(10-28-2016, 08:56 PM)grim Wrote: (10-28-2016, 06:52 PM)BadDad Wrote: A word of caution...popularity is not synonymous with quality. and undeniably, of lower quality...
Of so true, and along these lines ...
Economies of scale is a big thing. If a major company can produce product A for $15 and a small company for $25. Guess which one the public buys.
I doubt its a coincidence that the biggest seller is TOBS sandalwood on Amazon. Cheap and reputable despite all the artisans.
Yea, until Company A buys small company b, reduces the quality of the product to save costs, and raises the price.
Then it is up to a skilled artisan to provide a higher quality product so that the people that care about performance can get it...
Again...volume does not equate to quality. What do you bet that the majority of TOBS Sandalwood sales from Amazon are made by new shavers just getting started in the hobby? How many of those initial sales translate into repeat customers? This is a much more important and telling variable within the equation...
My guess, and yes...purely a guess...is that very few of those Amazon sales for shaving goods turn into repeat customers. SOME of those initial Amazon sales might find Maggard's or West Coast Shaving and buy their TOBS from them, but I'd be willing to bet that the majority move on to other vendors and artisan products...
Purely conjecture on my part, but I do believe it to be sound...