Folks, I have a new video today where I'm very excited to announce a new dishwasher powder on the market.

Why am I so excited? Because it's vindicated every single one of my detergent opinions.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DAX2_mPr9W8

I was right about dishwasher pods, and now I can prove it

YouTube
@TechConnectify I have two questions (and if it was addressed in the video, my apologies, I must have missed it) - the bag of Green Llama detergent costs about 3x more than a box of Cascade where I live. Does the higher cleaning performance really justify that price delta? I also haven't really kept track of how many loads a box of Cascade can do... Is the rated number of loads equivalent between the two products? Cascade helpfully omits that information from their boxes (or I'm just blind).

@baralheia @TechConnectify IMO the cleaning performance doesn't - It's only slightly better - but the part that does justify it is two fold.

Part the first, they don't have nearly the same economy of scale, it's hard to make it cheap until a lot of people buy some

Part the second, Profit goes to Charity, so there has to be some.

At least in my opinion.

@krutonium @baralheia @TechConnectify and thirdly, Green Llama is a eco focused small business. Walmart and P&G are very none of those things.
Baral'heia Stormdancer ΘΔ🐲 (@[email protected])

@[email protected] @[email protected] Oh yeah for sure, I'm fully expecting (and willing to pay) a price premium for products that work well (AND ones that benefit charities too)! It's just kinda difficult to get an apples-to-apples comparison to see if the higher cost is affordable for me. Neither the box of Cascade nor my dishwasher's manual specify exactly how much detergent is actually recommended so I'll have to measure and figure it out heh

Dragonchat