Shop Talk
Retailers, consumers and prices
Check Out Line: Will P&G get a “bounce” from outside?
Check out Procter & Gamble’s latest collaboration, which isn’t getting all rave reviews. P&G has been working with others for nearly a decade under a program it calls Connect + Develop. Now it is looking for its next success.
Quite a few products have come together with help from the outside. A few years ago, for example, a P&G employee heard a scientist from Sederma speak at an academic conference. P&G used the French company’s peptide technology in its Olay Regenerist skin care line.
Its newest product, now hitting U.S. and Canadian stores, is based on technology from Ecolab. The Bounce Dryer Bar sticks on the inside of a dryer. The innovation comes at a price — a bar that should last the average consumer about four months has a suggested retail price of about $7.79, while 105 sheets of Bounce with Febreze (which would last about 3-1/2 months based on doing one load a day) sells for about $5.49 to $6.49.
P&G said that consumers it spoke with saw the idea as valuable, since it makes their lives a little simpler. Recent reviews were mixed. More than one user was excited by the idea but said the product broke quickly, while others wrote they “loved it.” Several reviews on the company’s website are less than stellar. One writer said it was “horrible” and another posted a comment labeled “Hate It.”


