RIDING HERD By Lee
Pitts
……. Food For Thought (Best of)
...............11/30/2009
The grocery store
manager came running down the aisle screaming, "What are you doing opening
those bags and eating those potato chips inside the store?"
"I'm just following
directions," I said, pointing to the label on the chip bag that urged me to,
"Taste The Difference." The manager was a bit upset but I was grateful for the
opportunity to question him about some of the trends I've noticed lately in
the grocery business. I present the repartee here in the familiar Q and A
format to see if you can make better sense of it than I could. I am the Q and
he is the A.
Q: I notice this can of
corn with "No salt added" costs 10¢ more than the can that presumably had salt
added to it. Or so the label would imply. If they didn't have to put the extra
salt in the corn shouldn't the product cost less? After all, the extra salt
must still be sitting in a warehouse somewhere waiting to be sold.
A: What you are paying
for is mostly vocabulary. Certain words on a label merely cost more. For
instance, the words "lite," "fat free," "no salt," and "hypoallergenic" can
add as much as 20% to the price of a product. Replace some natural ingredients
with expensive chemicals like buta-beta-hydroxy-rhododendron and the cost to
consumers can rise as much as 25% per syllable.
Q: Wow! So farmers would
make more money if their silos were full of adjectives instead of grain?
A: That is correct. But
you want to pick your words carefully because some words have higher yields
than others.
Q: Such as?
A: The words "New and
Improved" seem to be the hot crop this year.
Q: But are the products
really new and have they been improved?
A: Of course not. The
words merely mean that the manufacturer has taken out all the good stuff and
in so doing has "improved" his profit margin significantly.
Q: I may not have all
my corn flakes in one box but I see a huge disparity between what cattleman
receive for cattle and what you are charging for beef?
A: It's not just us.
Eat at an all-you-can-eat buffet and you may pay $10.95 for dinner but dine in
a high class restaurant and that wouldn't cover the tip. It's called
marketing. Purchase fish eggs at a bait store and they cost $5.95 but call it
caviar and it'll set you back a month's wages. Grind up some dried citrus
peals and yard leaves and call it "potpourri" and it's worth more per pound
than the whole fresh oranges.
Q: I notice this week
that cereal costs more per pound than rump roast. In an effort to improve
their beef ranchers feed grain to their cattle. But with these prices you are
basically telling me the grain was worth more per pound than the beef if we
had just left it alone and called it cereal?
A: Only if you add
enough sugar to the cereal. Sugar is the key.
Q: I still don't get
it. Blend some grain and horse meat and call it "gourmet dog food" and it
sells for more per pound than the rancher gets for prime beef. I just don't
understand why the person who made the plastic toy in the box of cereal got
more for his effort than the farmer who grew the grain? It makes no sense.
A: Not true, it makes a
lot of cents. In many cases what you are paying for is the cost of packaging.
Q: Then how do you
explain the dirty carrots here in this bin? The ones you have to rip the tops
off and bag yourself cost more than the prepackaged, pre-washed, pre-sliced
carrots in an attractive package.
A: That's because the
loose carrots were "organically cultivated."
Q: Wow, that's nine
syllables by my count.
A: Precisely!
Magniloquent marketing, if I may say so! (Look that one up in your Funk and
Wagnalls.)
Visit Lee at his website
"LeePittsBooks.com"