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marketdoctor wrote:If it's early enough, this can happen even if the products are very clearly labeled. :-S.Early in the morning (when you're probably still half-asleep), accidentally making a bowl of corn flakes and orange juice is distinctly undelicious.


Gelsamel wrote:If you punch him in the face repeatedly then it's science.
Invisiblemoose wrote:Muffinman42 wrote:I think what most people are missing is that the products which stand out the most and as such have the most brand awareness is the bland white ones. The irony being that for all the pictures and cleaver names, nothing beats black on white contrast and state-the-obvious naming. It would stick in peoples mind and would link all your products in peoples heads, so once they try one out they feel confident trying other products.
Look at the shelf and try to identify what some of the products are. I couldn't get any other than the white ones with names.
What you're clearly missing is that those aren't real brands -- they're incredibly cluttered, shit brands that Randall devised to make a point that everybody already knows.
marketdoctor wrote:Although the marketing can be on the order of 50% of a product*, you can find how much is the cost of the brand for store brands vs. name brands of products where they're virtually identical, such as for aspirin or paper towels. Sometimes there IS a quality difference, so buying store brands when you can't tell the difference, and name brands when you can, saved my family enough over a few years to pay for the computer for this post.
Offering a generic product as a high-end brand is a bold strategy, and I like it.
MathUhhhSaurus wrote:but Walmart pretty much already does this with their "Great Value" products:
userxp wrote:I always thought that if I had to do a TV advertisement, I'd make it completely silent. The sudden change of volume would probably attract lots of attention. I'm surprised I've never seen one like this. Of course as soon as other people started doing it it'd stop being original.
ScottTFrazer wrote:Ahem. No one remembers Public Image Ltd?

FalseProphet wrote:Actually, it's the reverse. Most No Frills/No Name/generic brands are actually higher-end brands with simplified packaging. It's a form of price discrimination: the distributors know that higher income shoppers will buy the name brand, but lower income shoppers will balk at the inflated price. So they sell the same product as generic. Same principle as generic drugs.
SamSam wrote:Any evidence for that, besides generic drugs (which are a different kettle of fish)? Generic pasta sucks compared to good pasta. Generic toilet paper is scratchy and falls apart. Generic eggs are made from battery chickens. It's everyone's personal choice whether they think it's worth buying the higher-end product if they can afford it (and if they can't, it's not a choice), but what makes you think that they're actually the same product?FalseProphet wrote:Actually, it's the reverse. Most No Frills/No Name/generic brands are actually higher-end brands with simplified packaging. It's a form of price discrimination: the distributors know that higher income shoppers will buy the name brand, but lower income shoppers will balk at the inflated price. So they sell the same product as generic. Same principle as generic drugs.
Gelsamel wrote:If you punch him in the face repeatedly then it's science.
Karilyn wrote:SamSam wrote:Any evidence for that, besides generic drugs (which are a different kettle of fish)? Generic pasta sucks compared to good pasta. Generic toilet paper is scratchy and falls apart. Generic eggs are made from battery chickens. It's everyone's personal choice whether they think it's worth buying the higher-end product if they can afford it (and if they can't, it's not a choice), but what makes you think that they're actually the same product?FalseProphet wrote:Actually, it's the reverse. Most No Frills/No Name/generic brands are actually higher-end brands with simplified packaging. It's a form of price discrimination: the distributors know that higher income shoppers will buy the name brand, but lower income shoppers will balk at the inflated price. So they sell the same product as generic. Same principle as generic drugs.
False Prophet is right. It's definitely true that the low end products are often identical to a high end brand, with a different package. The only problem goes when the generic happens to be based on a high end brand that you don't like. A common one is Ketchup. Generic Ketchup is usually Hunts, not Heinz, and some people don't like Hunts. Another one is Peanut Butter, one of the few things I buy non-generic. Generic peanut butter is usually Jif or Skippy, both of which I don't like because they are too sweet and too salty, I always pick up Peter Pan as one of the few non-generics I buy.
If you're familiar with a variety of name brands, it's often not hard to figure out which name brand your generic actually is.
I was so happy when stores started carrying generic Miracle Whip. You have to keep an close eye to figure out which ones are Mayo (usually Heilman's equivalent) and which are Miracle Whip, considering they are both frequently labeled generically as Salad Dressing (who puts miracle whip or mayo on their salad?)
Karilyn wrote:False Prophet is right. It's definitely true that the low end products are often identical to a high end brand, with a different package. The only problem goes when the generic happens to be based on a high end brand that you don't like. A common one is Ketchup. Generic Ketchup is usually Hunts, not Heinz, and some people don't like Hunts. Another one is Peanut Butter, one of the few things I buy non-generic. Generic peanut butter is usually Jif or Skippy, both of which I don't like because they are too sweet and too salty, I always pick up Peter Pan as one of the few non-generics I buy.
If you're familiar with a variety of name brands, it's often not hard to figure out which name brand your generic actually is.
I was so happy when stores started carrying generic Miracle Whip. You have to keep an close eye to figure out which ones are Mayo (usually Heilman's equivalent) and which are Miracle Whip, considering they are both frequently labeled generically as Salad Dressing (who puts miracle whip or mayo on their salad?)
SamSam wrote:Karilyn wrote:False Prophet is right. It's definitely true that the low end products are often identical to a high end brand, with a different package. The only problem goes when the generic happens to be based on a high end brand that you don't like. A common one is Ketchup. Generic Ketchup is usually Hunts, not Heinz, and some people don't like Hunts. Another one is Peanut Butter, one of the few things I buy non-generic. Generic peanut butter is usually Jif or Skippy, both of which I don't like because they are too sweet and too salty, I always pick up Peter Pan as one of the few non-generics I buy.
If you're familiar with a variety of name brands, it's often not hard to figure out which name brand your generic actually is.
I was so happy when stores started carrying generic Miracle Whip. You have to keep an close eye to figure out which ones are Mayo (usually Heilman's equivalent) and which are Miracle Whip, considering they are both frequently labeled generically as Salad Dressing (who puts miracle whip or mayo on their salad?)
You seem to be contradicting yourself. If the generics are the same as the high-end brands, then why are you saying that the ketchup, penut butter, miracle whip and whatever aren't as good as the high-end brands? I guess what you're saying is that generics are often the same as the cheapest name brands. Generic ketchup is the same as (the cheaper ketchup) Hunts, generic peanut butter is the same as (the cheaper peanut butter) Jif, etc.
For the most part, you're probably right there -- if you're going to buy Hunts, you may as well save an extra penny and buy Walmart brand or whatever.
FalseProphet, however, was suggesting that the no-frills brands were actually putting the same product as the higher-end brands into their packages. While I agree that Walmart ketchup probably tastes like Hunts ketchup, I haven't seen any evidence that they're getting them from the same factory.
SamSam wrote:You seem to be contradicting yourself. If the generics are the same as the high-end brands, then why are you saying that the ketchup, penut butter, miracle whip and whatever aren't as good as the high-end brands? I guess what you're saying is that generics are often the same as the cheapest name brands. Generic ketchup is the same as (the cheaper ketchup) Hunts, generic peanut butter is the same as (the cheaper peanut butter) Jif, etc.Karilyn wrote:False Prophet is right. It's definitely true that the low end products are often identical to a high end brand, with a different package. The only problem goes when the generic happens to be based on a high end brand that you don't like. A common one is Ketchup. Generic Ketchup is usually Hunts, not Heinz, and some people don't like Hunts. Another one is Peanut Butter, one of the few things I buy non-generic. Generic peanut butter is usually Jif or Skippy, both of which I don't like because they are too sweet and too salty, I always pick up Peter Pan as one of the few non-generics I buy.
If you're familiar with a variety of name brands, it's often not hard to figure out which name brand your generic actually is.
I was so happy when stores started carrying generic Miracle Whip. You have to keep an close eye to figure out which ones are Mayo (usually Heilman's equivalent) and which are Miracle Whip, considering they are both frequently labeled generically as Salad Dressing (who puts miracle whip or mayo on their salad?)
For the most part, you're probably right there -- if you're going to buy Hunts, you may as well save an extra penny and buy Walmart brand or whatever.
FalseProphet, however, was suggesting that the no-frills brands were actually putting the same product as the higher-end brands into their packages. While I agree that Walmart ketchup probably tastes like Hunts ketchup, I haven't seen any evidence that they're getting them from the same factory.



Gelsamel wrote:If you punch him in the face repeatedly then it's science.
DaveInsurgent wrote:We tend to eat instant potatoes a lot, and Idahoan are way better than No-Name. Sure there's an element of preference to everything... we buy 90% brand name items, perhaps 95%, and our family of 4 spends $800 a month on groceries. I think that is pretty reasonable. We buy things on sale, and I always check the $/item ratio. You have to watch out for cheap no-name products selling you 0.8 units for a small price difference. Yes, you're saving 15 cents, but you're getting 20% less product. If you just bought the 250 foot roll (or 500, or whatever), or the 48-pack of Eggos, etc... you'd save a lot more.
Gelsamel wrote:If you punch him in the face repeatedly then it's science.
SamSam wrote:While I agree that Walmart ketchup probably tastes like Hunts ketchup, I haven't seen any evidence that they're getting them from the same factory.
DaveInsurgent wrote:Yes, you're saving 15 cents, but you're getting 20% less product.
Karilyn wrote:DaveInsurgent wrote:We tend to eat instant potatoes a lot, and Idahoan are way better than No-Name. Sure there's an element of preference to everything... we buy 90% brand name items, perhaps 95%, and our family of 4 spends $800 a month on groceries. I think that is pretty reasonable. We buy things on sale, and I always check the $/item ratio. You have to watch out for cheap no-name products selling you 0.8 units for a small price difference. Yes, you're saving 15 cents, but you're getting 20% less product. If you just bought the 250 foot roll (or 500, or whatever), or the 48-pack of Eggos, etc... you'd save a lot more.
I'm not going to lie, I'm baffled at how you spend $200 a month on groceries per person. I'm guessing nobody in your family cooks? The suggestion of Eggos as being something you'd buy would seem to indicate that. Home-made whole-wheat waffles with fruit inside and real maple syrup, or go home. I couldn't imagine spending more than $100 a month, and I cook big meals for every meal of the day. Actually, it probably has to do with being a vegetarian. I forget how expensive meat is ($1 for a quarter pound of minced beef? That's highway robbery @_@).
I don't know why people would buy food that tastes worse and costs 4 times as much as it would simply cooking the same thing yourself. But then again, I'm kind of a foodie, so I guess my opinion can be taken with a grain of salt by a non-foodie.
Also any person looking at the price and not the price per unit is a fool. I've caught generics occasionally being more expensive per unit than the name-brands. Of course, for every time I've caught that, I've also seen a dozen generics being only 60% the price of a name-brand per unit.
DragonHawk wrote:SamSam wrote:While I agree that Walmart ketchup probably tastes like Hunts ketchup, I haven't seen any evidence that they're getting them from the same factory.DaveInsurgent wrote:Yes, you're saving 15 cents, but you're getting 20% less product.
Then you're not saving 15 cents.
DaveInsurgent wrote:Your other argument is about quality of food: you take the time to prepare things, that's great. But that's added cost. Putting an extra half hour a day of my time in to preparation would be a monthly expense of $608 of my time.
Gelsamel wrote:If you punch him in the face repeatedly then it's science.
Karilyn wrote:DaveInsurgent wrote:Your other argument is about quality of food: you take the time to prepare things, that's great. But that's added cost. Putting an extra half hour a day of my time in to preparation would be a monthly expense of $608 of my time.
That argument is always silly. What are you going to be doing with the time if you don't spend it cooking? Watching TV? Surfing the Internet? And that also implies that cooking is a chore. Personally it's a hobby for me, always coming up with new and better recipes, adjusting tweaking, making amazing new flavors. Personally I find that cooking is a great bonding time between me and my partner, but I suppose not everyone can be lucky enough to have a girl who likes cooking too. I say that if you don't have enough time to spend an hour or two cooking every day, you're probably not utilizing your time well.
Then again I don't have kids, so that might also have something to do with it. And I don't keep a TV in my house. Forces you to find better ways to spend your time.
webgrunt wrote:Karilyn wrote: I couldn't imagine spending more than $100 a month, and I cook big meals for every meal of the day.
Please provide an example of one such "big meal" including ingredients and amounts so that we could replicate it. Assuming you eat three of these big meals per day, the total for the meal must be equal to or less than $1.33.
DaveInsurgent wrote:
So you make points both about cost and about quality of food.. I'm going to address cost:
$100 per month is $1200 a year or $3.28 per day.
-- Breakfast --
(etc.)
webgrunt wrote:DaveInsurgent wrote:
So you make points both about cost and about quality of food.. I'm going to address cost:
$100 per month is $1200 a year or $3.28 per day.
-- Breakfast --
(etc.)
It would be very easy to stay within budget by not eating anything fresh, frozen, processed or canned, and buying all dried things for ingredients, like uncooked beans and rice and cooking them yourself. How cheaply can beans and rice be purchased? I suspect you could come in far enough under budget to add some fresh veggies or fruits each day. Then there's other bulk products such as quinoa, textured vegetable protein, etc.
I can see it. Now, the kids might complain, but hey, what are you going to do? You can't be spending a ridiculous two bucks or more on a meal, can you?
DaveInsurgent wrote:Not perfect math, but I don't see how you're so surprised. I don't have a lot of labels to throw around, but I guess "middle-class" comes to mind. I think we have a balance between prepared meals and free time.
AvatarIII wrote:As already stated, this would be funnier if it hadn't already been done a million times over all over the world in real life.
maybe Randall only shops at high end grocery stores?
cephalopod9 wrote:Only on Xkcd can you start a topic involving Hitler and people spend the better part of half a dozen pages arguing about the quality of Operating Systems.
just john wrote:During the "generic" fad, there were even generic novels. The one labelled "Mystery" wasn't bad, for the price.
icthulu wrote:DaveInsurgent wrote:Not perfect math, but I don't see how you're so surprised. I don't have a lot of labels to throw around, but I guess "middle-class" comes to mind. I think we have a balance between prepared meals and free time.
I was going to add a comment in this vein as well, but yours was much better. Though I disagree with your breakfast and lunch numbers, seeing that that seems like so very little in terms of caloric intake to make it through a day if you are active... It does show you shouldn't live off less than $200 per month in food expenses.
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