BUYER BEWARE: Counterfeit Products

comike

Well-Known Member
Professional hair care products are guaranteed only when purchased at a salon.

Mass retailers, drug stores or grocery stores selling professional hair care products have obtained them through the gray or black market, and many of these products have been found to be counterfeit, old or contaminated with harmful bacteria. To be safe, buy professional hair care products at your salon – the ONLY place they are guaranteed. A BusinessWeek investigation finds pricey products meant for salon-only use and sale are in drugstores everywhere. What's going on?


A Rite Aid store in downtown Seattle has a wide selection of hair-care products from Nexxus, Redken, Sebastian, Paul Mitchell, and American Crew. In Lake Forest, Ill., a CVS store carries a similar variety. And at a Duane Reade in Manhattan, just as ample a supply can be found. That's what you would expect to find at the local drugstore, right? Trouble is, these products aren't supposed to be available in retail outlets. They're intended for sale only through salons.

A six-week investigation by BusinessWeek found a thriving gray market in professional grade hair-care products. In a spot check of retailers across the country -- including Target, CVS, Duane Reade, Rite Aid, Walgreen, Filene's, Publix, and Eckerd -- we found shelves stocked with salon-specific shampoos, conditioners, hair sprays, and gels.

We didn't hit every location, but 15 of 19 stores we visited in 12 cities and towns nationwide were selling these goods. In many cases, the store had well over 100 products -- all with labels that carry a variant of the same message: For salon sale only.

Companies that make salon-only products allege that retailers are selling goods that have been improperly diverted from their intended channel of distribution. Up to $800 million of the industry's $29 billion yearly product sales may be diverted or counterfeit, estimates Steve Sleeper, executive director of the Professional Beauty Assn. He says diverted and bogus goods are growing at nearly twice the industry's 3% annual rate.

It's an issue makers of hair-care products say they can no longer ignore. Paul Mitchell has launched a multimillion-dollar TV and print campaign warning customers to stick to salons if they want the real thing. "Instead of spending millions to advertise our product, we're spending that money educating consumers about the problem," says John Paul DeJoria, CEO of John Paul Mitchell Systems.

DeJoria won't say how much the $800 million company loses to the gray market, but a recent study by A.C. Nielsen Market Decisions for the Beauty Industry Fund, estimates that last year retailers sold $19.6 million of the Beverly Hills (Calif.)-based company's products, up from $14.2 million in 2002.

FAUX HUNT. It's not just bricks-and-mortar stores that carry salon-only products. On the Web, the same items can be found at sites from eBay and Amazon.com to Rite Aid's drugstore.com.

Stopping the sale of gray market hair-care products is difficult. No laws prohibit retailers from obtaining and selling these products. And federal and state officials are unwilling to jump into what they see as simply a contractual dispute. "Protecting companies' marketing agreements is not what we do," says Lesley Fair, an Federal Trade Commission attorney.

When products are diverted, the manufacturers still get paid by their distributors. So what's the problem? Manufacturers argue that since retailers don't buy directly from them, they can't confirm if the products are the real thing or counterfeit. Retailers have no fail-proof method for ferreting out these faux products. Also, because diverters often obliterate the manufacturer codes on bottles, companies can't recall products if they become contaminated.

Manufacturers also complain that their customers suffer. They say their products have limited shelf lives, which have often passed by the time the bottles hit retailers. Some shampoos, for example, use cream as an ingredient and become rancid if they're sold past their expiration date.

Manufacturers claim as well that these products are more specialized: Consumers don't know if a product "is going to give them the results they want" without help from stylists, says American Crew President Tony Nemer.

These companies are even more concerned by the extent to which diversion erodes their brands. They build reputations through exclusivity, setting higher prices because their hair-care products are used and sold only by hair professionals. If salon shampoos can be bought alongside VO5 and Pantene, what sets them apart from their lower-priced rivals?

"ETHICAL ISSUE." Retailers insist they're doing nothing wrong. They say they get real products through legitimate wholesalers. "These products are authentic, and each is readily available and purchased legally on the open market," says Walgreen's spokesperson Michael Polzin. CVS also says it obtains the products" in a lawful manner from reputable suppliers," as do Eckerd, Duane Reede, Rite Aid, and Target. Repeated calls to Filene's and Publix were not returned.

Retailers may be on solid legal ground, but their policies raise an ethical question. If the distribution restrictions are designed to ensure quality control and consumer safety, as manufacturers claim, then "we have a core ethical issue," says University of Notre Dame ethics professor Reverend Oliver Williams. Retailers can get the products legally, but since they can't guarantee the products came from the manufacturer, should they do so? Are they putting consumers at risk?

Most makers of hair-care products are small companies and are reluctant to take on big retailers -- especially without the law on their side. Paul Mitchell may be the most aggressive when it comes to fighting back. Micheline Re, a lawyer for the company, says she sent CVS a letter on Aug. 31 asking them to stop selling Paul Mitchell products. She says CVS has not responded.

ENTER THE COLLECTORS. Re says she also sent letters to eBay, Walgreens, and Amazon. eBay and Amazon both say they function as marketplaces, not a retail outlets, and thus only facilitate sales. eBay has set up a program to help manufacturers reach the diverters who eBay to peddle products.

How does the gray market work? Aveda, Mitchell, and others have exclusive sales contracts with distributors and salons nationwide. Their products are delivered to local salons through a network of regional distributors, which also sign agreements with local beauty parlors prohibiting them from reselling the products.

Since retailers can't buy from manufacturers directly or their distributors, they typically get the products through wholesalers. The wholesalers often get their supply from individuals called collectors.

CUTTING SUPPLY. "Collectors will come around in their vans and will offer [salon owners] about 20% over cost to purchase the product," says Erik Knudsen, Aveda's exclusive distributor in Illinois and Wisconsin. The collectors resell the products to wholesalers who then market them to drugstores and supermarkets. This year, Knudsen cut off supply to two salons that were selling to collectors.

When the salon sells to a collector, it may be violating its contract with the manufacturer and the distributor. Graham Webb CEO Rick Kornbluth says he has cut off hundreds of salons for violating their contracts this way. He estimates the fight to stop diversion has cost Graham Webb, which is owned by Procter & Gamble, $3 million in legal fees in the past two years.

Kornbluth says his products most often end up at wholesalers like Ronkonkomo (N.Y.)-based Quality King, which now does business as Professional's Choice. Arcenio Napiza, who manages an Eckerd store in Brooklyn, identified Professional's Choice as the supplier of their salon products.

QUIET SANCTION? Other wholesale sources, according to Kornbluth, are Damien Christopher, which has locations in Irving, Tex., and Lutz, Fla., and San Diego-based Jade Beauty. Several calls to Professional's Choice, Damien Christopher, and Jade Beauty were not returned.

One way to cut the supply to wholesalers is to go after distributors and salons. But that hurts the top line. Wella, which makes the salon-only brand Sebastian, recently terminated an East Coast distributor, and cut off $3 million worth of business with salons in California and Texas, says Raymond Stapleton, a former FBI agent who heads Wella's efforts to fight the problem.

Despite such efforts, the products are so widely available through retailers that it's hard to believe some manufactures aren't quietly sanctioning the practice. One CEO of a company that makes beauty products exclusively for salons who didn't want his name used says his peers sometimes force distributors to buy more products than they can place, thus driving up sales. Then they look the other way when the distributor unloads excess products to wholesalers.

RFID-READY. Consumers thinking they'll save a buck by bypassing salons in favor of drugstores should do their homework. Prices vary widely. The CVS store in Lake Forest, Ill., for example, sells a 33.8-ounce bottle of Aveda's Rosemary Mint Shampoo for $29. But at a nearby Aveda-owned store, the price tag was $25. The same shampoo is available online for as little as $23.75.

When diversion occurs, the biggest losers may be salons, which often depend on the exclusivity of these products for income. About 18% to 20% of the revenues at Chicago-based J. Gordon Designs come from Aveda product sales, says owner Jerry Gordon. He estimates that he loses 10% of Aveda sales to retailers.
 

DivaRox

New Member
"Since retailers can't buy from manufacturers directly or their distributors, they typically get the products through wholesalers. The wholesalers often get their supply from individuals called collectors. "

Interesting read, but it seems that it boils down to the products being authentic after all. If the product is delivered to salons, then being sold above cost by salons to collectors, then to wholesalers, etc. the product is still authentic:confused:right? Sounds more likely that an income stream is being diverted and the manufacturer is not pleased. As far as the item being contaminated, I wish they'd provided more info. Re: the product being old, I think we've had enough posts on the board to confirm this is more than just a possibility-it's reality.
 

cabellera

Well-Known Member
DivaRox said:
"Since retailers can't buy from manufacturers directly or their distributors, they typically get the products through wholesalers. The wholesalers often get their supply from individuals called collectors. "

Interesting read, but it seems that it boils down to the products being authentic after all. If the product is delivered to salons, then being sold above cost by salons to collectors, then to wholesalers, etc. the product is still authentic:confused:right? Sounds more likely that an income stream is being diverted and the manufacturer is not pleased. As far as the item being contaminated, I wish they'd provided more info. Re: the product being old, I think we've had enough posts on the board to confirm this is more than just a possibility-it's reality.


I think the mention of contamination was to scare consumers to only purchase from Salons, therefore diverting the money back to where it was intended to go in the first place. I didn't see where it mentions counterfeit, the issue is that the product is the real deal and it's not being sold in a Salon, the way the manufacturer would like.

Guess it boils down to driving to your Salon and getting a Paul Mitchell product for $25.00 or driving down the street to Walgreens and purchasing the same product for $15.00. Hmmm, I'd really have to be on friendly terms with that Salon. :lol:
 

Sistaslick

New Member
I totally agree with the final paragraph of the article. Salons are paying the price at the end of the day. They are simply the primary advertisers for salon exclusive products, and it seems that ultimately they are merely helping the manufacturers prepare the lines for eventual mass retail. When was the last time you saw a Kenra or KeraCare commercial on TV? Stylists are the only commercials manufacters need. Manufacturers know that stylists have a captive audience, you- sitting in that chair for however long. No need to spend money on expensive advertisements.

I think manufacturers use salons to build brand loyalty. And how do salons get repaid for all their hard work? By having their lines "diverted" and made available at mass retailers at lower prices. They've already sold you on that product line, so any savvy shopper is going to hunt for a bargain. Manufacturers have their loyal fan base. How many Nexxus users were all too happy to find their new, cheaper Botonoil and Therappee at WalMart for the taking. :lol: Imagine what went through the mind of the salon owner whose salon was Nexxus exclusive? She now has to hunt for another line to push. I guess the lesson is to diversify. I am still convinced that this is no accident. I do not feel sorry for manufacturers at all. Their hands, IMO, are D.I.R.T.Y.

And all this noise about the products being old, contaminated, yadda yadda... its bull. They only put up the fuss to keep salons loyal and to appear that they are taking a stand against diversion. Especially Paul Mitchell. He likes his products in salons and on mass retail shelves, trust me. The margins are probably higher at the salon, but he still gets paid from the volume mass retailers are able to achieve. Like I said in another thread:

*If the line is spotty- with only 2 or 3 items (a shampoo with no conditioner, and maybe a leave in thrown in)

*The line is never really kept in stock from week to week.

*The packaging isn't current.

*The product doesn't smell of look right.

Then its probably diverted product.

But if the line is 1.) FULL-- from the shampoo, conditioner, reconstructor, neutralizing poo, leave in, gel down to the last hair finishing gloss, 2.) is always replenished weekly/monthly and 3.) is wrapped in the manufacturers current packaging-- its meant to be there.
 

Sistaslick

New Member
cabellera said:
I think the mention of contamination was to scare consumers to only purchase from Salons, therefore diverting the money back to where it was intended to go in the first place. I didn't see where it mentions counterfeit, the issue is that the product is the real deal and it's not being sold in a Salon, the way the manufacturer would like.

Guess it boils down to driving to your Salon and getting a Paul Mitchell product for $25.00 or driving down the street to Walgreens and purchasing the same product for $15.00. Hmmm, I'd really have to be on friendly terms with that Salon. :lol:

I agree. I posted this in another thread awhile back but . . .

Here's my conspiracy theory. I think the goal of most product manufactorers is to go mass retail. Remaining salon exclusive doesn't really pay. The bottom line is always money. Once they get their lines to bigger stores like Trade Secret, Ulta, and Duane sales sky rocket. I think they use independent salons as marketing tools to get the name out and once the product has a reputation they slowly market it to mass retailers. Look at Nexxus. They let salons/stylists build the name and then sold out to mass retailers. Same thing with Tressemme, Pantene, and others that were once salon exclusive. And salon exclusive doesn't really mean that much. All a mass retailer has to do is slap a salon chair in the back to be considered "a salon" which is what it looks like ULTA and Trade Secret have done.

Thats why I don't feel sorry for people like Paul Mitchell. I think he has a hand in the mass diversion his products are experiencing. His products are on every Target and Walgreens shelf in America! FULLY STOCKED week after week. Now wouldn't the purchasing of enough product from distributors to keep Targets across the country fully stocked at all times raise an eyebrow at headquarters if diversion was such a big concern? They know Mom and Pop salons are NOT selling that much Paul Mitchell. I think he puts up such a big fuss to keep salons loyal to his line. If he acts like he is against diversion, they'll continue to retail his stuff too. Money.
 
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