Hi everyone,
What are your thoughts on this?
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/18/business/media/18adco.html
- ice
What are your thoughts on this?
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/18/business/media/18adco.html
- ice
Interesting, but don't they make plastic handles for cartridges?
I like how they resist TV ads because it will "ruin the mystique of the brand'. More like they don't want your average Joe finding a way to shave cheaply with a DE instead of carts. As soon as you get your average guy looking into and thinking about shaving rather than just doing what he's always done he's going to try out DE shaving and realize the cost benefit.
By keeping with targeted print advertising avenues they focus on the guys who are fine with spending $100 on a fancy fusion handle and thinking they're going "high end".
I like how they resist TV ads because it will "ruin the mystique of the brand'. More like they don't want your average Joe finding a way to shave cheaply with a DE instead of carts. As soon as you get your average guy looking into and thinking about shaving rather than just doing what he's always done he's going to try out DE shaving and realize the cost benefit.
By keeping with targeted print advertising avenues they focus on the guys who are fine with spending $100 on a fancy fusion handle and thinking they're going "high end".
the topic of shaving isnt something that guys are sitting around a bar talking to each other about, said Mr. Jones, of Procter & Gamble.
I like how they resist TV ads because it will "ruin the mystique of the brand'. More like they don't want your average Joe finding a way to shave cheaply with a DE instead of carts. As soon as you get your average guy looking into and thinking about shaving rather than just doing what he's always done he's going to try out DE shaving and realize the cost benefit.
By keeping with targeted print advertising avenues they focus on the guys who are fine with spending $100 on a fancy fusion handle and thinking they're going "high end".
I will say that the originators of the brand had it right by focusing on prep and post. If your prep and post is good a cartridge razor will usually do an ok job, albeit overpriced and leading to more landfills and waste.
Excerpt:
In his book, Accidental Branding, David Vinjamuri includes a chapter about the Art of Shaving. The book explains how the brand capitalized on the metrosexual trend popularized about a decade ago, when more men began to acknowledge exfoliating, while steering clear of the metrosexual reaction that ridiculed primping as unmanly.