My mother purchased a Panasonic Microwave brand new in 1989 and I still use it!! Works perfectly!
@avg_joe1174 ай бұрын
very reliable product
@Warmeister-zr2tg4 ай бұрын
thats the problem, it still works. lol
@midhunsmenonINDIAN4 ай бұрын
@@Warmeister-zr2tg If that was the case many people would have bought it.
@manichaean18883 ай бұрын
Microwaves don't break that often. Mine, from Daewoo is well over 15 years in everyday use.
@jaishree7012 ай бұрын
Impossible
@erbol001111 ай бұрын
Toshiba and Panasonic are clear examples of what happens when executives care more about power and money instead of company. They lost technological competition
@BloodRider191411 ай бұрын
Lol, they don't even care about that. Money and power are great things to care about if they lead to results.
@neloxcampo814011 ай бұрын
No, this is what happens when executives and shareholders treat their work as day jobs. work is something you build over a lifetime or your legacy job is your mundane 9-5 day job complacency is what killed Panasonic
@brandonwiles-n8t11 ай бұрын
Toshiba T1100 was the world's first mass marketed laptop. Lol. Even in 2010 they had a decent market, but now they are completely gone from the consumer electronics scene. It's so strange how such an old, strong company can fall.
@theuncalled_6411 ай бұрын
@@brandonwiles-n8tand its even worse when you remember that toshiba doesnt exist in the comouter scene now they belong to the chinese
@brandonwiles-n8t11 ай бұрын
@@theuncalled_64 lol didn't know that
@ulquiorraschiffer195611 ай бұрын
Sad to see this happening to a great quality company. Their products never let me down.
@LogicallyAnswered11 ай бұрын
Same
@tangbesitangbesi700911 ай бұрын
I couldn't agree more
@lunascomments302411 ай бұрын
my parent's would not dare to buy kitchen appliances unless it is from panasonic.
@HelipOfficial10 ай бұрын
Same mate. Now were flooded with cheap chinese garbage
@Lu-MingPan-b5w10 ай бұрын
@@HelipOfficial Does no one force you to buy it. And there are plenty of top-notch Chinese products out there.
@ykthang11 ай бұрын
For your information, Panasonic was once called NATIONAL before they changed the brand label to Panasonic.
@MithunOnTheNet11 ай бұрын
Yeah, he left out so many crucial pieces of information. Panasonic was created much later, as an audio sub-brand. National is what made Matsushita the largest electronics company.
@neloxcampo814011 ай бұрын
was browsing through the comments for this; almost all Tech / Business videos who covered Panasonic seem to miss this bigtime!
@senankamalakanan512810 ай бұрын
National was number 1 in Malaysia 70s and 80s and slowly changed to Panasonic in 90s
@lucasrem7 ай бұрын
ykthang Matsushita is the company, NATIONAL was just a brand they bought, they did make household electronics in 1932. Technics you know, theirs too ! WEIRDO GUY, FRAUD BITCOINS FREAKS ! need indie here ?
@johnabrahamabraham36443 ай бұрын
In Asia National /Panasonic brand in 70,80 In US it was Panasonic ' But I give big salute to their Hi Fi brand Technics
@MrBendybruce11 ай бұрын
I still own One of their final generation plasma TV's. They have always made quality products, but sadly that alone is not enough to ensure a successful business model.
@LogicallyAnswered11 ай бұрын
Yep, a good product requires even better marketing!
@MrBendybruce11 ай бұрын
@@LogicallyAnswered I was always confused by so many people buying lower quality Samsung lcds, instead of the demonstrably better Panasonic plasmas but the reality is most people are not home theater enthusiasts, they just want the best price, and Panasonic has never been competitive with its pricing.
@manny101311 ай бұрын
@@MrBendybruceneither have apple and they still do well. Marketing may not be the only factor but its a major factor in their downfall.
@MrBendybruce11 ай бұрын
@@manny1013 Yes but pricing is intrinsically connected to the perception of your product as a result of how it is marketed. That was really my point. Panasonic never really differentiated their product line in the minds of their potential customers enough to justify the higher prices, Even though the higher cost of manufacture for plasma tv's pretty much demanded it.
@edwinkm201611 ай бұрын
Had a pana plasma and burnin of subtitles. That and Impossible to support 4K (physical impossible afaik) killed plasma
@heron646211 ай бұрын
Some time ago I worked for Panasonic in Japan for more than a decade. I noted a lack of imagination and a feeling of complacency. It was also quite bureaucratic and top-down in spite of its claim to be led from the bottom. Non-Japanese like me were automatically placed at the bottom of the pyramid, but our ideas (including for corrections to glaring grammatical errors on their main website) were not welcomed. While I was there, the popular nickname for Matsushita, as it was then called, was Manéshita - 'copied.' Even then, in the eighties, supposedly at their peak, they struggled to come up with new ideas and told their researchers to produce a certain number of patents every year. I had a Panasonic bicycle, honeycomb disk stereo speakers, washing machine, and air conditioner. All extremely good.
@pokeoak11 ай бұрын
Just in August, I went to Japan, I saw all sorts of Panasonic factories and the Sony cameras were the best I ever saw. Over 100% chance of Bankruptcy is just astounding, how?! Stay great Panasonic!
@LogicallyAnswered11 ай бұрын
Really quite a shame 😔
@donjulioanejo11 ай бұрын
Sony makes extremely legit cameras (IMO top of the market now, beating out Canon through sheer variety of models). Panasonic, on the other hand.. Best you can say about them is "hey, they're cameras and they take pictures). They jumped on the mirrorless trend quite early. But where Sony just dumped billions into R&D to make amazing cameras and lenses.. Panasonic just sat there. Now, they're hopelessly behind. Meanwhile, Nikon, who had to scramble from even more behind (they were the last major maker to release mirorrles in 2018 and focused only on DSLRs up to that point), they came out swinging with amazing glass and massive hits like Z8 and likely hit in the Zf.
@pokeoak11 ай бұрын
@@donjulioanejo Yes, but Sony is only popular in Japan now after the US put a %100 tax on anything with microchips from Japan. Yet, if you go to Japan, you'll see their cameras are mind-blowing. Too bad they can't come to the US 😥
@donjulioanejo11 ай бұрын
@@pokeoakHm? US/Canada/EU get the same cameras they do in Japan. Nikon, Canon, Sony, etc have the same models, and they aren't really cheaper in Japan either at MSRP. For example, Nikon Z8 is about 600k yen in Japan, $3999 USD in US, and $5400 CAD in Canada. Let's be realistic. US is a humongous market. No company can afford to ignore it entirely.
@pokeoak11 ай бұрын
@@donjulioanejo Not really, the cameras are the same but the lenses are so much better in Japan. But you are right, who really can afford the U.S?
@DanG-xl5op11 ай бұрын
I immediately loved this video with his 2nd rule,"Good products don't sell themselves."
@LogicallyAnswered11 ай бұрын
Words of wisdom
@robertlindsay982611 ай бұрын
I thought toyota owned Panasonic?
@jimparr01Utube11 ай бұрын
I disagree with this mantra. It is B.S. Go take a look at a vibrant company like Tesla for example.
@tamwilfred10 ай бұрын
It depends on what market you wish to address, the size of your business, and what your product or service is. Most small businesses are based on their product and service which spreads by word of mouth.
@IceBlueLugia10 ай бұрын
@@jimparr01UtubeWdym? Tesla is a good product and has plenty of marketing backing it. It proves the mantra lol
@ondrejsedlak493511 ай бұрын
A former student of mine from my time in Japan was (and could still be) an engineer at Panasonic. I got an interesting insight into the company from our many conversations. To put it simply, they tried to play everything too safe, taking way too long in terms of releasing something to market (engaging in meeting after meeting after meeting for to finalise the most mundane of unimportant things) and failing to realise when they should change direction as opposed to stubbornly pressing on. One example was a multi-billion dollar plasma display factory, which started construction during the decline of plasma displays. The entire place was completed, ready for production and then immediately closed without producing even a single panel. They are still quite popular in Japan but their overseas market is definitely a foregone conclusion.
@exosproudmamabear55811 ай бұрын
Overbloated bureuacracy kills tech companies. Philips was same too and it sold every tech company it had and switched to the just appliances since turnover rate is slower in those pnes.
@TuNnL11 ай бұрын
Panasonic hung on too long to plasma. Sony made a tiny 22" OLED (Organic Light Emitting Diode) display model during the final plasma years, which you could buy for a ridiculous price. No one bought it, of course, but the OLED quality was so good, people would swear it equaled or exceeded that of the plasma. If only it could be bigger, customers said, they would pay extra for it. And that's exactly what Sony and LG spent millions in research, development and engineering on for a solid decade. Today, both companies have the honor of offering the best picture quality in world. An honor that once belonged to Panasonic, the last time they were relevant. I'm glad I bought one of the last 42" 1080p Panasonic plasmas for my Dad at Best Buy employee discount pricing, though. By the time I was ready for one of my own, they were unavailable in any retail store or even, an online reseller. I had to actually scroll through eBay for several months before I finally sourced one - from Canada. So worth it. 🇨🇦✈️📺
@ondrejsedlak493511 ай бұрын
@@TuNnL You bring up a good point about Sony. They are indeed innovators and the polar opposite to Panasonic. Sony will take risks on the wildest of ideas, get them to market and sometimes become a hit. If it fails, they are not afraid to can it. Having said that, I'm still dark towards them for shutting down the PSP. I always wondered how a Japanese company can be so un-Japanese in their behaviour.
@bthemedia11 ай бұрын
Can’t stay ahead of the competition if constantly lagging with wait-and-see approach… they missed the boat.
@OldMarius-gn5kk11 ай бұрын
@@ondrejsedlak4935 classic greed and corruption
@eskay201211 ай бұрын
Panasonic is smart to go ‘right sized’ in adjusting to change of time. I still uses their refrigerators, air conditions & fans. I will buy their products without hesitation.
@yudogcome59018 ай бұрын
In fact, many of their products are no longer produced by themselves, but are only OEM products.
@Lego_Collector_193211 ай бұрын
Panasonic was a great company, it is sad its gone!
@LogicallyAnswered11 ай бұрын
😔
@Lego_Collector_193211 ай бұрын
@@LogicallyAnswered I know right!
@devontektsellers11 ай бұрын
It's not gone they're just slow to change since they're a lithium battery company for Tesla at this point
@jaseaquino11 ай бұрын
They're now like Philips, where they disappear on AV equipment and focus most on kitchen and personal care appliances.
@Lego_Collector_193211 ай бұрын
@@devontektsellers They are still around but they are basically forgotten!
@tellmemoreplease923111 ай бұрын
The company is now run by bean counters (people with MBAs). Konosuke Matsushita was more of an engineer.
@a.a.p32543 ай бұрын
Sounds just like Boeing! It’s called GREED!
@erwinmanla23639 ай бұрын
I'm already 32 years working in a marketing firm that sold appliances and motorcycles and we are still selling Panasonic products until now.
@JericoJopio11 ай бұрын
Honestly, despite the fact that Panasonic had lost its major stakes in the communications sector, it still remains a great brand in terms of producing batteries for different industries and smart home innovations. We used to have a Panasonic TV set many years ago, and the TV still worked after all these years. 😊
@benjaminfranklin32910 ай бұрын
And they produce probably the best batteries for power tools that out last their competitors by several years.
@barebarekun1619 ай бұрын
They quickly losing grounds in my country where it used to have almost a monopoly. Their dry batteries suddenly became way overpriced for what it is compared to new competing brands from China.
@lzh49503 ай бұрын
Panasonic also has a duopoly with Thales for aircraft in-flight entertainment systems
@gnzllr11 ай бұрын
It is sad to see that quality is not always the key to success. I associate Panasonic with quality and will continue to buy their products.
@johniii814711 ай бұрын
All the major Japanese companies fell. It's largely due to Japanese culture they couldn't keep up with innovation in as the real thing was software. Too rigid of a culture as things evolved. Japan became to expensive for their manufactuating.
@johnfritz86758 ай бұрын
Sad to see. I worked for Panasonic in 79-80 before moving on. It was a good company I learned a lot there. Their product quality was good and constantly improving. Good luck Panasonic.
@steventan255011 ай бұрын
Sad to see Panasonic going down. I only use Panasonic products; air conditioners, TV, video-recorder, refrigerator, water-heater, electric shaver, fans because they are good quality products that last a long time..
@bob456fk611 ай бұрын
This is very interesting. For many years I've relied on Panasonic for what, I consider, good quality. I hope they don't go out of business.
@OurLordandSaviorSigmar11 ай бұрын
I was surrounded by Panasonic products whilst growing up in the 90s and 2000s. From speakers, tv, radios, they lasted a long time. Sad they're about to go bust now.
@alice_agogo11 ай бұрын
we had a national stereo component from the early 80s (record/tape combo with 2 very large wooden speakers). I don't remember if it was just national or national panasonic. but we never had anything else panasonic since we were a sony household. our vhs player was philips. my first phone from 2001 was a panasonic though but it didn't work well. but we still have an electric fan from kdk bought in 1993 or early 94 that still works well! 3 decades on!
@tamwilfred10 ай бұрын
Like a lot of big companies or businesses, they end up dying if they don't adapt.
@michaelquinones-lx6ks9 ай бұрын
So much for "Too Big to Fail"
@tamwilfred9 ай бұрын
@@michaelquinones-lx6ks Panasonic is not included in the rule. "Too big to fail" is a phrase used to describe a company that's so entwined in the global economy that its failure would be catastrophic. If Panasonic went bankrupt then some other electronic company could pick up the slack; Sony, Samsung, ect.
@michaelquinones-lx6ks9 ай бұрын
@@tamwilfred Yes, possibly Samsung might even take over Panasonic if that should happen. And, Thank You for answering my reply.
@ThinkTwice222211 ай бұрын
Watching this on a Panasonic plasma TV... better than any UHD out now... I've tested
@Scuppun11 ай бұрын
Agreed. I have a 42 inch 7th Gen plasma, 14 years old and better than most lcd and led tvs today.
@RJARRRPCGP3 ай бұрын
@@Scuppun "LED TV" is just marketing speak for an LCD with LED backlights, since CCFLs stopped being used for LCD backlights.
@psikeyhackr691411 ай бұрын
Panasonic was my first full time job after I dropped out of college. I repaired consumer electronics and hi-fi when someone brought it in. I remember their starting the Technics brand. Electronics has changed VASTLY since the 70s. People who don't know a capacitor from a voltage regulator don't have a clue. To them it's just a box with switches, knobs and lights. And a Brand Name!
@7o7-zoz9711 ай бұрын
I bought a Technics direct-connect mini compo in the 80s. When the amp made a loud humming sound, i brought it to their tech support branch. They told me they can't fix that. It was under warranty. I got so mad i threw it in the bin outisde their office. So i never boought another Technics product do da.
@psikeyhackr691411 ай бұрын
@@7o7-zoz97 That does not make any sense. They should have at least given you another one.
@7o7-zoz9711 ай бұрын
@@psikeyhackr6914 I remember now why i got so mad. The first problem was months or weeks earlier and was the cassette deck; it had clicking noises that affected the amp and speaker output. I sent it in and after collecting it still had the problem. Hence when the amp had a problem, i figured either they are really incompetent or just didn't want to help.
@keno778 ай бұрын
The sad thing is that this has happened to almost every great electronic brands of the 70s and 80s Panasonic Sony Aiwa Akai Sanyo Sansui Sharp Kenwood Yamaha and many more, the competition keept them make better and better products. But as we all know, they all moved the production to China and nothing is made in Japan any longer and even when China is trying to keep some of the brands alive it's only a shadow of former glory.
@BoyKhongklai9 ай бұрын
Panasonic might not be very active in the TV business but they're still making great electric tools and audio components
@9243937511 ай бұрын
Panasonic is synonymous with quality, affordability, and durability. I feel skeptical about it failing since it doesn't frequently venture into new tech products. Despite this, it has performed well and established a reputable brand.
@toto0730813 ай бұрын
I ❤ panasonic :-) its vintage hifi audio component is amazing
@67daltonknox10 ай бұрын
From a flashgun in the '60s to my nose clippers, vacuum cleaner and microwaves now, I've always associated Panasonic with good value, reliable products. I'd be sorry to lose them.
@senankamalakanan512810 ай бұрын
Panasonic was National in many East Asian countries including Malaysia. 80s was their height and by Y2K they moved factories to Vietnam and now end cycle. My mom's rice cookers still working since 1982
@zJericho101z11 ай бұрын
I have been using the same panasonic wired earbuds for the last 7-8 years it boggles my mind that they are sill working perfectly after all that time. I allways try to grab panasonic products if they are available. Panasonic Allways have great design and build quality right next to Sony.
@traingp711 ай бұрын
I have a 50-inch 3D Panasonic from 2010 that is still going strong in my front room today. They also make one of the most expensive and best from reviews 4K blu ray players today, theDP- UB9000.
@abps994710 ай бұрын
Same here The Panasonic TV which I have been using to watch my cartoon and shows is still working Bought in 2004 now in 2023
@ykd00115 ай бұрын
My first smartphone in early 2015 was Panasonic Eluga I. It was such a quality product, the design was just so beautiful, it used to get hot but ran smoothly, camera was also excellent. Used it for almost 4 years, and never had a complaint. They closed their smartphone business few years ago, sad to see them leave one industry after another, they made excellent quality products.
@Tential111 ай бұрын
Sadly, Panasonic actually makes amazing products, with amazing looks. I always use Panasonic when available. They just don't advertise. I specifically use their head units for cars because it integrates the best, looks wise.
@tamwilfred10 ай бұрын
Do people still use head units now? I haven't kept up but its seems like modern cars have displays now and it's much harder to wire things up compared to cars I remember in the 90s and 2000s.
@tamwilfred10 ай бұрын
@@BB-xx3dv It's hard to say. What makes you believe it could be done? Once a company loses its reputation it would be hard to claw back market share. In the modern age, it seems like a winner-take-all. Giants in their prime don't seem to be as relevant as before: IBM, HP, Xerox, Kodac, ect
@adamknight508911 ай бұрын
It's a shame as their products are amazing, very high quality. They need to do something drastic though. Popularity is very important.
@17ipmots9 ай бұрын
Panasonic was my first employer in the 90s. Looking back I am so glad I left after 3 years. They worship their founder Matsushita, they over-respected their tradition and in my opinion, they failed to adapt their business models to modern day market. They still have good products beyond home electronics, they should be fine, but their future remains to be seen.
@VishalYadavSays9 ай бұрын
I hope Panasonic survives Has special place in my heart for this company
@MajorDrama111 ай бұрын
I miss Panasonic - One of the great defining Japanese manufacturing giants that built very solid, very reliable and queitly prestigious products that gave my generation enormous respect for the Japanese, their values and especially their engineering
@j.675610 ай бұрын
Still have the last Panasonic 60 inch Plasma TV model that they ever made.... once calibrated (google search got the calibration settings... only one of the 60 settings was off by 4....BTW... digital image settings are the same on all TV's for that model... so paying someone $300 to calibrate your TV is a friggin rip off because it's just a matter of copying the settings from a sheet of paper to the TV) ... anyways... best TV image ever... not even an OLED can compare to its image quality... best TV ever for sports and movies... and after 10 years... absolutely... no friggin soap opera effect... or burn-ins... 😊😊😊 Their 50" Plasma TV had an even better picture... but I needed the larger size for a larger room...
@DungarooTV9 ай бұрын
WTF!! This is so sad. I love Panasonic's TVs, Cameras and Appliances.
@danielvasquez375811 ай бұрын
Yeah I remember their TVs!!! Those were the days!!! You always bring up nostalgia here!!
@LogicallyAnswered11 ай бұрын
Yes sir, the good old days
@terencew384011 ай бұрын
panasonic products lasts a long time before breaking. using their products over the years have saved me a lot of money
@petermaz70110 ай бұрын
Panasonic always had quality products. They were built to last and many of them are still in functioning condition now. I was so upset when Panasonic pulled their televisions from the US market, you couldn’t beat them. Their top-of-the-line plasma TV was outstanding. The VHS recorders, the DVD players, all of them strong performers.
@barebarekun1619 ай бұрын
Maybe only to the models made in Japan. I had mine Panasonic soundbar made in Malaysia broke in 4 years through normal uses.
@davidchristensen81111 ай бұрын
My favorite "toy" of all time was a Technics portable CD player I bought in 1987. It was high-end for the time, and had fantastic audio quality. Kicking myself that I ever got rid of it. If I still had it, it might be a very valuable collector's item. And ironically? I still buy CD's, sometimes. So it would still be useful!
@kastaways12599 ай бұрын
Surprised to hear this . Still using the Panasonic plasma tv I bought in 2006 . Has never needed a thing . Ditto for our Panasonic microwave. Sad news .
@RJARRRPCGP5 ай бұрын
That was indeed an excellent era of plasma TVs! I did hear that they got better not very long before they were discontinued. (2012-2014?)
@TobiasStarling11 ай бұрын
Pretty sure a probability of over 100% means somethings going wrong with the calculation…?
@LogicallyAnswered11 ай бұрын
I think it means they’re certain about the prediction
@Erowens984 ай бұрын
Yeah. Thats very fishy. Probability can not exceed 100%. It can only reach 100% and thats only if its basically already happened. Unless they mean something different and are just misusing the term probability.
@fahinmohamed4 ай бұрын
True…. Max probability is 1
@mpalin1111 ай бұрын
Well, that's officially the first time I hear of a probability of over 100%.
@martinqizeaq9 ай бұрын
Here in Asia, they are still one of the major competitors. Because most homeowners know Panasonic is like Toyota. Their product lasts forever.
@hitmusicworldwide11 ай бұрын
Umm anyone heard of the Panasonic GH6 or Lumix cameras, Panasonic lenses, broadcast equipment, PTZ cameras etc? Go look up the prices for this equipment. Why do you want to sell a UHD TV when they are going for 200 plus bucks for 60-in screen when you can sell specialty lenses for over $16,000 or PTZ cameras at over $16,000 and other broadcast equipment in the tens of thousands of dollars? When you look at a company's patent profile or catalog of products, why not shift towards higher margin, higher technology products over now commoditized consumer products? TVs and washing machines as nice as they may look are not leading edge technology anymore. I'm reserving judgment until these variables are part of the equation.
@jschoonj4 ай бұрын
What kind of b.s. is this. Panasonic is making over 2 billion dollars in profit each year. They’re not going bankrupt.
@BillDobson11 ай бұрын
I really liked their sound systems. They seemed to have dialed into my particular equalisation. And, I had one of their flat screens. Excellent unit. Really sad story
@abcnikhiltripathi11 ай бұрын
If bankruptcy probability was 100%, then its stock would've already reflected that. But, its stock is up 29.45% over the last 5 years. Bankruptcy probability is 50-60% I think.
@MithunOnTheNet11 ай бұрын
Most of this video is rubbish. Panasonic is profitable and is still a major player in the EV battery business. The consumer electronics business is super-competitive so its expected not every product of Panasonic will be no. 1 in every product category. But having owned two Panasonic washing machines, I can definitely vouch for their appliances! Any day more reliable than Samsung in India.
@shojun1110 ай бұрын
@@MithunOnTheNet Just like it`s reporting about sony. The market cap of sony is $108 billion so how is it dying ? Panasonic just concentrated on EV batteries and they still make a lot of products for the asian market.
@DD-ld1xq9 ай бұрын
@@MithunOnTheNet Are you wilfully stupid? They are regularly making losses instead of profit. Just because they are still "doing things"doesn't make them a going concern far into the future if they can't turn regular profits and even if they do, it might not be enough to prevent massive downsizing. Panasonic has laid off tens of thousands of workers because their once profitable concerns aren't any longer and never will be due to the changing nature of the electronics industry - again, in the video if you'd bothered to notice.
@spinchange9 ай бұрын
On what basis or by what measure are these claims that the firm is "close to bankruptcy?" This is a baseless claim
@riptonedwards9175Ай бұрын
Thus is pure rubbish Panasonic will survive bet you said same about sony
@LWRC9 ай бұрын
Back in the day when plasma TVs first came out, Panasonic had one of the best screens! Such a shame!!!
@RJARRRPCGP5 ай бұрын
Looked like the late-plasma-TV-era was excellent, too! (before they quit making plasma altogether)
@bpowick8 ай бұрын
They still make some of the best TVs on the market. Their image processing is best in class.
@wyw20111 ай бұрын
Has anyone involved in the production of this video ever read a Panasonic financial statement?
@spinchange9 ай бұрын
Logically asked...
@hoppysport28729 ай бұрын
Like many here, my daily TV is a Panasonic from 2008. My Panasonic Arc 5 shaver is superlative. My Panasonic Lumix camera is incredible. My parents panasonic flip clock radio from the late 60s still works perfectly...and is even in the Museum of Modern Art. Crazy that their marketing is abysmal.
@miketolhurst46378 ай бұрын
We still, many times a day, use a Panasonic Genius microwave bought for £300 in December 1985. Apart from replacing the internal light bulb twice in the last 38 years, the microwave has performed faultlessly. Not just for coffee, jacket potatoes, and reheating, it is used to cook all our vegetables, stews, currys, etc. It has accompanied us on a number of holidays and also when moving our home from the UK to the Republic of Ireland and back to the UK. I strongly believe that their products were made to such a high standard and did not fail, therefore not requiring the purchase of a replacement, possibly resulting in part to the decline of the company.
@christopherkelly5779 ай бұрын
The FZ-1 3DO is one of the coolest looking consoles ever. They nailed it. Was solid and reliable too. I had a Japanese one and it worked from launch until I sold it around 2021. Front loading CD mechanism laser all worked. Was a tank.
@premkxk9 ай бұрын
Plasma Tvs and cordless phones from them are of very very good quality
@maximodakila287311 ай бұрын
I loved Panasonic products. They are very durable and high quality. I prefer it to Korean brands to be honest. I had bad experiences with Korean electronic brands but never once with Panasonic
@james_l433710 ай бұрын
Same
@apststreet84898 ай бұрын
I bought a Panasonic washing machine almost 10 years ago and it’s still working fine. Did a maintenance once
@nicholasellis74949 ай бұрын
Panasonic is one of my most treasured company, I'd hate to see them bankrupt, I have their last vcr and their latest dvd player
@bananabear0094 ай бұрын
It’s more on the rise, instead of fall of Panasonic.
@aussiejinjo4 ай бұрын
yeah i looked at their quarterlies and they're performing well? what is this video referring to
@Scuppun11 ай бұрын
I still have a 42 inch Panasonic 7th gen plasma tv, running very well. Picture quality beats most lcd panels today. Good tv.
@ej25411 ай бұрын
It's very sad what is happening to Panasonic 😢 My home ac system is Panasonic and still going strong no trouble since I bought them 9 years ago. My best car battery is Panasonic they tend to last 4 years on average, other brands which I know friends are using for their cars last between 1.5 to 2 years only !!! My best travel camera is Panasonic LX100 and LX100ii ... small and sharp photos It's really sad what is happening with Japanese big companies
@patpatterson971911 ай бұрын
The pinnacle of quality. I love their products!
@tangbesitangbesi700911 ай бұрын
PANASONIC is the one and only company left still manufacturing quality and reliable electronics and others. There will be millions of loyal Panasonic customers like me praying it will never go the way SHARP, Toshiba and Philips had. We believe Panasonic's electrical and electronic sector is still going strong worldwide and can prop up the company indefinitely
@medardosierra61118 ай бұрын
Loved their TV’s
@errorsofmodernism73319 ай бұрын
I worked in Japan at several airports and the Japanese do not like to take risks. It can end your career if you lose face too many times. If you lose your career in JP it is a fate worse than death.
@krizmatic71711 ай бұрын
I ain't going to lie I used to listen to hip hop on my Panasonic speakers and that was the best sound that I heard ever since!
@shabanafzal94402 ай бұрын
My first Panasonic purchase was a dvd player. It was a fantastic purchase and a great looking product. Since then I've adored panasonic products and they last a long time. I have a 55 inch 4k 3D TV and it looks good, fantastic sound and a great looking picture. I also have their earbuds and the sound is superb. I don't feel like changing the tv. This brand is great
@Jonathan900S11 ай бұрын
I bought a 40 inch Panasonic tv 4k It was good price & quality lasted for years
@LogicallyAnswered11 ай бұрын
Not surprised haha, glad you had a good experience with Panasonic
@joerinaldi59 ай бұрын
I am very upset by the news that Panasonic is in such financial hardship, because I have always preferred Panasonic to most brands. I have trusted Panasonic from the early 60’s it has always been reliable and an excellent brand. Maybe that what happens to very good companies like Panasonic and Toshiba they are so reliable that last too long. That is if they are still made in Japan.
@JonathanWrightZA10 ай бұрын
The last time I saw a Panasonic ad, was on a billboard in 2012 next to the Van der Stel train station in Somerset West, South Africa. I was reminded the other day, because the board hasn't had an ad on it since then and the old layers make out 30% of the word 'Panasonic'.
@hinkhall529111 ай бұрын
I really loved their discmans and mini stereos in the ‘90s
@franciskundukulangara79239 ай бұрын
Panasonic can revive their business by entering the cell phone manufacturing and marketing. Because, that is the future for now.
@Erowens984 ай бұрын
I doubt that. The smartphone market is heavily over saturated and there isn't really much more room for innovation leading to a stagnant market. Brands that have massive marketing departments like apple or samsung are able to hold on, but everyone else is in a race to the bottom.
@DIYBill2 ай бұрын
They can enter the drone market with help from Honda.
@sergiofonseca22859 ай бұрын
I have a recent washing machine and microwave from panasonic. These are the best I've ever had.
@sumimasenpanda3 ай бұрын
Our panasonic CRT TV lasted for 15 years. Only the buttons broke not the picture tube. My full respect to that brand
@arx1172 ай бұрын
Yeah the old One, if you bought their new tv which LED LCD is from rebrand Taiwan company or OLED from LG. Japan really fell hard from their era
@velzard106811 ай бұрын
Panasonic is still a huge company though? They are the primary battery makers for Tesla EVs and they are making like four gigafactory in the US as we speak
@johnl.775411 ай бұрын
Yeah was surprised no mention of involvement in electric batteries with TESLA
@tcbobb161311 ай бұрын
Also has Toughbook, which is in A lot of cop cars.
@alice_agogo11 ай бұрын
and it's only a matter of time before byd or other chinese battery makers kill them
@velzard106811 ай бұрын
@@alice_agogo it’s not a matter of time, they are doing pretty well, making deals with Mazda, Subaru, Toyota, Tesla, and building tons of factories for these companies. If anything the US would probably put sanctions on Chinese battery makers (not byd since they are basically owned by Berkshire Hathaway) and Panasonic would probably gain a ton from that. It’s really hard to predict a future when most of Panasonic’s biggest customers haven’t even really started mass production of EVs. I’m also not saying that sanctions are justified but knowing the US government it would probably happen
@kamolhengkiatisak152711 ай бұрын
In Thailand, Panasonic is only known for its excellent aftermarket auto batteries right now and circuit breaker (MCB). Worldwide, I read that Panasonic is good in batt technology and one of its major customers is Tesla.
@paolochicco72008 ай бұрын
It’s an overall problem of all Japanese electronic companies, with the exception of Sony with their Playstation brand: underestimate the foreign competitors, fear to take risk, lack of innovation. The unofficial embargo on Korean products helped with the domestic market, otherwise they would have collapsed completely. Remembering these company in the 80’s to mid 00’s, it hurts😢
@McbreakRsfanboy11 ай бұрын
This is crazy, I was just reading the other week about how they're flourishing because they are an industry leader in batteries producing the majority of ev batteries which is obviously extremely lucrative. Guess that article was wrong.
@filbao811311 ай бұрын
Yap they just shifted focus...
@algoobi55733 ай бұрын
i used to have 3 Panasonic plasma TVs. Because of the quality. It was so amazing. Like oled, but more longlivety. I remember standing watching LCD-tvs in like 2004 in a mall (sweden). It looked so bad, thought, well ill not change from CRT in many years. Then i got a good paying job in 2010-2011 and bought myself a new tv, first i was in process of buying LG plasma, but then i changed the order and payd extra for my first panasonic plasma TV. Wow, it was the G20. Wow. When nicely configured nothing could compete with it.
@sahilsatishpandit40832 ай бұрын
Panasonic and Toshiba had Great Products! My Toshiba Laptop ran for over 12yrs! The quality of the products were so good. Even my Panasonic TV ran completely fine for almost 9yrs.
@arx1172 ай бұрын
But toshiba already stopped producing laptop, memory card, thumbdrive, chipset and hard disk they sold of those tech to China after they failed to create safe nuclear energy in USA which USA government sued them 8 billion in 2015
@CaptainSword_Lady9 ай бұрын
don't trash on methods and long term success just because they don't want the marketing overhead, that's part of the toxic corporate culturism that some people prefer to avoid.
@pr0jectSkyneT11 ай бұрын
Had ther 60" VT60 Plasma TV which was fantastic. We replaced it last year with a LG G2 OLED.
@BadBeardDude7 ай бұрын
My current TV is a Panasonic OLED and I've a Panasonic 4K UHD player. Both are fantastic and I bought both on the name as I've never had a bad experience with anything with their name on it. While watching this video I thought I'd check where I bought my OLED to see if they were still selling the brand, they are not. This is very sad and I'd be rooting for them to make a comeback. Sony was another brand I used to rely on for technology but I'd choose Panasonic over Sony any day.
@trk19739 ай бұрын
Disclaimer first. I am a fan of Panasonic. Last 3 TVs (current OLED, previous plasma and previous CRT) are and were Panasonic, HD Bluray player, Bluray recorder and even VHS VCR (now 30 years old) are Panasonic. Even the last personal cassette player I bought before the IPod landed was also Panasonic. Panasonic dropped the ball when they missed the start of the DVD / 5.1 amplifier revolution in the late 1990s. Their Technics brand of hifi was world renowned and I remember being shocked at the time that I’d have to look at a different brand. I’ve noticed they really only do TV recording units nowadays (which nobody else does). I know they still do premium hifi under the Technics name but nobody unless they’re a purist is going to buy these nowadays. Everything else they sell, doesn’t stand out in an already crowded market of cheap, Chinese made products. I’ll be sad to see the Brand disappear
@suplado75832 ай бұрын
I'm an electrician here in philippines, panasonic brand electrical devices like light switch and outlet are today standard. And I also recommend to my clients to use panasonic devices which is reliable and safe. Sorry bad english grammar.
@MarlinWilliams-ts5ul3 ай бұрын
My mother bought me a Panasonic transistor radio at K-Mart, had to be in the late 1960s. I still have it, and it still works!
@NONO-hz4vo11 ай бұрын
Even when Panasonic was doing well they were always second to Sony.
@LogicallyAnswered11 ай бұрын
Fair enough
@abdullahrajput705918 күн бұрын
I have a Panasonic AC about 8,10 years ago and its quality was awesome at that time i never found that type of quality and technology in any other brand comparing with others.
@matthewmcpherson75354 ай бұрын
I always bought Panasonic, my uncle always bought Panasonic. My last panasonic item was one of the last plasma tv's made in japan, still going over 15+ years old
@loseweightusingketo11 ай бұрын
We still have a small Panasonic split AC in one of our bedrooms back in India, that was bought in 2013. Still going strong with regular maintenance. Our upstairs neighbors also have a similar AC that still works well. We'd been using a Panasonic LED TV since 2013 too, before giving it to a relative. Yes, still works perfectly fine. However, the same relative bough a Samsung AC that cost almost twice as much as ours, in 2015. It had major issues with the copper pipes and basically is scrap at this point as repair would be almost as expensive as a new AC. Such a shame because Panasonic made top quality products.
@alice_agogo11 ай бұрын
I still have a kdk basic electric fan from 1993 or so. it's quiet and still works after 3 decades. we used to have a square panasonic fan from early 2000s until 2011 when I smashed it (long story)😂
@senankamalakanan512810 ай бұрын
Panasonic was National back in 70s and 80s in Malaysia and Singapore also other East Asian countries. My mom still has her National year 1982 rice cooker working fine. Cheap and lasting home appliance for the poor.
@sazanrai62108 ай бұрын
Panasonic still makes great mirrorless camera. The features is absolutely uncompromising. I own lumix s5 and absolutely loving it.
@gabl8a892 ай бұрын
I still own the Panasonic Lumix G1 as of today, the camera is literally immortal, it would be very sad to see the company gone before the camera does.
@Rahulsharma-rg8ce11 ай бұрын
my uncle used to have a panasonic phone. it was so cool
@LogicallyAnswered11 ай бұрын
Ah yeah, we used to have Panasonic handsets as well
@robertlevy24208 ай бұрын
Sold TVs for Circuit City around 1990. Panasonic picture quality always stood out!! Images were so sharp and the colors so saturated - great tech! Yet, even then, companies with lesser quality tech were kicking their behind (see Sony).
@simonhodgetts65307 ай бұрын
I have owned many Panasonic products over the years - mainly personal stereos and CD players. Their products were superb - maybe a little conservative, but well made and great quality - with brilliant sound quality. Sad to see them in so much financial trouble now.
@marlonallansupetran7120Ай бұрын
I'm thinking I should be getting a new refrigerator, but our Panasonic fridge from 1994 still works fine. Oh and we still use my mother's Panasonic hair blower from the 80's.
@guitarchitectural11 ай бұрын
I'm sorry but this video's research feels a bit lazy - those big empty spaces from the 2000s onwards aren't from them not releasing any products - seems more like a website issue. They did a tonne of plasma TV production in the 2000s, kickstarted the micro 4/3 mirrorless camera system revolution with the Lumix brand in 2008, and they developed battery technology to the point that they are the main battery supplier for this car brand you might have heard of... Tesla?
@LogicallyAnswered11 ай бұрын
Worth mentioning for sure, but not quite the same as their progress pre 2000
@ronch55010 ай бұрын
I go online shopping and see a Panasonic flashlight.