I will freely admit that when I did yesterday’s cartoon, I didn’t realize that we’d fill the comment section underneath it so completely with what, essentially, is today’s cartoon’s point. It’s like you guys are psychic or something!
Improved is never about higher customer satisfaction but always about profit. If it means to be better than the competition to up the market share then the customers may benefit.
If it means better than their own product they replace then it is worse the less competition there is left. Until you have a monopoly. Then you get a mere shadow of the quality that enabled the maker to corner the market in the first place.
(1) I can’t remember the last time I saw a product that was actually labeled, “New and Improved.”
(2) Usually that label carries a further claim of what they did to improve it. Whether the improvement is real is typically a matter of opinion.
(3) My favorite meaningless label claim is “3X MORE than our 2 oz size” (where the first past is very large, and the last part is very small). This is to be found on a 6 oz spice jar in my kitchen.
They actually lose money when the product . When it builds up a following, the change to cheaper ingredients, and claim it’s new and improved. True Story.
On the other hand they just reduce the size of the container without any announcement, like many OJ containers are now less than 64oz. It allows them to appear cheaper than their competitors who havent (yet) reduces their sizes.
ATGMer almost 4 years ago
It means there’s less and it costs more. That way you get fewer consumer complaints by calling it new and improved.
Lucy Rudy almost 4 years ago
It is never improved. They should keep their mouths shut – first thing I check is weight, then what ingredients changed.
Shirl Summ Premium Member almost 4 years ago
And ruin the taste.
Doctor Toon almost 4 years ago
Sometimes the only change is the look of the packaging
Its all marketing , and it works
Ive seen product in a new and more attractive packaging nearly double in sales with no other difference I know of
Qiset almost 4 years ago
My wife often buys things that say “new” on them.
gregcartoon Premium Member almost 4 years ago
I will freely admit that when I did yesterday’s cartoon, I didn’t realize that we’d fill the comment section underneath it so completely with what, essentially, is today’s cartoon’s point. It’s like you guys are psychic or something!
Mr. JRB almost 4 years ago
Thank you, thank you, very mucho lol
bigal666 almost 4 years ago
I can remember when companies made more profits by being better than all the others, not just cheaper. I’m always willing to pay for quality.
unfair.de almost 4 years ago
Improved is never about higher customer satisfaction but always about profit. If it means to be better than the competition to up the market share then the customers may benefit.
If it means better than their own product they replace then it is worse the less competition there is left. Until you have a monopoly. Then you get a mere shadow of the quality that enabled the maker to corner the market in the first place.
jscarff57 Premium Member almost 4 years ago
Sometimes “new and improved” means that they got a new advertising agency…
rhpii almost 4 years ago
New Coke https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=83T34Za1ls0
car2ner almost 4 years ago
I always figured if the product was so good before why did they need to improve it? Were they selling us inadequate products all this time?
Alberta Oil Premium Member almost 4 years ago
A smaller box.. with less inside. Improved for the shareholders
paullp Premium Member almost 4 years ago
It means the previous version was old and lousy (with a nod to Mike Stivic — aka Rob Reiner — of All in the Family).
paullp Premium Member almost 4 years ago
Some observations:
(1) I can’t remember the last time I saw a product that was actually labeled, “New and Improved.”
(2) Usually that label carries a further claim of what they did to improve it. Whether the improvement is real is typically a matter of opinion.
(3) My favorite meaningless label claim is “3X MORE than our 2 oz size” (where the first past is very large, and the last part is very small). This is to be found on a 6 oz spice jar in my kitchen.
Ren Rodee almost 4 years ago
She broke the code!
Old Man River almost 4 years ago
They actually lose money when the product . When it builds up a following, the change to cheaper ingredients, and claim it’s new and improved. True Story.
Bill Löhr Premium Member almost 4 years ago
On the other hand they just reduce the size of the container without any announcement, like many OJ containers are now less than 64oz. It allows them to appear cheaper than their competitors who havent (yet) reduces their sizes.
MCProfessor almost 4 years ago
Actually, that’s pretty true.