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A Practical Guide to Particle Counting for Drinking Water Treatment - Chapter 23 pot

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Particle Counting from a Market Perspective After evaluating all the available systems and approaches to particle counting, it should be apparent that the “perfect” system does not exist

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Particle Counting from a Market

Perspective

After evaluating all the available systems and approaches to particle counting,

it should be apparent that the “perfect” system does not exist, and never will There

is never any way to be sure that one will make the “right” choice, as experience is

the best teacher, but experience is only acquired well after the initial selection

It is helpful to examine the manufacturer’s perspective when evaluating particle

counter systems Certainly there are any number of reasons behind the various ways

each company approaches the market, which would be impossible to even attempt

to explain However, human nature and the laws of economics being what they are,

a few broad generalizations are possible It is helpful to understand some of the

dynamics involved in the current business climate, especially for those who have

spent careers in the public sector, and have not worked in private business

The municipal market is quite unlike the industrial markets in which most of

the particle counting companies have been involved The long, drawn-out

compet-itive bid process is much slower and more tedious than most industrial contracts

While all human endeavors involve some degree of politics, municipal contracts

involve politics with a capital “P,” that is, on the governmental level Decisions are

often made with no regard for technical merit by bureaucrats who are only concerned

with costs and budgets New plants can take several years to complete from the time

of initial specification, and the manufacturers must invest time and resources in these

projects over several years, often to receive no return Industrial projects are usually

accomplished in a much shorter time span, with less political involvement, and the

plant personnel are generally more technically adept The highly competitive nature

of private business places a premium on problem solving and process improvement,

and once the importance of a particular technology is ascertained, it does not take

long to implement

As municipalities are noncompetitive, there is less urgency to improve Water

quality is quite good in most places, and while lowering the cost of production a

few percent would benefit the taxpayer or consumer, it is not a pressing concern

There is no great monetary incentive for investing in a particle counting system

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202 A PRACTICAL GUIDE TO PARTICLE COUNTING

Market forces are still the driving factor behind the advances in particle counting

technology, as in most technological development Hiac Royco produced a complex

and expensive particle counter in the early going, while Met One developed a simpler

and lower-cost unit to compete with it in the hydraulics market This cheaper, simpler

approach had limited appeal in the hydraulics market, but was ideally suited for the

less-sophisticated and more-price-driven municipal market As Met One built up a

substantial share of the drinking water market against the more expensive Hiac

Royco product line, it had little incentive to improve its equipment This allowed

PMS and Chemtrac an opening into the market with systems designed to address

some of the shortcomings of the existing equipment It also allowed Hach to recover

from its initial entry with Hiac Royco equipment and try an improved attempt with

help from PMS This has in turn forced Met One to improve its offering, and basically

forced Hiac Royco and PMS out of direct involvement in the water treatment market

They have strongholds in other markets, but cannot compete at the price levels that

have resulted from this competitive situation

The importance of competition in this area cannot be overstated From the early

1990s Met One has been ideally situated in terms of staff and resources to lead the

way in developing particle counting technology for the drinking water industry, but

has only done so when forced by competitive realities Chemtrac introduced several

innovations, developed by a team of experienced engineers who had been formerly

with Met One Some were hired on a contract basis, and others left after the product

was completed, so that none of the development team is still in place As a result,

little change can be expected from Chemtrac in the future

It would appear that future leadership of the particle counting market will be

decided between Met One/Hach and Art Instruments/US Filter Both have the market

presence and technical expertise necessary Chemtrac is a smaller firm that can

comfortably exist on a smaller market share while keeping the bigger firms in line

on pricing IBR will continue to sell to the old Hiac Royco customer base, but is

not likely to pose a bigger threat to the others

But, as the economic skeptics like to say, in the long run, we will all be dead

That and taxes are what we can be assured of There is no way to know what the

future holds for particle counting in drinking water treatment Enough questions and

problems still exist to allow for the possibility of a truly innovative entry that could

revolutionize the industry Unless, of course, firm regulations are established, which

will likely end any new innovation in the industry Competitive markets are what

drive innovation, as should be obvious from observing the growth in that most

unregulated of markets, the computer industry

Regulations provide the security of a fixed standard of measure Once in place,

the goal becomes to meet them with the smallest amount of cost, whether in terms

of price or effort People are motivated by incentives, and will follow the path of

least resistance to achieve them When the incentive path is changed from continual

improvement to maintenance of a fixed standard, a whole new set of attitudes will

be formed The more positive and dynamic outlook produced by a climate of

innovation and improvement becomes a negative and static one of trying not to fail

to meet the fixed standard Failure is punished more than success is rewarded, so

the incentive comes to be the avoidance of failure, or even the appearance of failure,

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PARTICLE COUNTING FROM A MARKET PERSPECTIVE 203

more than striving for success This attitude is prevalent in the water treatment

industry, because of the predominance of regulations It explains much of the

hes-itancy about selecting a particle counting system, because no one wants to make a

“bad” choice It is safer to defend a choice because the neighboring plants have the

same equipment, or the company has been around longer, than to defend it by virtue

of its innovative features and performance

This attitude has become widely prevalent in private business as well, in large

part due to the abundance of regulation in all spheres of life Fear of failure

super-sedes reward for success, and little incentive is given for those willing to risk failure

Human nature has always been such that outside people, be they competitors or

consultants, are always trusted more than one’s own employees, no matter how well

they have performed in the past That “prophet is never accepted in his own town”

is a well known and established truth This goes a long way toward explaining why

outside competition drives improvement It is never a safe bet to assume the biggest

will always be the best, and it will usually be the newest entry into the market that

will push the older established firms to improve Little consideration is given to

customer requests for changes to products until the pinch is felt in the pocketbook

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