Juicero was the mirror product, then: An overpriced orange juice machine, with little packets that you can only buy on subscription, but can’t suspend while on holidays, with a QR code to prevent you from consuming after your holidays. It is also down if it can’t reach the Wifi. It showed that you can overcharge and make everything become a cloud subscription, because money was unlimited on the consumer side this time.
Surprisingly, it didn’t work outside of the Bay area. Some entrepreneurs have difficulty seeing the world’s situation beyond their local horizon.
While I can see luxury food delivery kind-of working (wealthy workers in the office ordering lunch, wealthy home workers ordering lunch, fitness nuts who want calories and good food without cooking), Juicero was just plain ridiculous.
Competition from local supermarket is too strong. I can get freshly squeezed juice from the store machine anytime I want for cheap.
Plus juice is kind of a crappy high sugar project that’s bad for you?
Relatedly, I have no idea how “Joe and The Juice” stores remain in business. They’re in super valuable real estate in cities across the country and as far as I can tell never have anyone in them.
Do they? How long have the same ones been around 5 or 10 years yet?
On other their products likely have such margin it might be possible with enough sales. The components aren't too expensive, there isn't massive number of labour and equipment isn't that big of investment either likely...
I keep hearing this, but I don‘t really think fresh orange juice, for instance, is as bad as sth like sunny delight or soda. I do not have a source though.
> Competition from local supermarket is too strong.
Honest question: Do startup millionaires still go shopping themselves? I imagine when you are between the area where you have a gardner for time-to-time tasks and don’t have “un majordome” yet to serve you at any time, there’s an entire higher-class-market-but-not-elites who would be interested in Juicero?
You, and everyone that responded to you, have no idea what Juicero was. It wasn’t orange juice at all, or any type of fruit juice. It was green juice. The founder made millions selling his chain of green juice stores on the east coast so he short had a history of success.
I have a friend that worked there so I even tried the product. I thought the idea was vastly overpriced, but it definitely had the chance of working. Lots of people are into green juice vs fruit juice and they were trying to create a new market.
> It wasn’t orange juice at all, or any type of fruit juice. It was green juice.
This is a distinction without a difference. It doesn't matter what the juice is called. It doesn't change the fact that it's idiotic to pay hundreds of dollars for a machine that just squeezes bags of fruits and vegetables, and needs an Internet connection to ensure you're locked in to only squeezing the company's pricy bags.
What it shows is people who criticize the company don’t actually know anything about it. If you’re going to criticize actually take the time to understand instead of throwing rocks thinking you’re so smart because you read a headline.
"Green juice" is fruits and vegetables, FYI. Look at their marketing material. The bags listed the ingredients on the front and they included things like apple and pineapple.
Surprisingly, it didn’t work outside of the Bay area. Some entrepreneurs have difficulty seeing the world’s situation beyond their local horizon.