Carl
Well-Known Member
I've been doing a lot of analysis of the soap business lately. I have purchased multiple bars from local craft shows/soap shops and from Etsy. Because I was just curious about what other people are doing and how they go about doing it. I've compared my knowledge of soaping (things I've learned from this site, reading several books, and personal experience) to what I see and the real world.
And my conclusion is: There are a lot of sellers that are just flat out liars.
Let me start
And these are people that are selling a lot of soap at the top of the Etsy search results etc.
Of all the bars that I tested as a "Competitive Analysis," I must admit that they were all really nice bars of soap. It's just the misleading marketing that gets me!
There's my rant, LOL.
Thanks for listening
And my conclusion is: There are a lot of sellers that are just flat out liars.
Let me start
- Not 1 bar that I had purchased weighed what it said on the label. NOT ONE! The 5.0 oz bar weighted 4.3 ounces. All the 4.5 oz bars were in the high 3's with exception to 1 which was 4.1.
- People sell their soap labeled as "All Natural" when it contains Fragrance Oils and Mica powders. This is very common.
- Most people don't list out the entire ingredient list like they should. They just put Mica on the label, but they don't break it down into "Polyerster-3, Tin Dioxide, etc."
- People make medicinal claims about their soap all the time; cures dry skin; cures eczema, and everything else. They even call it dry skin soap.
- I spoke to one girl who sells only hot process. Her reasoning is that there is no cure time, so she can put it up for sale immediately.
And these are people that are selling a lot of soap at the top of the Etsy search results etc.
Of all the bars that I tested as a "Competitive Analysis," I must admit that they were all really nice bars of soap. It's just the misleading marketing that gets me!
There's my rant, LOL.
Thanks for listening