Within the IT sector, where I work, we do have a range of different architecture professions, it be technical architect, solution architect, integration architect, enterprise architect, depending on where you fit within the organization or a project you may have one or more of these roles….
Some of these guys are strongly coupled to vendors like Microsoft, Oracle, Fiorino, Software AG, Tibco or others, but where the genuine value comes in is when the architectural profession is made really vendor independent so we can go in and provide services where the customer’s goals and needs are prioritized and received main focus, we can only do that when we have no firm connections to any of these companies.
As I see it… This is professions that are just 100% non-existent within the audio industry at all. All kinds of so called architects or whatever you call them, have an agenda in a way that they want to sell you speakers, room treatments, room correction systems or whatever the heck the product is, so when these experts have “their own” products to provide resolution to your issues, part of the credibility is getting lost if you ask me. They're not there to really help you but to sell their stuff
The architectural business area that’s not covered within the consumer audio industry as I see it, and maybe here lies an opportunity for Audioholics, not to provide the services but to provide really high value architectural advice so that consumers may do the best choices. You cannot do this fully Gene as you will have to visit each and every member repeatedly to do such a thing fully…… but here’s a need that is not covered.
(Probably this is not the case in the pro audi area, though.....)
This requires an incredibly amount of hard work, and there's no easy way out here.......
Any thoughts gentlemen