Thank you all for your thoughtful responses to my questions about whether or not a boat should go out even if it was a given that the charter was going to lose money.
What I have seen a lot of in regards to these responses is that most people embraced Nekton's (or any other liveaboard for that matter) policy of going out with 4, 5, 6 guests even though charters with so few passengers are doomed to lose thousands of dollars in the process. From a consumer's perspective, I wholeheartedly agree.
From a business perspective (and I am a relatively new business owner in the dive industry, although I am not in the liveaboard industry) I am not sure if it makes sense financially. Dive industry businesses run on notoriously slim profit margins and running charters that lose tens of thousands of dollars a year (working on Nekton over the years I went out on literally dozens of charters with extremely low occupancy rates) seem to be an exercise in shooting oneself in the foot. While I would never be foolish enough to suggest that running such small charters was responsible for Nekton's demise (there were obviously plenty of other factors which contributed), I can't help wondering if this might have contributed to their failure in some way. Tens of thousands of dollars lost every year would have gone a long way towards maintenance, crew payroll, etc. Of course this assumes that management would have utilized the "saved" money for the right purposes, something that we cannot assume.
Once again thanks for all of your input. As a relatively new business owner, your posts have helped me get a better understanding of what divers expect and how to manage similar issues with my business.
What I have seen a lot of in regards to these responses is that most people embraced Nekton's (or any other liveaboard for that matter) policy of going out with 4, 5, 6 guests even though charters with so few passengers are doomed to lose thousands of dollars in the process. From a consumer's perspective, I wholeheartedly agree.
From a business perspective (and I am a relatively new business owner in the dive industry, although I am not in the liveaboard industry) I am not sure if it makes sense financially. Dive industry businesses run on notoriously slim profit margins and running charters that lose tens of thousands of dollars a year (working on Nekton over the years I went out on literally dozens of charters with extremely low occupancy rates) seem to be an exercise in shooting oneself in the foot. While I would never be foolish enough to suggest that running such small charters was responsible for Nekton's demise (there were obviously plenty of other factors which contributed), I can't help wondering if this might have contributed to their failure in some way. Tens of thousands of dollars lost every year would have gone a long way towards maintenance, crew payroll, etc. Of course this assumes that management would have utilized the "saved" money for the right purposes, something that we cannot assume.
Once again thanks for all of your input. As a relatively new business owner, your posts have helped me get a better understanding of what divers expect and how to manage similar issues with my business.