Tide Liquid being diluted with more water, price increased gradually by 13%

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mich

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Procter & Gamble recently decided to make certain varieties of Tide detergent more costly for shoppers. Based on a Wall Street Journal story, the company appears to be raising prices an unheard of three ways simultaneously.

It seems to be passing on a straight list price increase of about 13% to retailers on Tide+ products. But it is also downsizing the product AND apparently diluting it (or making you use more).

Note to readers: We use the words “seems to,” “apparently” and “appears to” because P&G has used “pr-speak” (a.k.a. “spin”) in response to very pointed questions about these changes, as noted at the end of this story.

 

tide10092mp.jpg


 

Tide+ varieties with special scents, fabric softener, etc. are being downsized from 100 ounce jugs to 92 ounces — an 8% drop in contents.

But, not content to raise the price AND put less product in each bottle, you are now going to get fewer loads per bottle than even an 8% drop in contents would work out to.

tide6048.jpg


 

The traditional 100-ounce bottle was enough for 60 loads according to the package, while the new 92-ounce product only provides 48 loads. So an 8% drop in contents somehow translates into a 20% drop in the number washes you get. Huh?

That sounds like P&G is somehow diluting the product and/or making you use more per load. A look at the back of the bottle reveals the secret.

tide10092caplines.jpg


 

According to the old bottle, you could get 60 medium-size loads of wash done by filling the cap to line 1. With the new bottle, you are instructed to fill the cap to line 2 for the same medium load and advised you will only get 48 such loads when used this way. Being told we have to use more to get the same job done suggests that the product has been diluted. Alternatively, we are simply being told to use more so we finish up the bottle faster. Medium load users in fact will be using more detergent per load if they follow the manufacturer’s recommendation, but large load users will be using the same amount. (Line 3 in the new cap is where line 2 was in the old.)

We asked P&G to explain these changes with very explicit, pointed questions. Here is how the company responded:

<blockquote style="border: 1px dashed #999966; background-color: #e0e1ce; margin-left: 30px; margin-right: 30px; padding: 0px 10px; color: #000000; font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-style: normal;">
1. Why is Tide downsizing from 100 ounce to 92 ounce jugs?

With the introduction of the new Tide Plus Collection, we have standardized the load sizes across variants (previously there were 5 differing load designations per same size bottle based on the variant) to make shopping the line easier.

2. Are you in fact also raising the price to retailers of Tide+ products? If so, by an average of about how much?

I cannot share our pricing strategies. The significant performance innovation behind this new introduction will carry an average 13% list price increase (on a cost per load basis) but it is important to note that it will be retailers that set the price that consumers pay.

3. How is it that an 8% drop in contents (from 100 ounces to 92 ounces) results in a 20% drop in loads in each bottle (60 loads down to 48)?

This is not a direct correlation; we have upgraded the formulas which has impacted dosing.

4. Is the product the same formula, for Tide+ Febreze, for example, in both the 100 ounce and new 92 ounce size?

We are bringing significant innovation behind the launch of The Tide Plus Collection, providing a one wash wow with even more of the performance and fabric care benefits consumers expect from Tide

5. Have you diluted the product necessitating having to use more, or are you just telling consumers to use more than before for the same size load? (Old instructions: fill to line 1 for medium loads; new instructions: fill to line 2 for medium loads.)

We have updated the usage to align with the formulation and the increasing size of wash loads. — P&G Fabric Care Communications/Corporate Media Relations

</blockquote>
The bottom line is this: Getting less detergent in the bottle, having to use more product per load, and paying a higher price at the store means consumers are really being taken to the cleaners.

 
I am not buying P&G products from awhiile now, especially Tide, I just don't like their policy anymore and how they're doing..
They just messed up with powders over here, they reduced the size claiming a phantom concentration I could not really see, it's just less product for the same cost it was, they did put Dash in offer last week, 50% off, shelf was still so full, this week there is the Big dixan on offer and it sold way more than dash did.
I don't like much Henkel either but I am well happy for this, may P&G realize there is something wrong with them lately.
They can go to hell for what concerns me anyway, there are thousands products out there as good or even better that look forward customer satisfaction, and no new ways to swindle...
 
It seems like the great majority of the employees at P&G must be in the marketing dept., thinking up new ways to give customers less for more money.

The P&G Professional division seems to not have this problem nearly so much as the consumer division. The product line is fairly simple, works well, formula seems to stay the same over time, and packaging seems to stay the same size.
 
Speaking of detergents, and dilution for that matter:

 

I noticed yesterday at the Supermarket some older boxes of "Omo Front-Loader" on the shelf, along with the newer "Omo Small and Mighty," a concentrate, which you assume that you would dose LESS of?

Apparently not. Doesn't matter if its concentrated, they still want you to use 1 scoop for normal loads :/ 
 
sleight of hand trifecta from P&G?

P&G are not the bad guys here.

This is inflation eating away the purchasing power of the dollar. Many consumer products have been quietly downsized the last few years.
 
Douglas:

"....quietly downsized...."

Another term for that would be "hidden price increase." Inflation is as old as money, and everyone in their right mind knows that prices go up as time goes on. What cost a dollar last year might cost $1.25 this year.

So long as the price is increased openly, in response to inflationary pressures no individual manufacturer controls, that's okay enough. We'd like the price to remain the same, but it can't.

But when someone puts 25% less in the bottle and engages in elegant double-talk to conceal the fact that that is what has been done, that's less understandable. When someone puts less in the bottle, and goes up on the price AND decreases the strength of the product, that's a three-way increase, two ways of which are hidden.

Sorry, this is dirty pool. And I have a feeling it's going to bite P & G in its corporate derriere, especially when Consumer Reports gets wind of it. That's one readership that will react sharply, and influence others as well.
 
Trying to trick the consumer is never a smart move. Maybe you get away with it for awhile. If the value is no longer there, the consumer will eventually figure it out and switch brands.

 
 
Inflation is as old as money

Actually inflation is as old paper money, which is what the dollar is today, unbacked currency, and why it loses value year after year There was little inflation 1815-1913 when we were on the gold standard. Unfortunately, people accept inflation as though it is some natural phenomenon like the weather. When they do get worked up the rage gets directed against the wrong people who have no control over the monetary policy in this country.

Granted, P&G may have gone a little too far but no one is forced to buy their product and its happening across the board. Yes, it would be nice if manufacturers were honest about their price increase but with the current regime in DC I don't blame them for trying to stay under the radar.
 
Last time I used Tide liquid it was ALREADY diluted. I glug-glug-glugged it in and it worked really lousy. "The Tide Plus Collection"? Like it was Gucci shoes or Faberge eggs? And lying on top of that. Proctology and Grumble is working their way onto my shatner list.
 
Douglas-- Here is a chart of inflation rates since 2001. Each block represents a month of the year; the block furthest to the right is the average for that year. P&G has no more reason to keep its price increases under the radar with the 'current regime' than it did with the previous one. Unless the price of Tide hasn't risen since 2007, P&G's price increases are far outpacing interest rates.
[this post was last edited: 4/23/2014-06:01]

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Wisk

I have been using Wisk for quite some time and actually prefer it to Tide for most loads.

Once my baggie of Tide pods is gone, I'll probably go back to Persil for my white loads.

Malcolm
 
Here is a chart of inflation rates

Those are the government issued inflation rates and well below the actual inflation rate. Energy and food cost are deliberately excluded, along with other tricks used to keep the advertised rate low. The same is done with unemployment rates.

Here is a page from Shadow Stats which calculates inflation using 1990 and 1980 methods.
Even using the watered down 1990 version inflation has average around 5% for the past 10 years. The picture gets even uglier using the 1980 methods:

http://www.shadowstats.com/alternate_data/inflation-charts
 
I don't use much liquid tide because a lot of it smells like vomit and makes me retch.I have been using liquid all and all pods and wisk because with coupons and sales I get it for .99 cents a bottle or bag.
 
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