During this last Super Bowl, I saw an ad for the $20,000 2011 Hyundai Sonata family sedan. The ad message was clear about the car's 14-step paint process:
"Better paint quality than the Mercedes CLS550. Think about it."
Now, I'm not saying that one should choose the Sonata over the CLS550: Hyundai also makes their Genesis, which would be a closer comparison, as the Mercedes-Benz CLS550 is a $72,400 luxury car. Still, if one reads the April Auto issue of Consumer Reports, the reader survey points out that Hyundai is one of the highest-quality and best automakers now (way up from junk status a decade ago), whereas Mercedes (with one exception) ranks near the bottom in terms of quality. Yet many people still associate Mercedes with prestige, quality, and being the best and Hyundai with producing OK (if not junk) cars, a remnant of the days of the old Mercedes models and the Hyundai Excel, respectively.
I see a similar correlation to the fragrance world. I own several fragrances that don't cost much or are reasonably priced such as Giorgio for Men, Mugler Cologne, PdN New York (my SOTD: a wonderful, reasonably priced niche), and Narciso Rodriguez for Him. They all hold their own to the likes of the best $100+ niche fragrances from the likes of Creed, By Kilian, Carthusia, and the like.
At the same time, some of those $100+ niches are a mixed bag. I've smelled some that are as bad as certain newer designer releases, though I won't name names to protect the innocent. On the other hand, some are so good and special that you want to buy them on the spot (case in point: By Kilian's Straight to Heaven). But some people buy niche fragrances because of some special rare ingredient, name on the bottle (we're looking at you, Creed), or magical story and not their nose instinct. It's like a car buyer buying a Mercedes over a Hyundai without doing their homework, expecting better reliability than their Chevy, only to have it in the dealer service department often.
Like the Hyundai commercial, we should "think about it": is our fragrance collection based on what our nose wanted to buy, or is it based on perception alone?
"Better paint quality than the Mercedes CLS550. Think about it."
Now, I'm not saying that one should choose the Sonata over the CLS550: Hyundai also makes their Genesis, which would be a closer comparison, as the Mercedes-Benz CLS550 is a $72,400 luxury car. Still, if one reads the April Auto issue of Consumer Reports, the reader survey points out that Hyundai is one of the highest-quality and best automakers now (way up from junk status a decade ago), whereas Mercedes (with one exception) ranks near the bottom in terms of quality. Yet many people still associate Mercedes with prestige, quality, and being the best and Hyundai with producing OK (if not junk) cars, a remnant of the days of the old Mercedes models and the Hyundai Excel, respectively.
I see a similar correlation to the fragrance world. I own several fragrances that don't cost much or are reasonably priced such as Giorgio for Men, Mugler Cologne, PdN New York (my SOTD: a wonderful, reasonably priced niche), and Narciso Rodriguez for Him. They all hold their own to the likes of the best $100+ niche fragrances from the likes of Creed, By Kilian, Carthusia, and the like.
At the same time, some of those $100+ niches are a mixed bag. I've smelled some that are as bad as certain newer designer releases, though I won't name names to protect the innocent. On the other hand, some are so good and special that you want to buy them on the spot (case in point: By Kilian's Straight to Heaven). But some people buy niche fragrances because of some special rare ingredient, name on the bottle (we're looking at you, Creed), or magical story and not their nose instinct. It's like a car buyer buying a Mercedes over a Hyundai without doing their homework, expecting better reliability than their Chevy, only to have it in the dealer service department often.
Like the Hyundai commercial, we should "think about it": is our fragrance collection based on what our nose wanted to buy, or is it based on perception alone?











