Why do vitamins and supplements companies leave so much empty space in their bottles/tubs?
from Mothra@mander.xyz to nostupidquestions@lemmy.ca on 22 Jun 08:52
https://mander.xyz/post/32583799

Just got some Swisse vitamin D and 3/4 of the tub is air. I’ve had similar experiences with other brands too.

So what’s the deal?

Wouldn’t it be more profitable for them to use smaller packaging? Smaller=less material cost, more stock can be shipped in the same delivery. They can still sell it at the same price if they want

I can understand the “fill with air” gimmick for things like potato chips, but not supplements. These are numbered. There’s 60 pills here, you’re advertising this number on the label, you can still put the same number on a smaller tub.

Why tho?

#nostupidquestions

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redlemace@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 09:02 next collapse

Big package gives the feeling/illusion of getting more for your money.

Mothra@mander.xyz on 22 Jun 09:51 collapse

I think I’ve mentioned that the pills are numbered. It’s not potato chips or cookies

redlemace@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 10:09 collapse

Yes, you did. Pills have different sizes, people have no clear image of a pile of x pills. A big package is very obvious. €10 for a big box with 60 pills feels like better deal than €10 for a small box with 60 pills.

themoonisacheese@sh.itjust.works on 22 Jun 10:41 collapse

Consumers are also unbelievably stupid. Even for stuff like candy bars, which people have a good idea of the size, they often pull tricks like carton inserts between bars to increase total package size. They still claim the correct amount of candy bars on the package, but consumers will see the larger package and go “ah yes, clearly bigger is better”

Mothra@mander.xyz on 22 Jun 13:20 collapse

I think this works better for items like confectionery because most people aren’t mindful of units when shopping. Most people don’t stop to read the label for confectionery. But most people do for meds, vitamins and supplements

themoonisacheese@sh.itjust.works on 22 Jun 19:11 collapse

I understand that you believe that, but you seem to be severalty overestimating consumer’s ability to read in the first place.

sanguinepar@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 09:06 next collapse

It’s maybe cheaper for them to buy millions of the same size of container than to buy smaller quantities of various more suitably sized ones. Could be that for some medications/patient requirements those same tubs do get mostly filled up, and it’s easier just to have the same size for all. Probably makes boxing and shipping simpler too.

Rhaedas@fedia.io on 22 Jun 10:03 next collapse

Correct. Same reason why most products in cans or bottles come in similar sizes. The cost for packaging and shipping has been minimized over time. There will be outliers, usually to try and stand out on the shelf. For unseen online shipping, the cheaper mass production is best, even if they're shipping air and it's wasted space. It cost them less.

Regna@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 10:03 next collapse

Also, smaller sizes would get less exposure space on the shelves. They need them big enough for the brand and type to be legible and not disappear among other brand products on the shelves.

Source: temped in ”health” stores.

[deleted] on 22 Jun 10:04 next collapse
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sanguinepar@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 10:26 collapse

Good point.

Mothra@mander.xyz on 22 Jun 13:23 collapse

This makes sense

BCsven@lemmy.ca on 22 Jun 20:38 collapse

The scale the bottles are produced at makes it so the cosy between a tall bottle or half size would be negligible. The actually material difference is fractions of a penny

Dagwood222@lemm.ee on 22 Jun 09:45 next collapse

It makes shipping easier. Packing a bunch of different sized bottles into a single carton is a mess.

nimble@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 22 Jun 10:52 collapse

Anything sold in stores basically has to compete with physical eye appeal. This means small things are prone to being packaged bigger so they catch people’s eyes. You can see this with a bag of chips- sure the air helps prevent chips from breaking but have you ever wondered why some bags are 50% air? It’s just to make the package bigger so it stands out more.