Henri Heikkinen

Valco is the world’s friendliest little evil corporation. We’ve been saying openly for a long time that our goal is, sooner or later, to build our own Death Star and subjugate all of humanity. It’s an honest and ambitious goal, and we work toward it every day.

But when I look at the audio market in 2025, the joke is starting to die in my throat. We’ve realized we’re complete amateurs. It turns out it’s painfully hard to be a greedy, ruthless world-conquering villain when the competition keeps blowing past us on the left and right in the exact same role.

There’s too much money on the table

The headphone market is no small side hustle. Globally, we’re talking well over a hundred billion euros in business, and it keeps growing faster every year. That is a massive pile of money. With that kind of cash, you could buy a few small countries, colonize the Moon, or even pay off half of Finland’s national debt.

When there’s this much money on the table, the game gets brutal. If you look around, you’ll see the market’s true nature.

First of all, there’s Apple. They’ve already managed what we only dream about: they’ve built the perfect closed ecosystem and own half the entire market. Apple probably already has its own Death Star somewhere.

The scale is completely absurd. If Apple’s headphone business alone were spun off into its own company, its revenue would be in the same league as all of Nokia. A single Apple accessory generates as much money as the biggest industrial giant in Finnish stock market history. Next to that, Finnish “world domination” looks more like bad summer theater.

Who owns your ears?

If you don’t buy Apple, you might think you’re buying traditional Western quality or a piece of rock history. Most likely, though, you’re wrong. Acquisitions reveal the grim truth about where the profits actually flow these days. 

Even Swedish rock credibility eventually got a price tag, and it was exactly 1.15 billion dollars. For that sum, the Chinese investment company HongShan bought a majority stake in Marshall Group.

The same pattern repeats everywhere. 

Germany’s Beyerdynamic was sold to China’s Cosonic, and Samsung has swallowed up almost every other hi-fi company from JBL to Bowers & Wilkins. Behind most of the rest, you’ll find either a Chinese investment firm, a Japanese conglomerate, or an American tech giant like HP.

Bose, a smaller player (revenue approx. 3.2 billion dollars), is a refreshingly weird exception in this crowd, since it’s owned by the dead founder’s trust contraption and MIT.

Brutal oligopoly, and us

This situation puts us in a strategically weird and slightly embarrassing light. The market is not evenly divided. It’s a brutal oligopoly. In reality, a handful of giants vacuum up about 98 billion dollars from the market. The crumbs left on the floor get licked up by a thousand small players trying to survive under the giants’ feet.

We are one of those thousand crumbs.

We’re the only idiots planning to set up our own headphone factory in Puolanka. While everyone else is either selling themselves to China or running “side businesses” bigger than Nokia, our plan to cobble together headphones in Finland starts to look a bit strange.

That inevitably causes a minor identity crisis. We’re trying to play evil corporation, but the end result looks suspiciously like honest hard work.

New strategy: Dual-use technology

At an emergency board meeting, we concluded that in this situation there is only one logical option. We have to escalate. Since we can’t beat our competitors in money or evil, we need to speed up the original plan.

The solution ultimately came from an unexpected direction.

When we asked the authorities about funding options for getting the Puolanka factory up and running, we were told that in the current global situation, we should consider so-called dual-use technology. Apparently that gets EU funding very nicely these days.

This suits us perfectly.

Building a Death Star takes too much time without outside funding, but if we label it a “dual-use project,” we can get the EU to pay for part of the destructive power with shared debt.

So we intend to keep making high-quality, repairable headphones with excellent value for money, because we need the self-financing portion for this Wunderwaffe program recommended by the authorities.

This plan also gives us hope.

If this small crew of ours can make headphones that are fully competitive and usually even better than the products of these empires operating on endless budgets, then we’re not far from our goal.

We don’t need to grow that much more before we can also make the kind of dual-use technology you conquer the world with.

The only way to one-up the global giants is to subjugate all of humanity with futuristic dual-use technology. It’s a harsh solution, but the market situation and EU funding guidelines leave us no choice.