(01-13-2017, 04:23 AM)j-mt Wrote: Simple economics would suggest I continue to raise prices until the demand levels off, but that's not what I'm about.
The market always sorts things out.
(01-13-2017, 07:44 AM)Watson Wrote: Price/shave makes the most sense. Absent of any usage data, I would think that price/gram could be reasonable.
(01-13-2017, 04:18 PM)j-mt Wrote: You've touched on another subject.
Absolutely correct. Standards are all over the place. Some people get hung up on acquisition cost but fail, for example, that some soaps sell as 7 oz, not 4 oz. And some list in fl oz and not weight oz. It also fails to recognize that some are more concentrated than others. Or that some people use more per use than others.
So here is the bottom line. You take the container the product is in. Weigh it. When done, you weigh it again. Do the math and you cost cost/shave.
I agree this is the ONLY way to compare the relative cost of these consumable products. It's a LONG process and you have to actually consume the products. That is why is this thread
https://damnfineshave.com/thread-shaving...ss-results I only look at the technical attributes, for myself, of a product. I will go back in a year and discuss money, the cost/shave.
However, even when presented with cost/shave numbers, its the actual cost to acquire that people do look at. If it costs $20 to ship something from France, then you can't ignore that. Similarly, if a products sells dirt cheap on Amazon or shipping is free if you buy $50 of product, you can't ignore that either. Actual cost/shave means just that ... cost/shave.
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