A few days ago at work, somebody had brought some food over
- a mix of cakes and biscuits – some own
brand and some branded. Somewhere from there a conversation began on the
difference between the two varieties. It was interesting to see the reactions
people had to this – with some like me swearing by own brand, others either
refusing to buy own brand if possible, and still others, generally ok with own
brand but not on certain specific items .
Of course, it is perfectly acceptable to have some brand
choices and choose to go with certain products over others. And as items become
more expensive, the downside of a bad decision becomes higher and the trust a
brand gives becomes more important. But on
most consumables, I genuinely believe there is very little that a brand tends
to add over the generic. There is only one product where I have consistently gone for a
brand over the generic –I would argue that my experience makes it
understandable.
I started shaving in the early 90s, when Gillette, I think
had not yet been introduced in India. The gillette readyshaver was launched
shortly afterwards but did not seem worthwhile at that time. I started working
in 2000 and, without any idea of quality, bought the sensor excel –purely on
brand. By this time the company had already launched the Mach III, at a much
higher price point but with my usual disdain for “better improved” products
sold at a premium, I went for the sensor excel. It did not disappoint- while the wiltech edge (if I remember the
name correctly) lasted me a week, the sensor excel lasted a month.
I quite happily continued with the sensor excel, happy to
pay the premium over other double edge cartridges but not willing to pay the
premium for the Mach III. In 2003, my brother visited India and he gifted me a
Mach III razor with a set of around 20 blades. I switched over when my existing
sensor excels finished and I found that each blade was lasting me 3 months or
so – much superior to the Sensor excel.
In 2007, as I got ready to leave for the UK, I closed down
my Indian credit card and used up the remaining points. Among the things I
bought was a pack of 5 sensor excel blades. The 20 Mach IIIs lasted for around
5 years and wound down at some point in 2008. By this time, Gillette had
introduced the Fusion 5 blade razors – which I viewed as a gimmick to get the
customers to pay even more. I still had the 5 sensor excels to use up so I
started using those and these were almost done by the end of 2008.
A friend of mine strongly recommended the Fusion- but I was hugely sceptical. I was happy to
pay for Gillette over a generic but not convinced of Fusion over Mach III.
After spending Christmas at his place during 2008, on the way back home, I did
need to buy new blades- either the Mach
III or the sensor excel. When about to leave his place, he again strongly urged
that I switch to Fusion. With that ringing in my ears as I went to the supermarket, I succumbed in a moment of
weakness and bought a pack of 8 fusion blades- sometime at the end of December
2008.
I am still using that pack!
I am almost at the end now – in fact, I probably will be
done with it by sometime in March. But I have used that 8 pack of blades from
December 2008 till March 2018. Admittedly when I travel on holiday I prefer
to take an electric razor rather than the Gilette. And, if I am in India, I
will often get a shave done at the barbers rather than at home. But even
adjusting for that I suspect that I have used that 8 pack of blades for more than
8 years. I don’t know if I just got an exceptional pack but I have already
bought the next 8 pack of fusion blades – whatever the premium on the
price.
Of course, this decision has involved some amount of usage
before reaching it. But that is the magic of the marketers - they have managed to convince a lot of people
that if you are paying a premium on the price, then you are getting a better
product- automatically. The refrain “you
get what you pay for” is such a common thing. The facts suggest the complete
opposite but, at least, in this country, it is widely accepted, often as gospel
truth. The evidence exists to show that this is not true but people almost seem
to be willing to be hoodwinked.
A classic example of this is vintage wines. You might have
read of the wine fraud committed by Rudy Kurniawan. But just think of it for a
minute – he replaced vintage wines with non-vintage wines and sold them as
vintage. Definitely not acceptable. But why exactly are some wines vintage and
others not - only because experts say so! Can you think of any other food
product where a third party tells you what is good and what is not. Compare say
with mangos, with their varieties of alphonso, dashera, langda, etc etc. An
expert is not going to come and tell you that you must eat alphonso and the
others are not as good. People make up their own minds and act as per their own
preferences. That resultant demand may then set price…but not an expert’s judgement.
But wine is this thing where somehow we have been sold the idea that a
vintage wine is better than a non-vintage one simply because an expert has said
so (and guess which is more expensive) .
But why are the vintage wines better and is there any
objective benchmark for that. Ok, so for some things there can’t be an
objective measurable benchmark but is there at least consistency? The answer is
no. (look at https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2013/jun/23/wine-tasting-junk-science-analysis
and some of the follow up links from there) – experts can’t agree, not just
among themselves but with their own self. A judge could rate the same wine as
excellent or good or acceptable within minutes of each decision. Studies have
shown that experts cannot even distinguish between red wine and white wine dyed
red in colour. But the industry sells itself on this basis and vintage wines
can be sold for huge amounts, because they are deemed to be better. A massive
fraud, in my opinion.
Examples like these abound where price is used to indicate
quality with no objective standard- the
same product is segmented and sold to different segments at different
prices- completely justifiable. But we
have managed to imbibe that the more expensive one is better. Interestingly
when different supermarkets sell the same product at different prices, no one
has any issue – no one is going to say that the Tropicana in Tesco is better
than the Tropicana in Sainsburys even
though one may be cheaper than the other. Similarly, when a company cuts its
own prices, we don’t immediately say it is poorer quality – it is only when we
compare it with something else that the relative price seems to impact the
quality perception. 6 years ago, Huggies wipes used to sell for around two and
a half pounds a pack. Today you get them for 80p a pack (and if you buy 10 or
12 of them, you can get them for 50p a pack- though I think the pack size has
reduced from 64 to 56).I don’t think their quality has worsened nor do I remember that people are now complaining of that. It has happened primarily because supermarket own
brand wipes are now available for 60p. But imagine the margin Huggies had
originally…and why therefore price in itself is no measure of quality.
Irrespective of brand vs generic, the other social change in
this area is one which is often discussed – the throw away culture. People
consistently buy new all the time and just get rid of old stuff. At one level,
this does not work too badly…e.g old clothes which you donate to charity inevitably are recycled… and not on
the high street. Rather they are sold in other parts of the world forming a good
bit of a roughly USD5 bn second-hand garment trade that spans the globe (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-30227025,
https://www.theguardian.com/sustainable-business/sustainable-fashion-blog/2015/feb/13/second-hand-clothes-charity-donations-africa)
. But while UK exports around USD 600 m of second hand clothes, around
USD 200m goes to land fill. Similarly, the UK throws away USD8bn of white goods
every year which can be repaired. . But unfortunately that 8bn does not get repaired
or even recycled, it gets thrown away.
Part of the problem of course is that repair is often so
expensive that it does not make economic sense to do so. I am sure there is a
model whereby old stuff can be exchanged for a cut off the new price and parts
from the old piece can be reused. We have always had a similar model for cars
and we see it for stuff like laptops and phones but somehow it does not seem to
exist for washing machines and dishwashers and microwave ovens and so on. I don’t
know why. But while it might be difficult for an individual to repair a washing
machine, it is not that difficult to mend/salvage clothes which cannot be
donated to charity, probably because of a rip or some such thing, but which could
still be mended/salvaged. But nobody will do it…because mending clothes is so
infra-dig and uncool. Much easier to just throw it away and buy new ones.
And the most amazing thing of this all – if you are a person
who is particular of these sort of issues – who prefers to mend things rather
than throw them away, who waits to buy on a deal rather than pay full price,
who is happy to shop around to buy at the lowest price- socially we have reached
the stage where that is now seen as stingy and mean and niggardly. It is no
longer socially acceptable to be able to say that you buy consumables on price…because
that, by definition, means that you are willing to accept low quality…even if
that is not the case. It has taken many years for Aldi and Lidl to become even
semi-acceptable and even now a lot of people I know will not be willing to accept
buying anything from Poundland…even if it’s the same items as that you would
get at Tesco or Sainsbury’s.
Of course, the data does not reflect that…Aldi’s and Lidl’s market
share keeps rising, the other supermarket’s shares keep falling and for 2017 Aldi
topped the Which supermarket ratings with Lidl coming in at 3- suggesting a
high degree of hypocrisy. Which of course, makes the initial point moot…maybe people
do buy generic stuff, in spite of whatever they say. They just refuse to own up
to it.
Ultimately, all individuals will decide on their own buying
patterns – if you want to buy a more expensive product, that is perfectly
acceptable – just as I do with Gillette. If however, you believe that a more
expensive product is automatically better quality, then I would urge you to
think again. And if you think someone buying a cheaper product is being stingy,
you might want to consider that it is possible that they genuinely just like
that product better. And please, please get the notion out of your head that
you get what you pay for…instead remember that you pay what you are willing to
pay for!