(This post was last modified: 07-23-2017, 03:18 PM by Hardtop01.)
Ok folks I go back and forth on this one so hear my thoughts and then let's hear your thoughts.
About a month or two ago, a collaboration between a razor maker (which I respect and have two custom razors from) and a somewhat mainstream shaving vendor put out a product I was interested in. The product was well presented and in line with what the razor makers typically produces. I went to the shave forums and youtubers to actually see the product and to get their "collective" opinions on the razor since it was new. I use the word "collective" very loosely because you need to take opinions with lots and lots of salt.
That's where things kinda went off the rails for me since review after review everyone had gotten the item for free. At the time, I actually could not find a review where someone had in fact invested their own money in the product, tried it, and gave it the thumbs down or up. Yes there is the "buyer buy in" element, but wetshavers are a pretty good group that we generally come clean when we make questionable purchases, and collectively laugh at them.
At the end of the day I didn't buy the item because I couldn't get past the "marketing piece" that put their razor in the hands of virtually every YouTuber they could find. Although I respect the razor vendour and would suggest the razor was "that good", based on my own previous purchases, the concept of being sold to in that way in a hobby that generally functions by word of mouth is different? No not really, but for the most part we have been shielded from this since the community has been traditionally small. Times are changing..so....although I've kinda answered my own question, should it really matter that a Youtuber doing a review on an item got it for free and should it carry any weight? For me it did not, but was I being too hasty and dismissive? Providing the disclaimer that they didn't purchase the item doesn't make the situation any better and when giving the item away after the review(if that's what they choose to do) do they go back and purchase? These are the things we really want to know since it speaks to the product or their credibility (hard to give a two thumbs up to a product you wouldn't spend your own money on.).
It always falls back to credibility and objectivity.
As wetshaving becomes bigger and bigger, so will mainstream marketing.
Anywho, my wife thinks I was being a bit of a putz for holding that against them, and I really couldn't articulate why this aggressive marketing was any worse in wetshaving.
About a month or two ago, a collaboration between a razor maker (which I respect and have two custom razors from) and a somewhat mainstream shaving vendor put out a product I was interested in. The product was well presented and in line with what the razor makers typically produces. I went to the shave forums and youtubers to actually see the product and to get their "collective" opinions on the razor since it was new. I use the word "collective" very loosely because you need to take opinions with lots and lots of salt.
That's where things kinda went off the rails for me since review after review everyone had gotten the item for free. At the time, I actually could not find a review where someone had in fact invested their own money in the product, tried it, and gave it the thumbs down or up. Yes there is the "buyer buy in" element, but wetshavers are a pretty good group that we generally come clean when we make questionable purchases, and collectively laugh at them.
At the end of the day I didn't buy the item because I couldn't get past the "marketing piece" that put their razor in the hands of virtually every YouTuber they could find. Although I respect the razor vendour and would suggest the razor was "that good", based on my own previous purchases, the concept of being sold to in that way in a hobby that generally functions by word of mouth is different? No not really, but for the most part we have been shielded from this since the community has been traditionally small. Times are changing..so....although I've kinda answered my own question, should it really matter that a Youtuber doing a review on an item got it for free and should it carry any weight? For me it did not, but was I being too hasty and dismissive? Providing the disclaimer that they didn't purchase the item doesn't make the situation any better and when giving the item away after the review(if that's what they choose to do) do they go back and purchase? These are the things we really want to know since it speaks to the product or their credibility (hard to give a two thumbs up to a product you wouldn't spend your own money on.).
It always falls back to credibility and objectivity.
As wetshaving becomes bigger and bigger, so will mainstream marketing.
Anywho, my wife thinks I was being a bit of a putz for holding that against them, and I really couldn't articulate why this aggressive marketing was any worse in wetshaving.