Sneaky Ways Companies Are Getting You To Pay More For Less
When I was a kid my mother would occasionally buy a gallon
of ice cream. YUM. Today the gallon of ice cream is pretty much
gone. What was once considered the
standard has gotten smaller. The new
standard of ice cream measurement is three quarts. It happened slowly and very little noise was
made about it.
Here’s how it all went down.
Prices for ice cream slowly were creeping up. Ice cream sales were slowly falling down
because of the higher prices. Then some
genius at one of the companies making ice cream came up with the idea of
downsizing the container and dropping the price a little bit. Consumers took the bait and the next thing
you knew ice cream sales were on the rise.
The company was smart. They
promoted the new lower price and never mentioned the new smaller size
package.
Other businesses took notice and now smaller product sizes
with the same prices are more the rule than the exception. Take for example, my Barbasol Shaving
Cream. A few years ago it was a 12 oz.
can for 99 cents. Then it went to an 11
oz. can for the same price. Today that
can is now 10 oz. for a penny less than a buck.
I know somebody is going to say to me, “Hey, it’s only an ounce or
two.” Yep – that’s right. But think
about it from the company’s point of view.
In every case of 12 cans sold 1 can was almost pure profit.
Here’s an even better example that was mostly kept under the
radar. H.J. Heinz, the ketchup people,
pulled a trick that made them untold amounts of money. Back in the days of glass bottles of ketchup,
somebody at Heinz came up with an illegal profit making gimmick. They put 7 ounces of ketchup in a bottle
labeled 8 ounces. Unfortunately for
them, they got caught.
Here’s how it all came down.
A woman was carefully following a recipe that called for 8 ounces of
ketchup. She got out a new 8 ounce
bottle of Heinz and dumped it into a measuring cup. Much to her surprise there was only 7
ounces. She checked another new bottle
only to find 7 ounces. She went to the
store and bought another one only to get the same amount. She realized that every 7 or 8 bottles sold
Heinz was getting a free bottle to sell.
She also realized, as a consumer, she was getting ripped off. She notified the Federal Trade Commission who
pulled an inspection on the plant. Heinz
quickly confessed to the sin, paid a huge fine, and quickly swept a potential
public relations nightmare under the carpet.
In the agreement Heinz did NOT
have to tell how long they were doing it or if any other products were
involved. By not having to disclose how
long that practice took place there is the potential that the company’s profits
FAR exceeded the imposed fine. That
being the case they could do it again in the future.
At the beginning of this I mentioned toilet paper. Toilet paper is manufactured in a paper conversion
factory. Toilet paper is made in logs
and then cut down to individual rolls.
It only takes about 8 to 10 seconds to roll a log of toilet paper. By adjusting the roll width by ½ inch you
could squeeze an extra roll out of each log.
The factory could make an additional 4 roll pack in less than 45
seconds. Now let’s assume this is only
50 cents a minute in additional profit. If
the company had 5 toilet paper lines with 20 hours running time per line per
day the yearly profit increase would be $109,500.
This next item I am about to share with you is a sneaky way
an insurance company can raise the price of your premium. You may have seen this advertisement on
television, where a representative of the company says the price of the
insurance is only $9.95 per unit and guaranteed never to go up. WOW, what an attractive offer, your price is
guaranteed for ever and ever to remain the same. Think about that. While you are thinking, remember the old
adage, if it sounds too good to be true it probably is. Have you figured out the catch yet? If not, let me help you. The ‘Catch 22’ is in the use of the word “unit”. The size of a unit is subject to change, and
it’s pretty safe to say, the size of the unit will go down while the price
remains the same, which in turn equals a back door price increase. Oh, if this sounds a lot like the ice cream
size gimmick I mentioned at the beginning, it’s because it’s the same. Same price with a new smaller container.
In a previous blog, I mentioned the ever increasing world
FEEs. Here is the link to that blog goo.gl/M4bXk.
The world of the fee is a league of its own for varied and unlimited
price increases.
I’ve heard the argument, “I don’t worry about price increases. It’s usually just a few cents.” In some cases it actually is only just a
few cents, but as any smart businessperson knows a few cents here and there
add up to dollars and a few dollars here and there add up to big dollars.
That is the reason smart business people watch the
pennies. Pennies can translate in
millions of bucks for a big company.
Pennies at the consumer level may not appear to be much,
however, that’s far from the truth. Your
pennies add up too.
Think about this as an example - postage stamps were one
time only two cents each. Today, a postage
stamp is currently $.46 and climbing. During
the day of the two penny stamp 1000 stamps would’ve cost you $20. Today the same 1000 stamps would cost you a
whopping $460, which is more than the cost of my car insurance for the entire
year. So there you have it, your pennies
do matter.
Someday when you have extra time, just for fun, count the
sheets on a new roll of toilet paper. I
sincerely hope you’re not surprised at what you find.
© Krystalco LLC 2013 Any publication or reuse of the information on this blog, in part or
whole, without express written consent is prohibited.
© Krystalco LLC 2013 Any publication or reuse of the information on this blog, in part or
whole, without express written consent is prohibited.
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