Friday, January 27, 2012

The Quality of Personal Care Products Today

The quality of personal care products, including electric razors, tooth brushes, waterjet floss, nose trimmers, and many of others alike, is significantly poor. In the past few, years I personally spent several hundreds of dollars on innovation products instead of traditional devices, and they have not responded to my expectation in terms of durability or reliability, regardless of their functionality and usability. Besides, returning, exchanging the product, or getting a refund seems to be a time-consuming task, for which you must have the money to afford a backup device or go buy the traditional goods already inflated in price. I believe that these products are apparently all made in the USA, so there is no need to blame a foreign country for their lack of quality.  Thus, one needs to keep the traditional dental floss yarn at hand just in case one's waterjet breaks.
Besides, my final point is that trying to make a company more profitable should not convey the process of abasing the quality of their products, since this will have not only an impact on the consumer's willingness to buy but also on the consumer confidence on the basis of a return on investment as utility or personal satisfaction. If you extended this perception on other productlines, certainly the sense of social responsibility is being neglected for pure profitability.