(This post was last modified: 04-05-2016, 04:40 PM by grim.)
(04-05-2016, 02:18 PM)TSEvangelist Wrote: Although I do use some luxury products prefer value when I can get it. In some cases the luxury products provide good value and better performance, but in some cases they do not. As an example, Xpec is not 5 times better than Mike's Natural Soaps for me.
I have no issue of you pointing out the top 25 of anything. Go for it. It might have little value to 99% of the population but so what? That's their problem.
The issue you mention of Xpec is clearly the law of diminishing returns, something that effects most of life. I have found, for example, that some soaps costing twice as much as a lesser performing soap (IMO), is, in fact, twice as good. But after that it starts to fall apart as the higher the cost the more tinier and incremental the value.
I find the simplest way to look at this is with cars, something about everyone on the planet understands. You can certainly get to your destination in a $20,000 car just fine, but it might be far more fun in a $40,000 car and great fun in a $100,000 car. But is the $100,000 car give you 5 times the value? Of course not - The Law of Diminishing Returns.
I'm still waiting to know the garbage. To be frank, it doesn't do much good to tell us which ones are great - Please take this as positive feedback. It's pretty easy to figure that out. All you have to do is crowdsource the reviews of a couple of dozen reviews and you can figure out which ones might be reasonable to buy. Whats far more hard to is find out which ones are NOT great.
Just like Consumer Reports might tell the consumer which cars to avoid, there should be a means to find out the soaps to NOT buy. That would be valuable to some of us.
Sometimes its better to own one GREAT product than 5 junk products.
SCShaver and
BadDad like this post