YUEI: Less is Less
Monday, March 16, 2009
Your shampoo bottle smaller? Your Doritos bag fuller? Tod Marks(aka "Tightwad Tod"), senior projects editor at Consumer Reports, explains how companies are adjusting product sizes and marketing in the new economy.
Have you noticed and product size changes or other marketing tricks? Comment below!
Comments [42]
More cost per pound is bad enough.
Rather than eating less, how many must open two of the smaller packages where one would suffice before. Ten ounces of tuna where 7 was just fine. Or two candy bars (and three and...).
Have they tried to downsize the "2-liter" soda yet? 68..65 .. 62 ....
the 50-cent bag of Wise buttered popcorn has shrunk :-(
btw, Ian from Brooklyn, at Grand Food Market (crnr Grand and Crosby in SoHo), the 20-oz sodas are $1.25.
Scott Toilet Paper Tissue. There are still 1,000 4.5x3.7 sheets/roll, BUT they are now so thin you can literally read a newspaper through them.
Bernardo --
Kimono Microthin Large
All the more reason to buy in bulk!
A 7oz. can of tuna is now 6oz or 5 1/2 oz.
Friskies Can Cat Food is now a "pate" (whatever that means) and it just "plops" out of the can, no spoon needed (less food)
RE: suki from williamsburg "I think they're doing us a favor..."
Regardless of the argument whether Americans eat too much I don't think it's doing us a favor providing less of a product (falsely advertised as a pint, etc.) for the same prices.
Contrary to what you say..." Less is More..." Perhaps this will help reduce waste and the 'super size' factor in obesity by only purchasing what you need- similar to Europe.
A long time ago, Burger King reduced the size (in diameter) of the Whopper.
plastic bottles have gotten thinner. this allows bottle makers to reduce the amount of plastic resin they buy. Yet the cost of bottled products hasnt changed.
bars of dial soap !!! the back has been carved out, it fits in my hand like a handle, not a rectangular bar of soap
I noticed yesterday at Fairway in Red Hook that the most expensive cheeses are now priced by the 1/4 lb., not by the lb.
Also check out the tuna fish. They're adding more water! Once you squeeze it all out you end up with half a can.
Thx,
John
Besides changing package sizes, I believe manufacturers are reformulating the product to make it flow more easily. Your opening caller mentioned this for shampoo, and I've noticed it for toothpaste, where changing the size of the orifice would be noticed.
Tropicana 16 oz box carton is now 14oz
they also make boxes and a bottle now
Tropicana 16oz cartons are now 14oz. They also changed the label to distract consumers.
yeah! i loved that coordinated all-brand tuna can downsizing this fall.
MY FAVORITE is the package that gets hollow from the Bottom! that is getting out of control. I just got a hummus package that is hilarious.
These are all good reasons to buy whole foods (not necessarily as in the the supermarket, but in the term). They are sold by WEIGHT.
Shrinking juice bottles for higher prices: portable V-8 juice sold in plastic bottles in the corner deli was originally 16 oz. for $1.20 and now the bottles have been reduced to 12 oz. and the prices are now $1.99!
Tuna Fish which prices have risen lately,
has a nicely wrapped in plastic 4 pack
still a hefty price but a lot less than 4 6 ounce cans, but when you open it up at home you notice these 4 cans are 5 ounces not 6 and this not labled anywhere on the 4 pack deal
the 12 oz pound of coffee has been around for years
Haha, while everyone in the city pays $1.75 to #2.00 for a Coca Cola 20oz soda, we in the outer boros still pay .50 for Tropical Fantasy Soda bottles by the Broklyn Bottling Company.
My Stonyfield low-fat plain yogurt container was partly empty -- filed only to about 1/2 inch from the top.
The grocery "SHRINK RAY"! we love consumerist.com, always reporting on this topic - a website owned by consumer reports.
I think the grocers are taking the bunches of spinach and kale and the like and splitting them in half but selling them for the same price.
I also note the bottom of jars are now domed, so it looks like you are buying the same size but actually you are not.
This is decades old, but you may appreciate Stephen Jay Gould's "Phyletic Size Decrease in Hershey Bars", found in his collection Hen's Teeth and Horses' Toes. Discusses price and size changes from 1949 through 1979.
This was collected along with his sadness
about the Red Sox. Have hope!
Is Haagen Daz really calling 14 ounces a pint? Wouldn't that be illegal? A pint is defined by the Bureau of Standards, isn't it?
Has anyone else noticed condoms have shrunk as well? Latex is money, like everything else.
Regarding beer size. High end beers, especially from other countries has been 11.2 ounces forever. It the typical 33cl size sold in most countries outside US.
I wish, however, that they would shrink the excess packaging that is a part of so many contemporary consumer goods. They could lower packaging costs and help the environment by limiting the sheer amount of plastic in packaging. (I try to buy as many things in bulk as I can)
I think they're doing us a favor. Americans eat ENTIRELY too much.
I opened a box of Ritz crackers on Friday and the cracker has shrunk in diameter.
Can't say if this is exactly new or not, but the shaving gel, Edge Gel, comes out very fast and you end up wasting a lot.
I swear my tortilla chips have gotten flatter...
Cereal boxes are shrinking SO MUCH! prices are SO HIGH!
My cereal boxes look the same size on the supermarket shelf, but when you pick them up you notice they are much skinnier from front to back.
All brands of canned tuna have gone from 6 to 5 ounces, while the price per can has risen about 50 cents.
When I tear open that bag of Doritos what I'm craving is 3.5z of good ole' American GMO corn, liquified, reformed and double salted. What I'm NOT craving is amateurishly molded particle-board dust.
Conclusion: If they have to cut let them cut quantity, not quality.
A half gallon (64 oz) container of supermarket ice cream (think Breyers or Turkey Hill) is now 56 or 48 ounces, but the price is the same. A bar of Dove soap used to be 4.75 oz, but now it's 4.25 oz (same price). Detergent, fabric softener, breakfast cereal - the list goes on and on. I'm waiting for a carton of a dozen eggs that contains only 8 or 10 eggs.
candy bars have shrunk in half(the size of an index finger) and are $1.50.
Interesting, too, that "just noticeable differences" (or the lack of them) are now a marketing tool: "Ben and Jerry's Calls Out Haagen-Dazs on Shrinkage"http://adage.com/article?article_id=135126
Leave a Comment
Register for your own account so you can vote on comments, save your favorites, and more. Learn more.
Please stay on topic, be civil, and be brief.
Email addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments. Names are displayed with all comments. We reserve the right to edit any comments posted on this site. Please read the Comment Guidelines before posting. By leaving a comment, you agree to New York Public Radio's Privacy Policy and Terms Of Use.