Would you buy it, why or why not?
What age range would this appeal to?
Does it look like a supplement and wellness brand?


Girl's Behavior
Guy's Behavior
Flirting
Dating
Relationships
Fashion & Beauty
Health & Fitness
Marriage & Weddings
Shopping & Gifts
Technology & Internet
Break Up & Divorce
Education & Career
Entertainment & Arts
Family & Friends
Food & Beverage
Hobbies & Leisure
Other
Religion & Spirituality
Society & Politics
Sports
Travel
Trending & News 

mothefriendly wants to hear from Girls only. Login to share your opinion.
I would buy it, but I have a few issues, the 5 bottles are not equally distanced apart in the photo add, that unaccounted gap makes it look unprofessional, the shades on the ones face should be more aesthetically designed, meaning, more circular patterns on the outer convex areas of the face, fewer circular patterns on the inner concave areas of the face, the buttocks of the women in pink is too uniquely shaped and detracts from the rest of the ad, I would use A. I. to give her buttocks a more standard shape, the upper torso of the same women is too large and her legs are too small, the shade of yellow on the top purple jug should match the shade of yellow in the top right yellow scooper, I would use A. I. to fix that.
They are all fair critisms. Its just a rough idea, those things would defo need tightening up for sure. You are extemely helpful. What is appealing about it?
I like how the purple and green are mixed in with he lighter pastel or skin make up palette shades, it gives it a dream like vibe, I also like the crescent shape in different parts of the ad, it makes it seem emotionally stimulating and further communicates this imaginary dream state. Mainly, when I get the idea of gentleness, dream reaching, a new creative indulgence world detached from reality, and imbued material intelligence and craftsmanship skill, as well as consistent and superior quality, I will buy the product.
You are a very thoughtful woman. I really appreciate your answers. Thank you. One last one how much would you pay for it?
It would depend on how full the supplement packs are, if they are full to the bridge and fairly long, I would pay $60-$80 Canadian dollars for it or maybe $100 if it is very good quality, if they are full 2/3rds and contain fewer single use portions, I would pay $40 for it. I am somebody who shops cheap, so even when a product is good, I am not willing to pay a lot for it, I just won't buy it at all. If it was full to the brim and lance level, I might pay $200 for it.
lancome level. Sorry, the autocorrect changed the spelling.
Do you for the full range of products or for 1 tub?
I do not know what the supplement looks like, how big it is, how much one portion is, what the quality of the supplement is, what the shelf life of the supplement is, how comforting it feels, whether it has a pleasant scent, whether it has a texture, whether it is a food or a lotion, or whether the supplement is mean to treat more than one thing or only one thing, whether it contains more than one ingredient or only one major ingredient, how common the ingredient or ingredient combination is, all of that affects how much I am willing to pay for it.
Fair enough. You are my kind of woman
Lets say its 2 tubs 500g each they taste and smell amazing. Tub 1 is a combination of supplements taken between a certain time of your cycle and tub 2 a combination of things
for the other half. I. e. iron and vitamin c to help you absorb the iron when you are on your period for example. Along side creatine and protien bars to aid women with working out amd feeling more energetic wether they work out or not
So I do not understand 500 grams because 500 grams of honey is different from 500 grams of protein powder, but the two both weigh 500 grams, but I would pay around $25 - $35 for the tubs, depending on how many portions you are getting from that. I learned from Dr. Berg that not all iron sold in capsule form is the type of iron your body likes to use, so if your iron is healthier than other types of iron, it would be important to mention that on your package, to attract future buyers and increase your ratings, and if you mention that your vitamin C is sourced from a rare vegetable and not a chemically processed synthesis, then your vitamin C would be a lot more valuable, because on amazon, vitamin C sourced from vegetables can sell over $100 Canadian per bottle, while normal vitamin C from questionable sources, can be bought for under $10 per bottle, so specifying that the vitamin C is sourced from a vegetable or tea or rare fruit would increase the amount people are willing to pay for vitamin c. If it is high quality iron and high quality vitamin C you could charge up to $60 per bottle, but to attract the highest volume of customers, I would stick to $30 per bottle, because you know, the biggest advertisement is a good price. Nothing sells more product than a low price, remember that.
Fair enough. I was going for premium feeling but at a good price point below the high end stuff. £35 per month for the bundle.
One last thing. Just objectively speaking does it appear to be something women in general would be interested in
When I saw the box, I was very curious because I thought you were selling lotions or collagen capsules or anti wrinkle anti youth or liver boosting enzymes and nutritional products. When I learned you were selling things for menstruation, I stopped caring because I am Chinese and Chinese people do not get painful cycles the way white people do. I am also older than the target you want to sell to, so I am more concerned with organ health and anti aging and youthfulness, then I am with menstrual cycles. The other thing, because your package was so exotic, I thought you would be selling minerals or alternative vegetables and herbs used for health and usefulness, that would have appealed to me, as well as potential lotions, while vitamin c and protein powder does not appeal to me, because I can get protein by eating chicken and I can get vitamin c by eating bananas which cost less than $0.15 per serving in Canadian money. If you want to sell protein powder, you should highlight that you are selling a vegetarian based protein powder such as chick peas maybe flavoured in chocolate or some tasty material, or using roasted beans as the protein source, and not regular protein powder from milk ingredients since people will have a negative view of your product if your protein powder is synthetically maid. You also want to avoid a chemically charged taste with your powder, as it will make your product seem unhealthy, so try to use a more alternative or spice based flavour as opposed to a milk fat vanilla flavour. Vanilla is good, but you don't want your vanilla to taste synthetic, you want it to taste rich and potentially fatty, the fatty taste, makes it taste real and not artificial.
So is there a lack of products branded in such a way that are aimed at women 40+?
I would say to focus more on the relevance of the product to people over the age of 40 and less on the artistry and media advertisement style that would appeal to women over 40, for example, highlighting the anti aging functions of your product, is more useful, than having photos of attractive 40 year old women in your product line, one smart thing a lot of companies do, is they try to make their product relevant to people of different ages, by avoiding the idea of age related art altogether, and they simply use a unique and elegant colour combination for their product line instead, one example is that there is a major brand that uses a beautiful shade of red for the glass case colour, with a silver top for the glass product covering, that colour combination appeals to both genders and appeals to all ages, so it does not diminish interest value from people outside The age range of its target branding market.
It does look like a wellness / supplement brand, yes. The clean layout, soft colors and simple typography usually signal “health, calm, trust.” I’d buy it if the info on ingredients and benefits is super clear and the logo feels professional, not gimmicky.
It would mainly appeal to people around 20–40, maybe stretching to mid‑40s if the design isn’t too playful.
Don't you have an account you just asked about women's supplements? I just answered that one not but a little bit ago. I will reiterate what I said there and that I don't take supplements. That would include whatever this stuff is.
I don't feel the need to put anything into my body that I don't have a legitimate need for. Perhaps some day when I am older I may require supplements.
I don't believe you are supposed to have two accounts.
Thats fair enough you are only 19 tbf. No this is my only account. Why would i need 2
Active women, what are the best female-focused supplement brands and why? ↗
So there is another guy with the same username style and same question within an hour? I don't really think so.
Oh yeah wtf 😂
Its not me i would just say yes if it was. Why do you even care lol. You do you but wtf
No. If I’m going to buy a supplement, I want to see that it’s backed by a lab. This tarot card design has zero scientific credibility, it looks more like those cheap products with "miracle cure that solves all problems" written on them
So you dont like the branding because it makes you think its not scientifically credible? What if it was backed by science?
Sure, I’d at least give it a look just by branding and design alone.
Thanks for your response
Ok so it looks appealing to you
Yeah 👍
Appreciate your contribution. One last question.. Do you think other women would also find it appealing?
Probably yeah
How many accounts do you have now?
Answer the question or fuck off
You are trolling. You have multiple accounts.
What? So confused
So this account no. ?
I've been told there a copy cat or something. No idea how its relevant to the question though?
What do you think of the product?
You can also add your opinion below!
Most Helpful Opinions