Ariel - in a new gel format!

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rolls_rapide

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I spied a new tv advert tonight, featuring silhouettes of the powder, tablet and liqui-tab boxes. The camera panned past them all, settling upon an illuminated, curvy oval-shaped bottle of green liquid. It looked not unlike a shower-gel bottle.

There was no name on the bottle, only a slogan of "Brrr-illiant..." at the bottom of the screen. I presumed it was to do with P&G's 'Ariel'. Sure enough...

"Procter & Gamble (P&G) is gearing up to launch flagship laundry brand Ariel in a next generation gel format. The new product will be backed by a major marketing push, as P&G stages a fightback against Unilever’s successful launch of Persil Small & Mighty concentrated sub-brand last year.

It is understood the new product will have a consistency similar to a shower gel. It is due to hit shelves in September and marks Ariel’s entry into the compact detergent market, as the battle for the environmentally-cons-cious consumer gathers pace.

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It is thought the Ariel gel will be dispensed into the washing machine drawer from a container with a nozzle reminiscent of a squeezable ketchup container, which will move it away from individually packaged measures.

P&G has been at the forefront of “green” initiatives in the laundry sector with its Future Friendly labelling scheme but has yet to launch any specifically eco-friendly products under the Ariel brand.

Despite spending over £12m on Ariel’s “Turn to 30°” campaign, which green campaigners say could potentially have a massive positive impact on the environment, the investment did not see the brand return to growth.

Since 2005, Ariel’s market share has fallen from 21% to 18%, according to Mintel. The combined effects of Persil Small & Mighty and significant growth in P&G’s supposedly secondary brand, Bold 2-in-1, has caused erosion to its brand share.

Bold’s market share leapt from 15% to 18% in the same period. The brand now accounts for a similar share of the market to Ariel."

source: Mad.co.uk & Marketing Week

 
I've seen this too! I was really intregued. Seeing how it says Hot, warm, cool & cold as it pans across the different shaped bottles, i thought that this was a cold detergent, though it is probably suitable for cold and will most likely have a huge push of hotpoints new cold temperature eco cycles. Which i can think of nothing worse.

Still i'm excited to see a new ariel product! I love ariel!

Darren
 
I saw it again tonight...

and realised I made a slight error: there wasn't a powder packet silhouette, but a conventional liquid bottle silhouette, before they showed the new gel bottle.

I would love Ariel too, if only they would get rid of the overpowering floral perfumes in it. Maybe that is why Ariel's sales dropped, and Bold's have increased.
 
What Need...

...Is there of this? It seems that manufacturers have nothing better to do than tinker with perfectly satisfactory products in an effort to get us to buy more. I notice that this "new" product moves Ariel away from being pre-measured, which probably has a lot to do with the introduction. Putting it in a squeezy bottle will cause a lot of people to over-dose, which will of course boost sales.

I must be the most out-of-touch consumer on the planet, wanting only my old favourites to continue unchanged.
 
Fiddling with the formulations...

is all well and good if trying to improve the cleaning performance. It's the overpowering fragrances that make me want to wretch.
 
The advert shows powder (hot), liquid (warm), liquitabs (cool) and the new gel bottle (cold).

I dread to think what the price will be for this thing. I bet it will be at least £5 seeing as their 2X liquids are £4. It makes sense now as to why P&G launched their 2X liquids with absolutely no fanfare and minimal advertising. This is going to be their heavily promoted new "thing".
 
Does the temperature reference in the advert...

refer to washing in cold water?

If so, they can keep it.
 
Cold water ariel....

I have a terrible feeling it will be "suitable for cold water washing" I expect it to be heavily promoted alongside hotpoints new "eco cold water wash cycles" ugh. No thanks!

Darren
 
Cold water washing is quite possible and can work well if you have the right chemicals in the water. I don't think that you'll see people converting en masse anytime soon though as the majority of washing machines seem to prefer at least 30-40C.

For proper stain removal in a front loader though you're better off using around 40C for most laundry as it does get those enzymes working properly.
 
As a lifelong Ariel fan I stopped using it recently because of the putrid fragrance - change that to something better or how it used to be before it's current incarnation and I will go back to it!!!
 
IF you can get some, the big professionl boxes of Ariel are still of the old formula with the grassy type scent - although cash and carries and trade warehouses sell them, places like Glynn Webb and Instore sell the huge boxes.

Jon
 
It's already been done by an Australian company called Lloyd Brooks (see link below). This product has been on the homeshop.com.au website for at least a few months already, and basically appears to be exactly the same idea, i.e. a triple concentrate liquid in a shower gel-type bottle. They even have matching fabric softeners.

In the testimonials section there is a reference to dosage markings on the side of the bottle, but I'm not sure this would be a reliable means of measuring. The level may look correct when the bottle is squeezed, but would drop instantly the moment you release it - maybe further than you expect. But I'm sure P&G would never make the mistake of allowing users to overdose on detergent ;o)

Have any of the Aussie guys tried this yet?

 
Ariel Excel Gel

Hi Folks,
Here is a small article I scanned from this months Which? Magazine. Ariel in every format has consistently proven itself the number one performer in Which? tests, I'm sure this new variant will be no exception.

Ariel Bio Powder is my favourite detergent I just love its cleaning performance and unbeatable whites. My next favourite detergent may surprise some; it's Lidl Formil Bio Powder, its half the price of Ariel or Persil, cleans superbly and rinses out better than any powder except for Amway SA8 Premium. It has a light fresh scent which rinses out leaving laundry smelling fresh not perfumed.

David

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