Wrinkle Cream Companies Think We Are Stupid
If you have ever used a wrinkle cream or anti aging products, please stop and take a minute to think about a few things.
These products are not cheap and yet we consistently purchase them hoping to get results that very few of them actually provide.
It's as if the companies only have to say that it works and we are willing to go running to the stores to buy it, cause we see it on TV.
What is even worse is once you acknowledge the advertising or marketing approach, you are insulted by these blatant ploys.
As consumers, there are a few things that we can do to protect ourselves from the companies that do business this way, and ensure that we purchase from companies more concerned with delivering a quality product than they are with securing maximum profits.
The author examines the growing number of questionable wrinkle cream companies, and what we can do, as consumers, to avoid falling victim to them.
If you have never done so, stop and look at some of the infomercials or advertisements that you see for wrinkle creams.
More often than not, there is very little science being discussed.
There are usually heartfelt stories of a consumer who is so very thankful, or that the creams "changed their lives.
" But in reality there is no actually documented clinical support for that even being surfaced.
To add insult to injury, there are often times celebrities that are endorsing a product.
Please do not fall for this ploy.
Do not make any mistake about it, these celebrities are being compensated to say the things that they are.
They are not so moved by a wrinkle cream that they are volunteering their time to simply spread the word.
And once they are being paid to say something, they are actors and actresses, simply doing their job for money.
While it is tempting to listen to celebrities as we are so fascinated with them in this culture, it has nothing to do with clinically supported or medical grade wrinkle creams.
The reality is that the most important part of a wrinkle cream is what ingredients are put into it.
Only then are you able to know whether the product will work or not.
When you come across a wrinkle cream or anti aging product that never talks about the ingredients, or only brings them up momentarily out of a 30 minute infomercial, you should be extremely concerned.
While scientific documentation may not be the best sales approach, as consumers it is the only thing that protects us from spending hundreds of dollars on products that just don't work.
Not to mention the frustration as well as the "auto billing" and "auto shipping" nightmare that comes with many of these free trials that we often fall victim to.
Speaking of companies thinking we are dumb, please tell me that you do not actually still think that these free trials are actually free, if you do, you should check your account statement.
There is nothing free about them.
Protect yourself from these companies that push celebrity and empty testimonials, rather than scientific documentation and proven results.
It may not be as fun to buy, but it will work.
Isn't that what you are looking for, after all?
These products are not cheap and yet we consistently purchase them hoping to get results that very few of them actually provide.
It's as if the companies only have to say that it works and we are willing to go running to the stores to buy it, cause we see it on TV.
What is even worse is once you acknowledge the advertising or marketing approach, you are insulted by these blatant ploys.
As consumers, there are a few things that we can do to protect ourselves from the companies that do business this way, and ensure that we purchase from companies more concerned with delivering a quality product than they are with securing maximum profits.
The author examines the growing number of questionable wrinkle cream companies, and what we can do, as consumers, to avoid falling victim to them.
If you have never done so, stop and look at some of the infomercials or advertisements that you see for wrinkle creams.
More often than not, there is very little science being discussed.
There are usually heartfelt stories of a consumer who is so very thankful, or that the creams "changed their lives.
" But in reality there is no actually documented clinical support for that even being surfaced.
To add insult to injury, there are often times celebrities that are endorsing a product.
Please do not fall for this ploy.
Do not make any mistake about it, these celebrities are being compensated to say the things that they are.
They are not so moved by a wrinkle cream that they are volunteering their time to simply spread the word.
And once they are being paid to say something, they are actors and actresses, simply doing their job for money.
While it is tempting to listen to celebrities as we are so fascinated with them in this culture, it has nothing to do with clinically supported or medical grade wrinkle creams.
The reality is that the most important part of a wrinkle cream is what ingredients are put into it.
Only then are you able to know whether the product will work or not.
When you come across a wrinkle cream or anti aging product that never talks about the ingredients, or only brings them up momentarily out of a 30 minute infomercial, you should be extremely concerned.
While scientific documentation may not be the best sales approach, as consumers it is the only thing that protects us from spending hundreds of dollars on products that just don't work.
Not to mention the frustration as well as the "auto billing" and "auto shipping" nightmare that comes with many of these free trials that we often fall victim to.
Speaking of companies thinking we are dumb, please tell me that you do not actually still think that these free trials are actually free, if you do, you should check your account statement.
There is nothing free about them.
Protect yourself from these companies that push celebrity and empty testimonials, rather than scientific documentation and proven results.
It may not be as fun to buy, but it will work.
Isn't that what you are looking for, after all?