Submitted by Daemonrealm t3_125co8w in mildlyinteresting
Daemonrealm OP t1_je3qalw wrote
Reply to comment by wholeselfin in My perfume bottle has a slanted glass bottom to ensure the last drop can be used by Daemonrealm
Just curve for men which isn’t very expensive. I also find it mildly interesting that the 5th most expensive liquid in the world is the perfume Chanel No. 5 at $26,000 a gallon.
Shufflepants t1_je3tyqc wrote
I wonder if Chanel No. 5 is even close to that expensive to produce or if it's entirely just an exclusivity thing.
DoubleSteve t1_je4lj2l wrote
You couldn't make any profit from producing it, if it was that expensive to produce, but it isn't just exclusivity either. Creating a good scent that sells isn't free or easy, so those failures/experimental costs are baked in to the price. The ingredients used can also really be incredibly expensive, the bottles it comes in tend to be much fancier than the mass produced crap, and marketing the product is expensive. The price you pay for the stuff has to cover all that and still make a nice profit for the company.
Shufflepants t1_je59nmg wrote
Yes, I know profit margins are a thing. But my question is whether those margins are reasonable, compared to other kinds of products (say 5%-15%), or is it almost entirely profit, (like does it only cost them like $50 to make). That's why I said "even close".
Birthday_dad420 t1_je5wyy2 wrote
"say 5%-15%" Big supermarket chains: *Laughs in 300%+"
Shufflepants t1_je6886d wrote
What supermarket products have a 300% profit margin? Remember, profit is after all costs. A 300% markup is not the same thing as 300% profit.
Birthday_dad420 t1_je8kb0a wrote
I meant it like they produce it for 100% then sell it for 400%
Shufflepants t1_je8m4oq wrote
Supermarket's don't produce anything. They buy stuff from distributors or producers and then resell it. Are you suggesting supermarkets you go to are buying things for x and then selling it for 4*x, or are you suggesting that they buy it for x and then sell for (x+c)*4 where c is a proportional amount of all their other costs?
I'm talking about profit margins which subtract out all their costs. Everything I can find says that grocery stores typically operate on 1%-3% profit margins. Nowhere near the absurd rate you're suggesting.
wholeselfin t1_je586ww wrote
Among perfumes, Chanel No 5 isn’t even one of the more expensive. Chanel has an exclusifs line that is about twice as costly ($300+ for 100 ml, vs $150 for Chanel No 5). Other niche perfume brands may charge $400-1000 or more for 100 ml. Check out Aftelier, Roja Dove Creation E, Ensar Oud, House of Matriarch, etc.
Daemonrealm OP t1_je8lbvj wrote
Will look that up. The “most expensive liquid” lists on the interwebbles are usually very old and not updated.
CuketkysTheGod t1_je4j2j8 wrote
It's just a bad smell too. I don't get Chanel 😄
obnoxiousab t1_je4p4uz wrote
At this point, Chanel No. 5 just smells like “old rich lady sitting alone in her upper west side apartment”.
CuketkysTheGod t1_je5646u wrote
Exactly. My coworker got it as a present and she gifted it to out workplace toilet as air freshener lol.
obnoxiousab t1_je5cq2m wrote
That’s one expensive air freshener!
Fair_Acanthisitta_75 t1_je6whnv wrote
Depends on the old lady?
AddNamAndHim t1_je4z2g7 wrote
Did you know that certain perfumes use feces for their aroma profile?
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