(08-21-2018, 12:59 PM)dominicr Wrote: (08-21-2018, 05:43 AM)wetshavingproducts Wrote: It's actually going to be the ones who are the most successful at marketing themselves that will survive. Quality of the product is the least important factor in business survival for cosmetics. Why? Because pretty much every single product will work.
Agreed. I’ve said this before. We make a great soap. A lot of people make great soaps.
Another difficulty in conversion...you have to convince a guy of two things.
1) that a “chore” can be enjoyable.
2)the can foam is not “good enough”
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Getting the first-timer is a lot tougher than convincing the already initiated. Unless the average artisan sees them at a Farmer's market or gets a referral, it is unlikely they will be able to convert the average Joe. This opinion is based on my marketing efforts and experience.
The new artisan's appeal is simply being new. This carries much cachet for the first 6 months to a year of "business". It's called the PR bump on Shark Tank and AFAIK business schools. But unless there's something new always coming out, the PR bump fades and you go back to whatever is "normal" business.
So, really, IMO, the challenge for old artisans is to simply remain relevant among our community or simply get a separate income source.
(08-21-2018, 10:29 PM)BPman Wrote: If one could see the books at say WCS, Maggard and Italian Barber (probably the Big Three of online vendors) we could maybe formulate a business theory on the market. However, there are just too many intangibles to really see the macro-economic picture. I still say DE/SE wet shavers are less than 1% of the overall market at best.
I think 1% is being extremely generous. I think it's closer to 1/100,000 or 1/50,000 men. And given the beard trend, it's far more likely for a guy to just grow it out than to search for a better way.