Has anyone besides me seen the Dr. Squatch commercials on YouTube? I think whoever came up with that ad campaign was brilliant.
It is a soap company. They make man bars I believe....What is Dr Squatch ? American I presume.
I remember that! I think of it every time i see the commercial, right before I hit "Skip this ad"Didn't Dr. Squatch try to sue someone here? Saying the member's packaging/labelling was too similar to their own?
...runs off to search...
...yes, they did try to sue someone here. The claim was ridiculous, so I can't help but associate them with that incident. Makes me wonder how many people they sued or tried to sue to get where they are today.
Sorry for being so cynical.
I just about fell of my chair in incredulous laughter when one gal read 'sodium chloride" off a competitor ingredient list, complaining in her very next breath about words she can't even pronounce, and then in the following scene a guy reads the 'all natural' ingredients off of a Dr. Squatch soap, one of of which was "sea salt".
What is Dr Squatch ? American I presume.
I was really impressed when I read that article. After reading this thread today, I went back to the 2017 thread by wetshavingproducts and saw that he claimed Dr. Squatch is just re-selling soap made by the soap guy! Not to impressed anymore. (when seeing that picture from the paper, I couldn't understand how he was making that much soap in his garage - and now I know "how" he did it! )
Actually, it's very impressive because it shows the importance of marketing. As to rest of what you said...:shaking head:
First, that claim sounds like sour grapes which is not uncommon.
Second, no he is not making soap out of the garage pictured in the article. Common sense aside that there is no way someone could manufacture, cure and distribute 1500-2000 soaps a day from the space in the pictured: 1) The caption on the picture clearly states that it is his 'soap lab'. 2) If you go to the 5th paragraph, it says that his soap is manufactured in Indiana and North Carolina.
The original poster commented soon after Squatch threatened legal action over labeling. He was a lawyer himself, so I would assume he found enough info on Squatch to state his claim accurately.
I did a little checking; I compared the ingredient list of The Soap Guy's soaps (not easy to find, either) and compared to Squatch, and they don't match up. So I figure 3 things are possible; Squatch has The Soap Guy use a special recipe that TSG doesn't mass produce for the typical buyer, the recipe has changed, it was never TSG's soaps they sold.
I'm still disappointed that "local boy made good" (I'm also from San Diego) isn't as good as I thought - meaning...he built from the ground up, including making his own product. But yes, credit is due for finding an unserved niche, and marketing.
Just because he's a lawyer, doesn't mean he's accurate. It just means he knows how to word things without facing a libel suit.
TheGecko said:While I haven't found anything to suggest that TSG manufacture anything but their own products for private labeling, would it matter if they did? I have a friend who has a company that sells makeup and skin care; when she first started out she made and packaged everything herself. Then she sent her recipes to a company that manufacturer to produce them in bulk. Eventually she moved on to a manufacturer that could produce and package her products. They are still the same products that she produced in her kitchen.
TheGecko said:He's not...at the time of the article, he had only been living in SD for a couple of years.
Enter your email address to join: