(09-06-2019, 03:10 PM)hawns Wrote:Alright hypothetical Shawn, you knew I was talking about you but if you read the last sentence of my post then you would see that I did take that other aspect into consideration. I fully expect all artisans, including hypothetical ones, to act in their rational economic best interest. While this may move you in directions that I personally am not interested in and it might make me sad on one level (ie, the selfish what about me level) it makes me happy to see you and other artisans achieving a degree of self actualization and economic success that may not be possible in the traditional wet shaving space alone. Lets be serious, most wet shavers are looking for the cheapest, effective product they can get. Thats not necessarily a bad thing because shaving is a daily activity and the shaving products are often viewed as staples that people are prepared to spend only a limited amount on. Ive always thought that your products were not only the best post shave products in wet shaving on both performance and creative scent/fragrance, but that they also represented excellent value. Seriously, I'd have paid more, however, there's a market and you have to price yourself in that market and once you have its hard to shift upwards without some whiney push back. I never went to business school but its obvious if you're paying attention that people will pay more for products they consider to be "luxury" products than they are for staples. And like it or not you are competing in some regards with aqua velva. I personally would never place your provisions line of products on that level but neither would I use aqua velva and yet I see aqua velva on the shelves so somebody is using that stuff.(09-05-2019, 10:24 PM)Marko Wrote:(09-05-2019, 05:21 PM)BPman Wrote: Let me make a Farmer's Almanacesque type guess: we may see a big push to artisan soaps that cost far less as the market is now "eating itself". B&M "kissed" the $28 mark with their latest intro and I see/hear many stating "Whoa!!". Latha "resurrection" coming?Hence the interest in samples. I'm willing to wager that the majority of wet shavers who order samples never purchase the full size product based on the sample. Its their model - given the number of soaps the average wet shaver has (at least those active on forums) it will still take them years to work through a single sample. And if, as often happens, they don't care for the scent and/or of the sample then the loss is small. They will have a large number of samples and a small number of full size pucks. It makes economic sense. I am not a sample buyer, I buy a full size puck and I have a significant number of soaps that have been lathered only once and several that have never been lathered at all because I did not care for either or both of the scent or performance. I don't want to do the math but every time I go down to the basement all of those soaps call out to me mockingly "you should have bought a sample"...ok, not literally because that would be scary but you know what I mean.
Another trend I've seen is artisans getting into the EDT/EDP line as those sell for a significantly higher price. I don't care for that much scent (I've tried but its not my thing) but for those who do like that sort of thing its great. I don't particularly like it when I see an artisan neglecting their original products to focus on EDPs, however, if the economics are driving them in that direction who am I to criticize?
I think there could also be another aspect that you didn't consider. Let's say an artisan, I don't know but let's call him Shawn hypothetically, makes aftershave and fragrances, but Shawn's sales of aftershave and shaving products fall off dramatically while the sales of his fragrances take off to much critical acclaim in the fragrance world, allowing him to really push the envelope in the most creative aspect of what he does. This hypothetical Shawn would probably be foolish to double down and invest his time, energy and money into a stagnating element of his business by all accounts of business practice when there is another segment in which he is receiving high acclaim and growing sales, it would seem.
All this is completely hypothetical, of course, but if it were true...Shawn would probably make a lot of his business professors that he had in college question their existence if he were to do anything other than shift his focus into the fragrance side of the business, I'd imagine.
Edit: And yeah, fragrances do cost more. They also cost more to make and have more expensive packaging. But I would bet this Shawn character would have people from the fragrance world tell him that they hesitated to check out his fragrances at first because they were so much cheaper than other fragrances on the market that they just assumed they wouldn't be as good as they were.
Long ramble but to sum up, I'm delighted to watch your business evolve in directions that you find economically profitable and also personally enjoyable and fulfilling. I always have and still do wish you all the success in the world.