Dollar Shave Club Goes 'Upscale' With $9 Moisturizer
Value
Blade Purveyor Projects $60 Million in Sales, Sees Men Trading Up
An
anti-aging post-shave moisturizer for Dollar Shave Club
MAY19
Dollar Shave Club is
aiming upscale with the launch of a $9 post-shave moisturizer with anti-aging
benefits. Until now, the online men's grooming retailer -- as its name implies
-- has built its business on automatic replenishment of value-priced razor blades.
As the club's founder and
CEO Michael Dubin sees it, Dr. Carver's Magnanimous Post Shave All-In-One Daily
Moisturizer is more proof that despite the name, the brand and its 600,000
subscribers aren't just about price.
That said, while $9 isn't
cheap, it's half the price per ounce (or less) of other anti-aging post-shave
products sold online for $18 to $120 a bottle. And it's on trend, Mr. Dubin
said."Gone is the stigma of spending time on your grooming and skincare
routine," he said. "This is something men realize they have to do to
look good and feel successful."
Then again, if men do
feel any stigma, he acknowledged that a mail-order subscription is a pretty
good way to buy anti-aging post-shave products without fear of discovery. For
the post-shave product, Mr. Dubin plans no funny videos a la the initial club
launch or last year's launch of One-Wipe Charlies "butt wipes." But
he said DSC will likely promote the moisturizer in its in-house-created radio
commercials. DSC also bought $2.2 million in cable TV last year (including ESPN
football broadcasts), as part of its $3.9 million total spend, according to
Kantar Media, and Mr. Dubin said he'll likely continue using TV
"periodically."
Dollar Shave Club is on
pace to do $60 million in sales this year, up from $20 million last year, Mr.
Dubin said. Its self-reported 600,000 users amount to around 2% of industry
estimates of 36 million male razor cartridge users in
the U.S. But Mr. Dubin said he believes Dollar Shave Club has captured 6.2% of
the U.S. cartridge market by volume -- something that would give the
two-year-old company around a third of the share of Gillette challenger Schick,
owned by Energizer Holdings, in the $1.4 billion market for razor cartridges,
according to Nielsen data from Deutsche Bank.
Mr. Dubin expects to
triple sales this year at a time when that broader razor market is losing
ground -- something P&G Chief Financial Officer Jon Moeller last
month blamed in part on men trading down from cartridges to cheaper
disposables. For the 52 weeks ended April 12, Nielsen data show offline razor
cartridge sales down 10.6% in units and 5.3% in dollars.
But Mr. Dubin believes
his company is actually trading men up from disposables.
"We're seeing 40% of
our members take other products from us," he said. "And we think we
can go even higher once we fine-tune our subscriber marketing."
More broadly, Mr. Dubin
believes the $6 billion market for all men's grooming products is growing 5%
annually. "We think we not only can ride that wave but can increase the
size of the wave because of the very accessible, relatable voice we speak to
men with," he said.
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