
Ever
heard of tryvertising?
“Your
Money’s No Good Here”
read the headline of an article by David McNeill in the Irish
Times “Innovation”
supplement (10 December). “Tokyo has a
shop with no price tags, no cash registers or no paying customers –
what’s it all about?”
No, they haven’t introduced socialism in
Japan. So what is it all about?
One
of the more abstruse objections to socialism is that it would have no
means of knowing what new products to make available and so people
would have a narrower choice than under capitalism. The critics
concede that, with free access to what they needed, people might well
take from the common stores and distribution centres only what they
needed till their next visit -- just as today, when some things are
free, they end up taking only as much water or free travel or free
phone calls as they need. But, the objection goes, how would you find
out what new products to make available?
Socialists
have replied that this would not be a problem in that the same sort
of techniques for finding out what new products people might like
that are used under capitalism could, with suitable modification, be
used in socialism. Of course it could not be called “market
research” since there’d
be no markets, so it would have to be called something like “new
wants research”. But the techniques would
be the same even though the aim would be to find out what new
products people would take under conditions of free access instead of
what they might be prepared to pay for.
Market
research has traditionally involved questionnaires and many people
have earned some extra money by stopping people in the street or
phoning them to ask what they think of some product. The clue to
what’s it all about is in the name of the
Tokyo free shop: Sample Lab. It’s a shop
where firms provide samples of their products for people to take and
try without having to pay for them. According to David McNeill, this
is known as “tryvertising”.
It’s
not really like things would normally be in socialism, even though
there are no price tags and no cash registers. Those who use the free
sample shop have to pay a modest registration and annual membership
fee and are expected to answer questions about the products they take
away and try, and they can only take five products at a time. The
advantage for the capitalist firms who supply the free samples is
that they get some feedback on what people think of their new product
and how well they are likely to sell if marketed, a feedback that is
said to be more accurate than from questioning people in the streets
or by phone.
But
this technique, at present prostituted in the service of profit,
could easily be adopted in socialism. There could still be sample
shops where a representative cross-section of people could come and
take new products to try in return for answering questions about what
they thought of them. It might even still be called “tryvertising”.

|