Wow...we went from getting artisan soaps on the shelf at WalMart to hiring an entire laboratory of specialized R&D scientists to develop the next new recipe in creating soap...
We aren't talking about internal combustion engines, or new-power technologies. We aren't talking about medical technologies or the latest vaccinations and anti-viral medications. We aren;t talking about getting people to colonize Mars.
We are talking about getting soap and aftershave products to a mass market.
Seriously, how much more R&D can go into shaving soap? Do you really, honestly think there is some as-of-yet undiscovered ingredient that will render current formulations obsolete? I don't. Soap has been being made in the same way for over 100 years, with only minor changes to the process and formulations. Sure, recipes can forever and always be tweaked and adjusted, but the chemical reactions needed to make soap have not and will not change in the very near future...
Do think any company that is putting soap on the shelf at WalMart for $1/oz is investing billions in manufacturing processes, calibrations, QC divisions, and testing standards? I don't. Not unless this company is P&G, making trillions of bars of soap annually. There isn't any profit in it.
More realistically, what would happen is a rapid decline in the quality of the product as an artisan hires every kid in the neighborhood to start pouring oils in beakers and hot soaps into plastic containers to cure....
But we can debate the reality of that until the cows come home. There is a reason it is not happening. There is a reason that the shave soaps available at WalMart cannot come CLOSE to comparing with the top-level artisans we have making soaps today. Magic or not, the reasoning is very valid, and the proof is in the daily reality...If it was possible, someone would be doing it already, and they aren;t...
Marko and
wyze0ne like this post