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Comparing Skin Care Products
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Women from all walks of life have forever sought endless beauty. The shift today, however, is that men are also doing the same. Longevity and beauty have stepped into the limelight as countless numbers of baby boomers begin to “grow” wrinkles.
We
no longer just worry about survival, but we also fret about the quality
of our health and the manifestation of such to be exhibited outwardly
– our appearance. The
biological sciences are making rapid advances in all areas.
If
you are in the market for a skin care product, beware.
Know what you’re buying before you buy it.
Effective skin care products must include ingredients that
protect the skin during the day and repair it at night.
This
is the first secret of an effective skin care program; the second is
having effective products. So
what is the difference between products that work and products that do
not work?
Commercial
products that are successful must also be profitable.
Two methods are used to sell skin care products.
The first is to promise something good will happen when the
product is used. This is
the “hope in a jar” method. It
requires constant and expensive advertising to suggest the buyer will
look just like the woman in the ad if she uses the product.
As
long as the commercial runs, the product will sell.
However, cost of the commercials is so high that it is next to
impossible to make a quality product for this market.
The
second method is to make a quality product and let the product’s
performance speak for itself. Only
a certain amount of advertising is needed, and once the product is
established, the name will carry future sales.
Many professional products are marketed this way.
Most
companies of mass-market products must keep the cost of materials very
low, including the ingredients and the packaging.
The ingredients are the key to an effective product – not only
the type of ingredients but also the quality.
Most inexpensive products will contain ingredients such as
mineral oil, stearic acid, and some alkali to form a soap emulsion.
A little fragrance and color and, voila, you have a skin care
product.
Many
people are misled that if a product looks good and smells good, it must
be good. Not so.
Actually, it may do your skin more harm than good.
Sometimes
these poorly-formulated products will list exotic ingredients on the
label to impress the buyer. Usually,
they are in the product at very low levels-at levels that cannot
possibly affect any kind of change to the skin.
It is the same as making a pot of tea with only one tealeaf.
It can be called tea, but it is not really tea, or, at least, not
very good tea.
The
consumer needs to be aware that a good skin care product cannot be made
cheaply. For example, one ingredient in a major skin care product line
cost about $3,000 a kilogram, a gram cost $3, so 0.9 grams will cost
$2.70 just for that one ingredient.
Consider that a good skin care product may have more than 15
ingredients. It is easy to
see why the cost of skin care products can be so expensive.
On
the other hand, the average cheap skin care product contains less than
30 cents’ worth of total active ingredients.
No matter what claims are made for a cheap product, the quality
and quantity of active ingredients tell the story.
About the Author
Terri Hawkins-Fox is a Doctor of Naturopathy and holds her Ph.D. in Nutritional Science. She is a member of the American Association of Drugless Practitioners (AADP) and registered as a Naturopath through the Department of Professional Licensing. In addition, she holds her National Certification in Colon Hydrotherapy through the International Association for Colon Hydrotherapy (I-ACT). She is a graduate of Hypnotherapy through theInstitute of Mindsight Consultants Cognitive Behavior Sciences.
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