I have used my own CPOPed soaps right after I cut them. They are "useable", but I would never sell them without a full cure, or even give them away to my friends. There will always be sellers who see dollar signs as more important than people. But if you make great soap, and are honest with your customers, you will grow a loyal customer base who know and love your product and can't live without it. If you make a great product, there's no need to stretch the truth. And if you do stretch it, sooner or later someone will call you out, and it's very hard to regain customer's trust once you've lost it. It's so much easier to just do the right thing.
Indeed. I don't know whether she has repeat customers (people who don't know that soap can be better than that?), but I'd think it would be difficult to make a living selling soap if you didn't have repeat customers.
Hi jbot, I agree with those who say this is probably M&P mixed with goats milk, and then dehydrated.
ppl add all sort of additives to melt and pour, and goats milk is no exception at all.
Did she not have an ingredients list, I thought that by latin the USA a seller needs to have one, but I don't really know?
She does. Soybean oil, coconut oil, goat's milk, palm oil.
I don't sell my soap, so I would tell everyone. Repeatedly. But, yes, I get your point. Anyone that does sell soap would certainly be wise to keep it a secret.
I've thought about this a lot as I've wondered if I could ever get her to tell me what she's doing. (She won't, pretty sure of that.) I actually think I would share the secret, even though I do plan to sell in the future, and here's why: it has no bearing on how good your recipe is, how good your soap smells, or how pretty it is. It's purely a matter of time. Assuming equal quality, it makes no difference (to me) whether I have to cure my soap for 4-6 weeks or can sell it right away.
Seriously, what's the rush? Maybe it would matter for the first month or two, but after that, you should have plenty of cured soap available for sale while the fresh stuff cures, and as long as you maintain your pipeline, it shouldn't be a problem to wait.
If I had a huge operation, perhaps the amount of space it takes to cure a lot of soap for 6 weeks would make a difference, but if I had business that big, presumably I would also have the space.
Then again, easy for me to say, right? I've never been in that position.