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How did we let Ariel overtake Omo
Rank: Elder Joined: 11/5/2010 Posts: 2,459
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The latest market share research indicates Ariel is the top detergent brand in kenya.
How could we ? How do you walk to a supermarket, choose a foreign brand over our homegrown guided by nothing else apart from an aggressive marketing campaign ? Are we really that cheap and easy to confuse, sorry, convince.
Then sit down and complain about youth unemployment ! ! !
Its basic economics. There is a wazuan who had a beautiful tagline about producing what you consume and consuming what we produce.
In my household, the only imported brand allowed is pampers.
When reckitt closed their Kenyan operations, I dropped their brands I.e. dettol, jik and harpic. Even the fact that they outsource some of the manufacturing locally to orion chemicals was not good enough for me. Roberts and ace were my natural choices.
Damn Kenyans and their poor choices.
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Rank: New-farer Joined: 2/24/2012 Posts: 22
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I totally agree.. the only way we can move forward as a country is we consume our locally manufactured products. That way our manufacturers are stronger and we can eventually become exporters of manufactured products. With the Power projects coming on board, we will probably see an increase in manufacturers. With our labour and land availability, I dont see why we should not be net exporters. And it all starts with loyalty to Kenyan manufactured products. Don't take life too seriously, you will never get out of it alive
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Rank: Elder Joined: 11/5/2010 Posts: 2,459
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We should learn to support our young economy where it matters.
Colgate-palmolive closed their branch here under the pretext that our production costs were too high. That's the last time I used their products I.e. Colgate, axion e.t.c
If we can become fiercely loyal to locally made products, i believe everyone would feel the trickle-down effects of a growing economy.
While at it, everyone should be using saj or flamingo ceramic tiles and not those ugly chinese made ones.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 1/17/2013 Posts: 4,693 Location: Earth
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Omo can continue sitting pretty on the shelves because it burns hands.
If you want to beat the competition,please beat their standard.
Sunlight/Ariel anytime.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 11/5/2010 Posts: 2,459
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kysse wrote:Omo can continue sitting pretty on the shelves because it burns hands.
If you want to beat the competition,please beat their standard.
Sunlight/Ariel anytime. Don't know much about burning hands. All I know is that if I buy Ariel, then I shouldn't complain if my younger brother remains jobless because I will have created a job in Egypt.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 10/9/2008 Posts: 5,389
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Rank: Elder Joined: 12/9/2009 Posts: 6,592 Location: Nairobi
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FRM2011 wrote:How could we ? How do you walk to a supermarket, choose a foreign brand over our homegrown guided by nothing else apart from an aggressive marketing campaign? Homegrown?? Most people believe that Omo is a local brand. Omo is as foreign as Ariel. Just because we used 504s for a long time doesn't mean we should not buy better more efficient Toyotas. Omo has failed somewhere hence the punishment by consumers. BBI will solve it :)
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Rank: Elder Joined: 3/18/2011 Posts: 12,069 Location: Kianjokoma
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2012 wrote:FRM2011 wrote:How could we ? How do you walk to a supermarket, choose a foreign brand over our homegrown guided by nothing else apart from an aggressive marketing campaign? Homegrown?? Most people believe that Omo is a local brand. Omo is as foreign as Ariel. Just because we used 504s for a long time doesn't mean we should not buy better more efficient Toyotas. Omo has failed somewhere hence the punishment by consumers. we know where it has failed @essyk tells us it's 'hard on hands' (rem the toss advert, it was aimed at Omo!) Tough on garments too, making them fade should Unilever continue producing such a product and expect us to suffer in the name of patriotism?
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Rank: Member Joined: 11/20/2006 Posts: 75 Location: Nairobi, Kenya
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As mentioned, Omo is very strong. My Domestic manager (househelp) says it burns her hands. We have now moved to sunlight powder. Sunlight is also cheaper than omo. I can do everything through Christ who strengthens me: Phil 4: 13
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Rank: Member Joined: 3/25/2013 Posts: 552 Location: Asgard
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Omo is not a local brand. And FYI omo owns sunlight
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Rank: Veteran Joined: 2/12/2008 Posts: 1,178
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Utility overrides patriotism while making my shopping decision.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 12/9/2009 Posts: 6,592 Location: Nairobi
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iller wrote:Omo is not a local brand. And FYI omo owns sunlight Unilever owns Omo and Sunlight. Maybe they need to sell Omo to Bidco like they did Kimbo. BBI will solve it :)
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Rank: Elder Joined: 11/5/2010 Posts: 2,459
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2012 wrote:FRM2011 wrote:How could we ? How do you walk to a supermarket, choose a foreign brand over our homegrown guided by nothing else apart from an aggressive marketing campaign? Homegrown?? Most people believe that Omo is a local brand. Omo is as foreign as Ariel. Just because we used 504s for a long time doesn't mean we should not buy better more efficient Toyotas. Omo has failed somewhere hence the punishment by consumers. My defn of local is simply where the manufacturing plant is located. Hope the good people at Unilever can hear the complaints about quality. But for the love of our crawling economy, please buy sunlight not Ariel.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 11/5/2010 Posts: 2,459
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Lolest! wrote:2012 wrote:FRM2011 wrote:How could we ? How do you walk to a supermarket, choose a foreign brand over our homegrown guided by nothing else apart from an aggressive marketing campaign? Homegrown?? Most people believe that Omo is a local brand. Omo is as foreign as Ariel. Just because we used 504s for a long time doesn't mean we should not buy better more efficient Toyotas. Omo has failed somewhere hence the punishment by consumers. we know where it has failed @essyk tells us it's 'hard on hands' (rem the toss advert, it was aimed at Omo!) Tough on garments too, making them fade should Unilever continue producing such a product and expect us to suffer in the name of patriotism? Kindly then settle for toss or sunlight.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 11/5/2010 Posts: 2,459
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willin2learn wrote:Utility overrides patriotism while making my shopping decision. Good point. But when you have a reasonable alternative that is locally manufactured, please settle for it. Its much helpful than voting.
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Rank: Member Joined: 3/25/2013 Posts: 552 Location: Asgard
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2012 wrote:iller wrote:Omo is not a local brand. And FYI omo owns sunlight Unilever owns Omo and Sunlight. Maybe they need to sell Omo to Bidco like they did Kimbo. My bad. Thanks for the correction
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Rank: Elder Joined: 12/9/2009 Posts: 6,592 Location: Nairobi
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FRM2011 wrote:2012 wrote:FRM2011 wrote:How could we ? How do you walk to a supermarket, choose a foreign brand over our homegrown guided by nothing else apart from an aggressive marketing campaign? Homegrown?? Most people believe that Omo is a local brand. Omo is as foreign as Ariel. Just because we used 504s for a long time doesn't mean we should not buy better more efficient Toyotas. Omo has failed somewhere hence the punishment by consumers. My defn of local is simply where the manufacturing plant is located. Hope the good people at Unilever can hear the complaints about quality. But for the love of our crawling economy, please buy sunlight not Ariel. I think it will be hard to move people from Ariel. If you go to the mtumba/2nd hand boutique sellers they all tell you they use Arial because it cleans and brightens at the same time. That's a big market and they are the reason why Arial is up there. Now ask the mamas who go around estates washing clothes for bachelors especially. Guys buy what they are told and those mamas recommend Ariel. It's sad that Kenyans may lose jobs but these are the consequences that come with the global market. Another brand in foreseeable danger is Tusker. The brand is not growing but Heineken is experiencing massive growth in consumer numbers. BBI will solve it :)
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Rank: Elder Joined: 2/16/2007 Posts: 2,114
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FRM2011 wrote:kysse wrote:Omo can continue sitting pretty on the shelves because it burns hands.
If you want to beat the competition,please beat their standard.
Sunlight/Ariel anytime. Don't know much about burning hands. All I know is that if I buy Ariel, then I shouldn't complain if my younger brother remains jobless because I will have created a job in Egypt. You mean the ariel sold here is imported from Egypt?Who owns this brand?
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Rank: User Joined: 9/6/2013 Posts: 1,446 Location: In a house
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Chaka wrote:FRM2011 wrote:kysse wrote:Omo can continue sitting pretty on the shelves because it burns hands.
If you want to beat the competition,please beat their standard.
Sunlight/Ariel anytime. Don't know much about burning hands. All I know is that if I buy Ariel, then I shouldn't complain if my younger brother remains jobless because I will have created a job in Egypt. You mean the ariel sold here is imported from Egypt?Who owns this brand? P & G
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Rank: Veteran Joined: 7/5/2010 Posts: 2,061 Location: Nairobi
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kysse wrote:Omo can continue sitting pretty on the shelves because it burns hands.
If you want to beat the competition,please beat their standard.
Sunlight/Ariel anytime. Burns hands? Never noticed. If you ask me I would tell you that is a concept that was sneaked into people's minds by devious marketing minds and then it stuck and became a yardstick. There is another, colgate triple action I think,..or Jameson's double distilled. You imagine it, therefore it becomes real. If you asked somebody who has never been exposed to advertising to compare and contrast the 2 the concept of 'burnt hands' wouldn't come up. Probably.
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How did we let Ariel overtake Omo
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