Today, in a certain well-known high street chemists, I was looking at deodorants. The men's and the women's ones ( same brand, same style ) were the same price, but men get 50ml whereas women get only 40ml.
Can anyone imagine how the aforementioned shop might account for this 25 percent price difference ?
Probably because the shelves for men's stuff are well away from the women's stuff, and not many women would expect such a shop to be so underhand that they must compare everything - just in case
It can work the other way round though. Asda, for example, tend to only put their 'Smart Price' roll-on deodorant (at around 30p) with the women's range, leaving those men who (unlike me) don't check both aisles, to pay at least a pound for the cheapest product in their part of the store.
Manufacturers can recommend a price but they can't insist that such a price is charged. (Several perfume manufacturers, for example, have tried to prevent supermarkets from selling their normally expensive products at discount prices, as they see such practices as cheapening the image of their 'luxury' perfumes but the courts have ruled that supermarkets are free to charge what they like).
^^^no, the retailer decides what to charge.
They're different products....different fragrance, somewhat different formulae etc....and (the argument might go) women like a "dinkier" container.
Slightly off topic but similar in a way; i'd like to know what ingredients are in Head & Shoulders For Men and the Head & Shoulders that has been around for yonks?