(This post was last modified: 04-06-2016, 07:22 PM by grim.)
I’ve been reading shaving soap/cream reviews for quite some time trying to crowd source, opinions on the best in technical terms/scent profiles. If enough people rave about a product, and the herd mentality is not in play (i.e., the sources are independent across multiple websites), then there is something going on indicating a product might be good.
However, the one thing I noticed over and over again, is that frankly NOBODY say anything negative, or much negative, about anything. It’s rare. Almost every product is highly rated, highly regarded, etc. etc. etc. That is not real life. If everything you encounter is perfect or near perfect, then chances are you haven’t tried enough products or your bar is set low. I've tried some products that were pretty bad. I've bought small appliances that were bad. I've bought lots of consumer products that fell apart or were junk. If only I had known. LOTS for stuff I have bought in my life have been junk (sad to say). Soaps/Creams are not different. I've had some actually start to dry on one side of my face while working the other or they literally stunk (to me). Or stuff where there was about little residual glide (and I'm too lazy to relather constantly). I know there were complaints about difficulty in lathering some products but that's a hard water issue (I think).
So what is going on here? Is this a case of “If you have nothing good to say then say nothing”? I am not talking about reviews on websites actually selling products. I expect nothing from those. I mean blogs, forums, youtube, wherever …
The latest Sharpologist podcast discusses this very issue http://sharpologist.com/wp-content/uploa...462015.mp3 where they talk about if you say something negative, then that’s a “bad thing”. Start at 7:20. If this happened in other industries, consumers would never know what products to avoid. Consumer Reports would not exist. You would not know which cars years to avoid because of problems. Safety reports would not be sent to governments, etc.
So what’s the deal? I have stumbled across exactly one blog where the person ranking things actually had low rankings of products – One. I find that very strange and bad for the consumer and the seller. If the consumer only sees “excellent” reviews, then he doesn’t know what to avoid. If the producer of a product only sees “excellent” reviews, the he/she doesn’t know what needs to improve. That’s bad for everyone. Sure, there are threads ranking top 3, top 5, top 50, etc. but that doesn't tell you much of anything if the difference between 1 and 50 is minimal.
What’s going on here?
However, the one thing I noticed over and over again, is that frankly NOBODY say anything negative, or much negative, about anything. It’s rare. Almost every product is highly rated, highly regarded, etc. etc. etc. That is not real life. If everything you encounter is perfect or near perfect, then chances are you haven’t tried enough products or your bar is set low. I've tried some products that were pretty bad. I've bought small appliances that were bad. I've bought lots of consumer products that fell apart or were junk. If only I had known. LOTS for stuff I have bought in my life have been junk (sad to say). Soaps/Creams are not different. I've had some actually start to dry on one side of my face while working the other or they literally stunk (to me). Or stuff where there was about little residual glide (and I'm too lazy to relather constantly). I know there were complaints about difficulty in lathering some products but that's a hard water issue (I think).
So what is going on here? Is this a case of “If you have nothing good to say then say nothing”? I am not talking about reviews on websites actually selling products. I expect nothing from those. I mean blogs, forums, youtube, wherever …
The latest Sharpologist podcast discusses this very issue http://sharpologist.com/wp-content/uploa...462015.mp3 where they talk about if you say something negative, then that’s a “bad thing”. Start at 7:20. If this happened in other industries, consumers would never know what products to avoid. Consumer Reports would not exist. You would not know which cars years to avoid because of problems. Safety reports would not be sent to governments, etc.
So what’s the deal? I have stumbled across exactly one blog where the person ranking things actually had low rankings of products – One. I find that very strange and bad for the consumer and the seller. If the consumer only sees “excellent” reviews, then he doesn’t know what to avoid. If the producer of a product only sees “excellent” reviews, the he/she doesn’t know what needs to improve. That’s bad for everyone. Sure, there are threads ranking top 3, top 5, top 50, etc. but that doesn't tell you much of anything if the difference between 1 and 50 is minimal.
What’s going on here?