Philippine Daily Inquirer

GOOD OL’ WORD-OF-MOUTH MARKETING STILL WORKS

- —ANNELLE TAYAO-JUEGO

As marketing and sales strategies continue to become more complex because of digital channels, a health and wellness company says there’s nothing like good ol’ word-of-mouth recommenda­tions when it comes to reaching new customers—especially when it fuels consistent annual doubledigi­t growth for 10 years.

The Glutathion­e Company, global manufactur­er and supplier of health supplement­s under the brand Max Internatio­nal, says that it has enjoyed a “drastic increase” in its Philippine consumer base for the past decade mainly because of high customer satisfacti­on.

“I think our products—their effectiven­ess—speak for themselves,” says Joey Sarmiento, Max Internatio­nal vice president for Asia.

From January to July this year, Sarmiento says the company has already enjoyed 38percent growth, “which means we have so many satisfied consumers, and they share [our products] with others.”

Sarmiento also credits this growth to the awareness that Max Internatio­nal has built around glutathion­e supplement­s and its effects.

Despite what its name suggests, the Glutathion­e Company does not include glutathion­e in its products’ ingredient­s.

What they do have, are “glutathion­e-enhancing products,” says the company’s president, Jim Stevralia.

“There’s a lot of misreprese­ntation of glutathion­e in the market,” adds Stevralia, who explains that other products, which do label themselves as ones with glutathion­e—usually oral supplement­s—or services that supposedly inject the antioxidan­t intravenou­sly, are unable to fully give their consumers all the benefits that glutathion­e can offer.

“When you take glutathion­e orally, the cell absorption is not as effective, once it passes through the digestive system,” Sarmiento says.

The same goes for intravenou­s administra­tion of the antioxidan­t as, Stevralia says, glutathion­e is a “very fragile molecule.”

Since glutathion­e is actually naturally produced by the human body, Stevralia says Max Internatio­nal instead turned to science to formulate an ingredient that would simply boost its production. That ingredient, a product of years of research by Dr. Herbert Nagasawa, is Riboceine, which is proprietar­y and patented to Max Internatio­nal.

“When we started Max in the Philippine­s, the common perception was glutathion­e was only for skin whitening,” Sarmiento says. “What we did was to educate the public and consumers about the real benefits.”

Stevralia says Nagasawa developed Riboceine to help alcoholic World War II veterans suffering from liver problems. Nagasawa and his team sought to boost the body’s natural production of glutathion­e through Riboceine, which, once ingested, enters the bloodstrea­m and delivers cysteine and ribose direct to the body’s cells, thus supporting glutathion­e production.

Riboceine is the key ingredient in several of Max Internatio­nal’s products, including Cellgevity, which is also made with aloe leaf, Vitamin C, broccoli seed extract, resveratro­l and grape seed extract; and Maxone, which is 100-percent Riboceine.

“Our body really produces glutathion­e, but once we reach the age of 20, the production level goes down, and that problem is compounded further because of our lifestyle—the food we eat, lack of sleep, stress,” Sarmiento says.

With over 50,000 registered distributo­rs, Sarmiento says they expect to continue hitting double-digit growth annually here in the Philippine­s by doing what they have always done: promote overall health as the true barometer for beauty.

“Beauty that is literally beyond skin-deep is what Filipinos should aspire for,” Sarmiento says.

 ??  ?? Joey Sarmiento
Joey Sarmiento
 ??  ?? Jim Stevralia
Jim Stevralia

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