carve out before, but maybe impacts
my life more than like anything else.
And I owe an extreme debt of gratitude too, for entertaining my very, very sick three-year-old
over the last week, which is bluey.
So thank you so much, Jo Brum and the Australian Broadcasting Company for creating the most
wonderful children's cartoon ever that my three-year-old and millions and millions and millions of others out in the
world will sit and watch and I can watch with her and will not make me want to rip my eyeballs out.
Great. My 15-month-old will be into that soon enough and I am sure I'll take your recommendation.
Oh, dude, it's so good. It's so good. Oh, great.
There is not even a comparison. It is the greatest children's content ever created.
All right. Soon. You greatest children's content ever created. Hmm
All right soon. You're in for a real treat
Great. I have two
one is a
On the podcast armchair expert David and I went and joined Dax and Monica a couple weeks ago to
Review the business of the NFL was very fun to do a
Update to our episode and to do it with tax Monica who are just great.
My second one is an app called eleven reader by eleven labs.
I mean i'm sure does more but the thing that i use it for which is totally amazing is you either paste a link or the killer use case for me you paste in a upload a pdf
or the killer use case for me, you paste in a, you upload a PDF and in a very convincing AI voice that sounds remarkably human, it will read you something that was text. I'm the person 15 years
ago who was highlighting emails, right clicking and using Apple's built-in speech thing on laptops
to read it to me because I'm so much better at processing information audibly than
visually. For this episode, I had so many PDFs to read as a part of my research that were not audiobooks, that were not podcasts. I mean, I willed myself to read two physical books because
this freaking Rolex is a whole pile of coffee table books is how people have published these.
There's no Kindles or anything available. 11 Reader totally saved my butt by letting me listen
to a large amount of what I needed to research.
So the app is just awesome if you like turning text
into a very compelling human narrated voice.
Nice.
I would say I have to give it a try,
but fortunately I think this is a great strength
I've acquired is-
You have the opposite.
We have the opposite research consumption styles.
I need physical hard copies in front of me with a pencil that I am writing on.
And I'm best on a 10-mile run listening to something and stopping to take notes along
the way.
Love it.
Love it.
All right.
Well, with that, listeners, thank you so much to our partners this season, JPMorgan Payments,
ServiceNow, Fundrise, and Huntress.
You can click the link in the show notes to learn more.
Special thank you to all the Rolex aficionados,
buyers, dealers, and fans that we spoke with.
A few in particular that we wanna thank on air
are Mark Bridge, the founder and CEO of At Present,
a jewelry marketplace, and good friend of David and mine.
Ben Clymer, the founder and CEO of Hodenki,
who let me talk his ear off and answer a zillion questions over text. Thank you so much, Ben.
Hodenki rocks. Joe Thompson, executive editor of Hodenki, legendary watch journalist. I
even have in my inbox right now, Joe sending me more follow-up information that I managed
to see just in time to get the right stats
into the episode. So Joe, you rock. Thank you so much.
Oh, that's amazing. Thank you as well. Big thank you to James Dowling, co-author of The
Best of Time, which is, I think probably, you know, we went through all the big coffee
table books on Rolex and probably the best one out there. Regardless, really, really great.
I thought the Rolex story was good too, heel by heel.
Yeah, that's a good one.
James was very generous with his time,
especially because he was right in the middle of crunch
for his deadline for his next Rolex book,
The Rolex Legacy, coming out in October.
So thank you, James.
And also thank you to Sleepwell Capital on Twitter, who like
a year ago DM'd us and was like, you guys got to do Rolex. And then pointed us to a
whole bunch of resources out there on the internet. It was very, very helpful.
And thank you to the over 100 people who have either in Slack or in email told us to do
Rolex over the years. This is probably our most requested episode.
Yeah, there are going to be at least 100 of you
that listen to this.
Yes.
To Morgan Stanley and Lux Consult
for providing the industry research report
was very helpful.
And always to Arvind Navaratnam at Worley Partners
for his fantastic write-up on the company
that we will link to from the show notes.
If you like this episode, go check out LVMH,
Hermes, or Porsche by searching in any podcast
player.
Listen to ACQ2 because we won't have another episode for another month.
So enjoy our conversation with Guillermo Rauch, the founder and CEO of Vercell in the meantime,
and come join the Slack, acquired.fm slash Slack.
Hang out with all the other smart, kind members of the acquired community, and you can sign up for email updates to make sure you don't miss corrections or trivia
in the future acquired.fm slash email.
With that listeners, we'll see you next time.
We'll see you next time.
Who got the truth?
Is it you?
Is it you?
Is it you?
Who got the truth now?
Huh. Who is it you who got the truth now?