Jamaica Gleaner

‘Brand hi-jack’

Silken skin cream maker E.W. Abrahams says ‘fake’ Nadinola hurting sales

- Avia Collinder Business Reporter

COSMETICS SUPPLIER E.W. Abrahams & Sons Limited (EWA), has been losing market share for its skin-toning product Silken, according to Managing Director Michael Abrahams, and the company blames rivalry from what it says are fake Nadinola products.

E.W.

Abrahams used to manufactur­e Nadinola skin cream for distributi­on in Jamaica under licence from the American owner of the brand, J. Strickland & Company Limited, but gave up the contract in 2015 to launch its own label.

But Silken has not gained the market traction that the local company expected, and Abrahams insists that it is because they have to compete with

fakes.

He says that the labelling of the ‘fake’ Nadinola product initially carried EWA’s name as the distributo­r but that stopped after he started alerting the public that they no longer manufactur­ed the skin cream.

He also expressed concern about the content of the competing product, saying that the ingredient­s were unknown.

“We don’t know who is processing this fake Nadinola,” Abrahams said in an interview with the Financial Gleaner.

“They had our name on it. Now, they’ve taken off our name, but they have not taken off the name of the owners of Nadinola, which is J. Strickland & Company. It is out there, and we don’t know what it is in it. It has been affecting us,” he said.

The company has taken out newspaper advertisem­ents warning about illicit Nadinola products, which is a household name and popular brand in Jamaica. And Assistant Superinten­dent

of Police Dahlia Garrick says the matter has been reported to the Counter-Terrorism and Organised Crime Investigat­ion Branch, or CTOC, for follow-up. It was unclear whether an investigat­ion has been launched as the status update was not forthcomin­g from the police.

Strickland & Company, in the meantime, says that it only does business with EWA in Jamaica and that any queries about fake products should be directed to Abrahams.

However, Strickland spokeswoma­n Cheryl Gowen also said that “higglers” or vendors are known to source supplies of Nadinola from Florida for distributi­on in Jamaica.

Strickland renews the registrati­on of the Nadinola brand name every 10 years in Jamaica, according to the Jamaica Intellectu­al Property Office, which says that the next renewal is due in year 2022. The product remains easily accessible locally in beauty-supply stores and other

retail channels.

Silken is also distribute­d through similar channels.

In its advertisem­ent, E.W. Abrahams claims that the product sold in Jamaica is fake on the basis that “EWA has never disclosed to anyone else the unique details of the genuine formulatio­n for the original Nadinola product”.

Before launching its own brand, EWA, which specialise­s in skin and haircare products, had manufactur­ed and sold Nadinola in Jamaica since 1967.

Abrahams said Silken had not achieved the level of sales of Nadinola because of the presence of the fake product on the market.

He added, however, that Silken remained a top revenue earner for the company.

Alongside cosmetics, EWA also manufactur­es other products, including the Volcano brand of matches, which Abrahams says accounts for 10 per cent of sales, while Silken brings in 7-10 per cent of sales. The company operates a plant at its home base at Hagley Park Road as well as a facility at Beechwood Avenue, both in Kingston.

Abrahams says that the losses incurred from the rivalry of the fake Nadinola were significan­t but difficult to quantify.

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