The wet shaving marketplace has generally been a convivial place characterized by a fair amount of camaraderie and a degree of good will. That said, however, its never been my perception that the various artisans and vendors have ever been anything other than competitors in a niche marketplace all competing for customers's limited shaving dollar. Thats how it should be. I'd be surprised and concerned if it were otherwise.
Some discussion erupted on a Merchant thread about the propriety of some artisans' competitive practices and while the discussion momentarily threatened to cross the line, to the credit of those involved it remained merely a lively discussion. Now I believe that in a free market economy competitors should compete. Its what weeds out the weak and inferior and allows the cream to rise to the top. I think that competitors are free to conduct themselves however they choose within the boundaries of the law which is why more and more artisans are keeping various competitive information closer to their vests. Things like release dates, formulas, scent profiles, unit sales numbers and so forth at the end of the day are all competitive confidential information and should be treated as such. Industrial espionage goes on routinely in other businesses as competitors try to wrongfully acquire such competitor's information. The shaving world is no different although, it is a smaller community and the prevalence of social media allows a much closer monitoring of the players' behaviour. If an artisan or a vendor conducts themselves aggressively and chooses, in the name of competition, to conduct themselves in a manner that the broader marketplace finds offensive, unethical or otherwise improper, well then the marketplace has a way of dealing with those they deem to be bad actors so they go down that path at their peril. Beware the angry mob.
That said, I welcome the more sophisticated and strategic approach to business that is evolving in the wet shaving marketplace because it increases the odds that more of the artisans and vendors we've come to know and love might be around for the long haul.
Some discussion erupted on a Merchant thread about the propriety of some artisans' competitive practices and while the discussion momentarily threatened to cross the line, to the credit of those involved it remained merely a lively discussion. Now I believe that in a free market economy competitors should compete. Its what weeds out the weak and inferior and allows the cream to rise to the top. I think that competitors are free to conduct themselves however they choose within the boundaries of the law which is why more and more artisans are keeping various competitive information closer to their vests. Things like release dates, formulas, scent profiles, unit sales numbers and so forth at the end of the day are all competitive confidential information and should be treated as such. Industrial espionage goes on routinely in other businesses as competitors try to wrongfully acquire such competitor's information. The shaving world is no different although, it is a smaller community and the prevalence of social media allows a much closer monitoring of the players' behaviour. If an artisan or a vendor conducts themselves aggressively and chooses, in the name of competition, to conduct themselves in a manner that the broader marketplace finds offensive, unethical or otherwise improper, well then the marketplace has a way of dealing with those they deem to be bad actors so they go down that path at their peril. Beware the angry mob.
That said, I welcome the more sophisticated and strategic approach to business that is evolving in the wet shaving marketplace because it increases the odds that more of the artisans and vendors we've come to know and love might be around for the long haul.