Hello
@Kenneth Rizza, and thank you for offering your cantact info. But from a business ownership-management perspective, it is a shame that you see yourself as needing to do so. A company with a new owner is always going to do things as they see fit, even if that means turning it up-side-down. But from the customer perspective, the people that this new owner depends upon for the business's survival, if that new owner can't perform, that customer has been lost, and the public reputation destroyed.
This new owner has one, and only one decision to make
TODAY- flourish, or perish. Pick one, there is no in-between.
They are already losing customers, and the woodturning community is relatively small, in the grand scale of things. They need to right this ship, now, today, this moment. No excuses, no trying to rationalize their problems to their customer base and ask for their forgiveness, that time has come and gone. The business world doesn't operate that way. It is unfortunate that you, the former owner, have stepped in to be the ear to the buying public on behalf of your former company. As one former business owner to another, tell these folks to get their s&*t together, today. Otherwise, turn off the website, kill the lights, and lock the door, then we'll go find somewhere else to spend our cash.