A substantial number of people have asked that I identify what I consider the elite brands. I was reluctant to do so but I will. I guess I will write up mini reviews trying to describe why I believe what I believe. That will take a few days. So continuing with what I already drafted ...
OBSERVATIONS
While I was enjoying myself trying a whole bunch of stuff, I read and observed. Here are some observations.
1. Don’t believe the hype in regards to products. The herd mentality sometimes takes over. Bernays was right. Sometimes the flavor of the month fades into obscurity. Trust in your own beliefs. The next guy's opinion, including mine, is no better than yours.
2. Buy low. Now this does not mean that sellers should not get a fair profit for their wares. Rather, it means impulse buying is expensive buying. Don't complain about the cost of items if you buy high.
a. Don’t pay for shipping. Instead of nickel and dime buying, wait until you have enough to buy to make the minimum for free shipping, if possible.
b. Don’t pay full price when it can be avoided. Companies have sales all the time. Of course, Black Friday might be the best but I have seen sales were 1/3 off was offered (around Christmas). That is significant. Thank about that. If you wait and buy stock all at once at 1/3 off, how much will you save?
c. Read the Deals subforums. A recent deal allowed consumers to get a name brand soap for $0.18 each. That’s not a typo. Eighteen cents. In particular, look for the closeout sales. There are a lot of resellers jumping late on to the bandwagon. Not all of them will survive. Close out sales are great sales.
d. Buy refills, not complete soaps in fancy containers.
3. Sometimes a product is very popular, discussed all over the internet, and then a year from then fades into obscurity. Hmmm. What’s with that? Surely you can think of a name that was popular in the past and has since disappeared from discussions? Is it no longer good? Does it no longer perform identically to the past? Of was it just a passing fad?
4. Before jumping on V3, V4, V5, ask yourself the following questions, some things to think about ...
a. Why is there a Vx? Are consumers guinea pigs? Sure technology evolves but think about the last operating system you installed on your computer or smartphone. Did you ever regret it? New does not always mean better.
b. Do you expect to see a substantial and significant improvement? Why? Did previous version have that? What makes you think the current version will? Is this impulse buying?
5. We are all different - yes, YMMV
6. Personally, I am drawn to old time, long standing, and simple scents. They might have multiple scents within them but they have a predominate note that comes through rather than the “
imagine yourself walking through the forest on a rainy day – a bird chirps – the sun peaks through … “ scents - Meh.
7. Take your time. Buy samples slowly. Cherish the experience. This isn't a race.
8. I believe there are summer and winter scents. In the winter I used a soap with peppermint in it thinking
“hmm, peppermint – candy canes, peppermint candies – sure sounds like a Holiday scent." YES!
That was – until it about froze my face off because I forgot real mint contains menthol – duh.
No, IMO, menthol is for the summer.
Some Annoyances
1.
Soap Descriptions. If a soap smells like ginger ale, then don’t tell me: “Think about walking though a forest in a spring rain. The rain ends, a rainbow peeks out. Fairies dance on mushroom tops, etc.”
Just tell me it smells like Ginger Ale. Life is short and I have no time to read all this nonsense to figure out its Ginger Ale.
2.
Companies that don’t sell samples. Your loss. Maybe there are people who can afford to buy something on a whim. Been there, done that, never again. There are far too many companies now trying to market and sell in a niche market space. No samples for sale? Then your product better be the next reincarnation of unicorn hair and verified as such by crowdsourcing.
3.
Lack of empirical data on cost/shave. While everyone has to figure this out on their own, it will take a LONG, LONG time. I wish some database existed on this beyond the intuitive sequence of triple milled soaps last longer than soft soaps.
4.
Standardization on Measures. Don’t tell me your product weighs 4.4 oz and another product is 200 ml. Really? Stick with weight or volume or whatever.