David Vinjamuri    david@brandtrainers.com

David Vinjamuri is adjunct Professor of Marketing at NYU and President of ThirdWay Brand Trainers, a leading brand marketing training company. David has over 18 years of marketing and management experience. David started his career at Johnson & Johnson and Coca-Cola in brand management and marketing. David has also led marketing groups at DoubleClick, Save.com and a major private label manufacturer. He is a graduate of Swarthmore College and the Fletcher School of Law & Diplomacy and studied marketing and manufacturing at Harvard Business School.

David writes and speaks frequently on marketing. He is editor and lead reviewer for the ThirdWay Advertising Blog, a Google® top five search pick for “Advertising Blog.” He has been the featured guest lecturer on the Queen Mary 2 and contributes regularly to Advertising Express. David’s 2004 article on branding called “What’s in a Name,” in the Journal for Nonprofit Management has helped to spark renewed interest in branding among nonprofits. David’s book on entrepreneurial branding will be published by John Wiley & Sons in 2008.


COMMENTARY: Gillette Fusion Performs as Predicted

fusion.jpgIssue: Consumers Balk at the High Price of Fusion
Commentary by: David

There is a certain trepidation that a critic feels when challenging a huge brand. Especially when that brand has just been validated by the one of the largest and most successful brand factories. But such was the case last September when we challenged Gillette Fusion and the pricing and product strategy behind this new razor. This month in BusinessWeek, our challenge was validated by Robert Berner and William Symonds.

Our argument in a nutshell was that Gillette had created a monopoly in the shaving business (which had evolved into a minor duopoly when Schick regained some luster with the Quattro) where pricing increases over a decade had far exceeded the innovation delivered to the consumer. For all but the most affluent consumers, the marginal increases in shaving closeness delivered by each successive generation of Gillette razor have been outweighed by hefty price increases in the vicinity of 30%. And don’t try buying in bulk. For years, Gillette has been one of the few companies which reverse prices razor blades, making it more expensive per unit to buy 8 than 4. But inertia and residual brand loyalty kept people coming back and bolstered the stock price, netting former CEO Jim Kilts an absolute fortune when Procter & Gamble acquired Gillette last year.

Now consumers are starting to react. According to Berner & Symonds, sales have been disappointing in spite of a record level of spending behind the brand:

For all that, Citigroup analyst Wendy Nicholson figures that Fusion’s market-share growth has been far weaker than what Gillette saw after the Mach3 and M3Power launches. Mach3’s U.S. market share, excluding Wal-Mart and warehouse-club stores, rose from 6.6% in the launch quarter to 11.7% in the second full quarter, she figures. But Fusion’s has hardly budged, from 10.6% in the launch quarter to 10.8% in the second, she adds. “Given that (the Fusion launch) included two Fusion products, we would have hoped that the initial shares would have been considerably higher,” she writes in a recent report.

From the perspective of this advertising blog, this reaction is nothing more than marketing karma balancing the scales. Gillette took advantage of consumers for too long, increase margin and complicating the product in marginally useful ways. Now consumers are reacting. Unfortunately, many of those who created this mess have already cashed out. We pray that the rest will work hard to add real value to this category.

2 Responses to “COMMENTARY: Gillette Fusion Performs as Predicted”

  1. Un blog sobre cómo llamar a las cosas | Impresiones, el Blog de Javier Velilla Says:

    […] 2. La palabra de moda: Fusion (o justamente lo contrario). Aseguran que hasta 63 marcas estadounidenses emplean la palabra ‘Fusion’, desde Flavia Fusion, Maxtor Fusion, Ford Fusion, Gillette Fusion (un interesante análisis aquí)… Este concepto de ‘dosenuno’ es ya un lugar común. Name Development critica el uso de este término: “in many cases, I don’t think Fusion communicates the benefit to the consumer, nor does the name reflect a unique and ownable brand strategy”. […]

  2. CTW Says:

    Gillete is just screwing over men who absolutely need to shave everyday. Why do I say this? Gee…lets see, they created the Fusion razor and added a few more blades and an extra trimmer…and the result? A HORRIBLE SHAVE!!!

    That’s right the fusion sucks, I only use the Mach3…and it is still expensive. just recently Gillete switched the packaging from 4-packs to 5-packs and jacked up the price. The difference in the price was definetely not proportional to the “value” of that one blade. Gillete spends probably 50 cents on a 5 pack and $2 on marketing, and sells the product for $11. This is pathetic…and it definetely is a monopoly because Schick does not pose any competition to the far more advertised Gillette products.

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