(03-06-2019, 09:25 PM)TheHandleBar Wrote: (12-30-2018, 03:22 AM)Marko Wrote: Is it just me or has the wet shaving space just calmed right down? I find myself missing those heady days with various artisans releasing new products to overwhelming demand (maybe limited supply) with online storefronts crashing and the agony or ecstasy of scoring the sought after product...or not I had a daily ritual of checking the New Arrivals sections of my preferred vendors and the upcoming releases of my favourite artisans but lately there have been so few updates that I may only look in weekly or even less frequently. Please, tell me we haven't peaked!! Tell me there will be another Hallows or Nuavia Rosso!! Maybe I'm spoiled but I'm hoping 2019 brings us more awesomeness.
I would definitely tend to agree with you Marko. I think many of the current Artisans are struggling with maintaining the current inventory levels on an already daunting number of scents/products, and maybe they are having difficulty adding new products?
The natural solution has been to add Limited Release or Limited Edition items. However, while being incredibly exciting, I think this too can have it's drawbacks. It's hard for customers to keep track of what is available when and where, often missing the entire release before they hear of it. And when it comes to spending your hard earned funds, its often even harder to decide WHICH limited item to go with, knowing you might completely miss out on another release elsewhere. Some limited items have a higher price tag too which can add to the stress.
It's definitely an interesting time in our little industry. It's both good, and bad. Coming from a vendor's point of view, its often difficult to stand out and keep relevant when the artisans are constantly churning out products. Even if they're just limited items, we are often unable to stock them.
This is by no means a complaint, merely an observation. Seeing as I'm both a consumer as well as a vendor I have a unique perspective and appreciate both sides, as well as share in the frustrations!
In case it is not obvious, I added the
red/bold emphasis to @"TheHandleBar"'s post. With that said, I'd like to distinguish in what follows between consumers, vendors, and manufacturers of SE/LE products. I will refer to the manufacturers collectively as "artisans", knowing that the vendor may be the artisan, may have commissioned the artisan, or may simply be retailing the artisan's product.
I think consumers are increasingly aware that "Limited Release" and "Special Edition" items are revenue generating tools. They are apparently a mixed blessing for vendors and IMO, they are more or less of a dice roll for consumers. Some consumers value the dice roll aspect, but it is an aspect that cuts many ways. In the case of hardware, an SE brush for example, the typical degree of chance is probably not very different from buying an off-the-shelf product. But software is another matter. When it comes to consumables, I would elaborate on the @"TheHandleBar"'s remarks to say that the consumer generally has only a vague idea about the scent, and may be confronted with a new formulation as well - exactly what some customers want but others do not.
For both better and worse, artisans differ widely in their approach to offering SE and LE products. Some offer SE/LE items to supplement a core of stable products. Their formulas may change, but infrequently, and their SE/LE items may be offered in a known formulation, differing only in fragrance. Some artisans announce SEs that will be available for a limited, but extended period, and even make samples available. At the other end of the spectrum, SE and LE products can dominate the product line, and may remain in stock too briefly for the consumer to do any homework or await the benefit of early adopter feedback.
I restrain myself from judging any of these approaches as better or worse, since one ought always ask "Better or worse
for whom?" Consumers are widely and sometimes even contentiously different in their preferences, and artisans have their own varying issues to deal with. Also, an approach may be better or worse other things being equal, but they never are equal. However, I do admit to personal preferences (other things being equal
). My hat is off to the artisans who announce a reasonably long period during which their SE/LE software will be available. I especially appreciate those that make samples or small jars available at the beginning. At this point, my interest in SE/LE software is pretty much limited to items I think may rival my top tier, which means that with luck, they will be superb, which means that I will want to buy them again. With these artisans, I can do that, and I may even be able to try before I buy.
I am reminded of Ben Franklin's formula of doing well by doing good, and I always interpret that as doing good for customers. What "doing good for customers" means may depend on who you ask, but I like to think that our market will remain competitive enough for long enough to accommodate at least one answer to that question (mine, of course
), and maybe more. Perhaps it will.