• @Treczoks
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    48 hours ago

    Well, their business model of selling their stuff with “Tupperware Parties” was en vogue in the 70s, 80s. The world of businesses has changed since then. Tupperware has not. Go figure.

  • @CyberDine
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    813 hours ago

    Another victim of Boston Consulting Group

    • @[email protected]
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      11 minute ago

      Oh is that what they do? I had no idea. They used to be a customer at the last company I worked at. I always wondered what, exactly, they consulted.

    • @[email protected]
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      28 hours ago

      Is this late-state enshittification? Didn’t they super cheap-out on some/all of their products to appeal to the ‘single’ use crowd?

      • @Cort
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        28 hours ago

        the ‘single’ use crowd

        Oil and plastic producers?

    • @Coreidan
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      111 hours ago

      Gonna need RC here to save them. BCG is cancer.

  • Ghostalmedia
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    3817 hours ago

    IMHO, they had a weird ass business model that was about selling direct to consumers through local reps and “Tupperware parties.”

    Their competitors sold comparable products in stores and online waaaay before Tupperware woke up. And by the time they woke up, people had already had moved on to other brands.

    They’re paying the price for dumb decisions made years ago. They basically handed their food container market dominance over to other companies.

    • @[email protected]
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      2417 hours ago

      Well, originally, they started in shops but it was failing miserably so they came up with the pyramid scheme Tupperware ambassadors.

      But yeah it was a long time ago and they didn’t think of changing the model until recently.

  • @ooterness
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    5319 hours ago

    …facilitate a sale process for the business in order to protect its iconic brand and further advance Tupperware’s transformation into a digital-first, technology-led company.

    Wait, what?

    • @EvacuateSoul
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      3812 hours ago

      Haven’t you heard of containerization?

    • Ghostalmedia
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      4117 hours ago

      Tupperware is a weird ass company and for the longest time you couldn’t buy their products in a store or online. You had to go to a “Tupperware party” and buy them from a local rep.

      Eventually they started to sell in select stores and eventually online.

      By “digital first, technology led,” they basically mean they’re playing catchup with e-commerce basics.

    • @jpreston2005
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      37 hours ago

      Since PFAS and PFOS is basically in all food container packaging these days, I’ve switched to using glass containers for everything I can. Pyrex if I can manage it.

    • @Zess
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      717 hours ago

      Rubbermaid makes better tupperware than Tupperware does.

  • @[email protected]
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    1419 hours ago

    On some level their product is too good–sell it once, and that’s it. You own it, and it lasts forever.

    • snooggums
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      3519 hours ago

      Products can break, people are born and grow up an eventually need to buy that kind of thing. Some of it can break or wear out even if most of it last decades.

      The problem is expecting never ending exponential growth because of the pressures of capitalism instead of finding a stable level of production and making that profitable. Especially with buy it for life products.

      • @[email protected]
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        1519 hours ago

        This makes room in the market for a company that makes subscription-based plastic containers that steal your data.

        • chingadera
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          513 hours ago

          That’s a weird way to spell innovation

        • snooggums
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          19 hours ago

          So does trying for exponential growth, or really selling anything at all.

    • Ghostalmedia
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      1617 hours ago

      IMHO, the bigger issue is that they refused to sell their stuff in stores and on the internet for a long long time. You had to buy from select retailers or a local rep that threw “tupper ware parties.”

      A lot of use just moved to other brands that were easier to find, and when we wanted to replace stuff that never got returned by a neighbor, we bought more of the same stuff.

    • HorseChandelier
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      817 hours ago

      The products also have/had a lifetime guarantee - providing you could find a rep and they still made the product… Got a jug replaced after 40 years of hard service.

      It’s also why the party model failed them - MLM for a product that never broke or wore out.

      Newer tupperware was microwave safe.

      Reps got a cut of party sales and if they made enough each month the could get other benefits as well (a company car, for example).

    • @Xeroxchasechase
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      518 hours ago

      You’ve just realized why companies love planned obsolescence.