|
The InterviewQuestions asked by OCC will be in orange. Jon Miller's answers will be in white.
1. Before we start, could you provide for our readers some background information about yourself?
I’ve been in the consumer electronics industry for about 25 years. I have been with this operation for 20 years and have done many diverse things within this company. We actually started LTB about 5 years ago as a dedicated division enhancing solutions of headphone technology by adding value to consumer computer products, home theater products, gaming products, and so on. Our focus right now at LTB is to really implement the best possible digital solution for headphone technology, both wired and wireless product. So that’s really where my attention lies.
I have a background in sales and marketing, in design, and in business administration. I’ve applied all of my skills to LTB to enhance the functionality of what we do and to enhance the benefits of how we do it.
2. What was the inspiration for naming the company LTB (Listen to Believe)?
Listen to Believe really is a concept. We want people to understand that our products are different. In order for someone to really appreciate one headphone over another, really, you need to listen, you need to experience, the headphone product. So Listen to Believe is really the concept that we promote. In fact, if you listen to our headphones, you’ll believe that there is a true difference. We were the first to come to the market with a true 5.1 headphone that actually offers a true-patented technology. We actually chamber our speakers so that the difference in resonance, the directional and spatial qualities are better. You have the actual aspect of true surround sound. The next best thing would be surround sound speakers.
3. So the fact that you have surround sound speakers in the headphones is what makes you stand out from the competition?
Absolutely. Over the past year, we’ve also added some new definitions in wireless products, which also are defining as we move along, a new realm of uniqueness. We have some new products coming out, actually, in the next couple of weeks which also implement a wireless technology which is unique and again, offers that Listen to Believe strategy.
4. Can you elaborate more on the products that are coming out soon?
We have several wireless products coming out right now geared toward gaming, personal audio, and PC control. We have a product called Q-BEAN, which is a product that is designed to enhance the usage of a PC or Mac or Linux based box. This is going to stream audio from the device through a wireless streaming technology which is pretty much impervious to interference. The technology, which we call Ario, is 2.4GHz adaptive technology. It can bypass a Wi-Fi router, a microwave oven, a Bluetooth device and it will not interfere with them, and will not find interference from them. The device has also got full duplex voice communication capability, so while you’re listening, you can also speak over VOIP, over a team application, over a voice recognition application, in full duplex. That means there is no latency and no compression, so you get CD quality. The sound quality is phenomenal.
In addition, the Q-BEAN can also remotely control a Windows environment. If you have Windows XP or Windows Vista, you can go into Media Center, you can put it into Windows Media Player, and you can take the Q-BEAN and advance or reverse tracks on music. It’ll also pause and play, and control volume. The Q-BEAN is literally like a little remote control. So literally, you don’t have to be in front of your computer to take advantage of your media. That’s the benefit of that product. The Q-BEAN is pretty unique. It’s a rechargeable product and it’s got about an 8-hour usage battery life. So each time you use it, you can use it up to eight hours at a time. It’s also very light weight, it’s about the size of a key fob. Q-BEAN is also technically a headphone link, as we call it. We’ve also got a stereo version, without the microphone, but it does also act as an audio bridge between the transmitting TV, MP3 player, etc.
5. How many headphones can you hook up at a time to the Q-BEAN?
The Q-BEAN is a one-to-one device. It pairs like Bluetooth, for security reasons, because you use voice communications and want to have it secure. You can have in one room thirty to fifty people using Q-BEANs and they will not interfere with each other.
6. Do you have any products where you have a single transmitter for multiple headphones?
We do. We’ve had those out for a while. We have the first and world’s only true 5.1 surround sound headphone. This product is a one-to-many, as we call it. That series of product allows you to have one transmitter, one source of audio, and many receivers. We also have a stereo version, which is a digital stereo product with analog input. We are coming out with a wireless 5.1, which will be a combination of inputs from stereo and inputs from hi-def, which would be optical or digital, with one-to-many. This will also have an Xbox Live microphone option.
We also have a model which we call the Q-BASE, which is similar to the Q-BEAN. It’s an actual headset that is USB enabled, and we also have a stereo version coming out. This is a true 2.1 headphone. This is a headphone that has a standard emitter and then a subwoofer. The subwoofer being in the headphone is a unique feature that no else has got. This is also our patent. And you are enabled to hear the true bass tones from your audio. So if you are a gamer, and you plug it into your PC, you can just basically link the two devices, you have a microphone on the unit, you can do your Teamspeak, your team gaming, and you can play your games and get the full effect of the bass effect from whatever application. Again, that’s a plug and play product and that one does not require software. So with Linux, Windows, Mac, plug and play, and you’re ready to go. That’s also using the Ario technology I mentioned, which is a wireless product technology, that is interchangeable with the Q-BEAN and a few other products we’ll be coming out with, so it gives the user some advantages toward accessories.
7. How do you test for quality assurance since on your website you claim nothing less than “perfect” is allowed by LTB. This is especially important since audio is so subjective.
When we talk about quality, we’re talking about manufacturing quality. Quality of the product that if you were to purchase a product, you don’t want it to come out of the box broken. You don’t want it to come out of the box and break within a couple of hours and ask, “Why did this break?” Quality is obviously an issue. We don’t have that kind of problem. I can tell you the returns from our products on the Gerald Scale of Retailers, is about 1%, and of that 1%, it’s only about one-tenth of that that is actually a defect. Most of the time it’s just a customer buys something, not sure why they bought it, or bought the wrong item.
We do the repairs here. This is not the factory, this is where we do the process of creation, the process of repair, and shipments are coming out of here, and the warehousing. The actual product is manufactured over in China, in factories that are used by some of the other big name headphone manufacturers that everyone is aware of. I’m not gonna name names, but I can tell you that we use the same assembly lines and the same tooling as the three largest headphone manufacturers in the world. So we set a standard of quality as high as possible.
8. So what happens to the returned products?
If a product is defective, we maintain accessory parts here. We repair or replace. There are times customers will break their own headphones. They contact us and generally what we do is we will send them the parts at no cost, but what we’ll sometimes do is ask them to pay the shipping for it, which is between five or six dollars. |
|