Bose' demographic is more well-off people who truly, genuinely THINK they're going to be getting the best.
I think you're completely right GranteedEV.
I would caution against believing that pure "objectivism" exists in audio or consumerism.
At risk of having my Audioholics membership card revoked - I don't believe in pure objectivism when it comes to sound. Sure, we appreciate it in electro-mechanical measurements.
And yes, companies should be held to task for the number they publish - that's why destinations like Audioholics are valued.
I happen to work in marketing for a wireless automotive (telematics) engineering firm – not consumer/audio or home theater related, we’re in the automotive OEM space.
But the number one truism about the consumer is that people don’t buy for quality, value and all those things they tell themselves they buy:
People buy their identity.
Over and over and over and over again – every dollar you spend is simply to reinforce who you think you are and who you think you want to be.
In hi-fi your ears are easily deceived. In fact – your ears are your identity’s b!tch.
I'm a huge fan of an old-school hi-fi writer named Tom Nousaine. I'm lucky to have worked with one of his peers Ian Masters who has written extensively on the topic of A/B/X testing the so-called Audiophiles.
Many of the results are comical and a bit scary considering how easily fooled many so-called qualified hi-fi writers are.
Nousaine conducted tests using strict A/B/X guidelines where he took two equal systems but on one did everything you're not supposed to do - including things like … wrapping odd-length speaker wire around fluorescent bulbs, filing down coat-hangers to substitute RCA-cables - none of the panel of pro Audiophile reviewers could ever tell the difference between the systems with any reliability.
He embarrassed noted hi-fi reviewers by swapping out an expensive luxury amp-array (with separate power-supplies) with a $200 Pioneer integrated amp. The panel gave less than a 70% +/- in discerning any difference.
It goes on... he did a 'sighted' variant of an A/B test to have hi-fi writers write about what they heard (posing as a peer review of two ‘new’ amps)
Apparently the guy who first invented Carver - amps was in attendance - Mr. Carver himself was also fooled, his own amps were used in this particular test.
Mr. Nousaine pretended to want this panel (that included Mr. Carver) to write the differences in timbre/tonal qualities between these two amps.
Amp 1: Got adjectives pertaining to warmth.
Amp 2: Primarily received adjectives pertaining to cold.
Unbeknownst to the audience they were the same amp, both visible to the audience – with one superficial difference. Mr. Nousiane had replaced the power diode on Amp 1 with a red diode, Amp 2 - you guessed it... got a blue diode.
I'd love to find this documented somewhere. I believe I still have an old scan of some old magazine that published this story - the predecessor to Sound and Vision. I got them from Ian a long time ago.