The Columbus Dispatch

CONSUMERS

- Kstankiewi­cz@dispatch.com @kevin_stank

Subscripti­on services for products are particular­ly appealing for younger people, according to recent research from consulting firm Mckinsey & Company. Subscriber­s are more likely to be ages 25 to 44 and live in urban areas, and the median number of e-commerce subscripti­ons people had was two, the research shows.

Not all subscripti­ons are the same, despite their widespread presence. There are those for digital content, where traditiona­l ownership of movies, music or software is forgone.

Digital subscripti­ons can be attractive because they limit clutter, said Mike Mueller, 33, of Italian Village. For Mueller, the music-streaming service Spotify, which costs $9.99 a month, “is a life saver,” he said.

“If I had the same interest in music that I do now, but was living in the ‘80s, I’d have crates of stuff,” he said, but that stuff wouldn’t fit in his tiny apartment.

In other instances, it’s about the possibilit­y of trying something new — a new recipe, a new clothing item, a new plant.

That’s why Julie Miller, 31, of Grandview Heights, subscribed for two years to Birchbox, which ships four or five makeup and beautyrela­ted products each month, and Winc, a wine subscripti­on.

“It was interestin­g to get wines that you cannot just get at the grocery store,” she said.

A recurring payment also gets you a product such as ethically raised meat shipped monthly through a company called Moink.

Or you can get two justadd-alcohol cocktail mixers in a box each month from Columbus-based Simple Times Mixers, which just moved production to Gahanna. Dog toys and treats from BARK, which has a Columbus office, can show up at the doorstep, too.

Even well-known brands such as Jeni’s Splendid Ice Creams have added subscripti­on programs.

For businesses, monthly subscripti­ons allow for easier revenue forecasts, and the continuous customer contact increases feedback, making it easier to adjust products or services to fit evolving needs, said Daniel Mccarthy, a professor at Emory University’s Goizueta School of Business who studies subscripti­on services.

For consumers, the allure is sometimes predicated on convenienc­e, like Dollar Shave Club, which delivers razors and other grooming products.

While some may decry the growing popularity of subscripti­on services as a sign of laziness, having essential products delivered routinely to your door isn’t a new concept. After all, before refrigerat­ors, the ice man brought ice to homes. It was common for milk to be delivered, too.

The glut of streaming services — which will only intensify as Disney and Nbcunivers­al prepare to launch their own — aren’t the only subscripti­ons causing people to feel overwhelme­d.

Mccarthy said sometimes the physical products being offered come too frequently, causing the goods to pile up. It’s a reason why some people unsubscrib­e, he said.

“They’re not consuming the product as quickly as it’s being shipped to them,” he said, using a drawer full of razors as an example. “Now when they’re getting them, they’re going, ‘ugh.’”

As both types of subscripti­on services continue growing, it’s important to consider how reasonable it is financiall­y to have a dozen of them, for example.

Mccarthy said be believes there is a “non-negligible” amount of people who don’t check their bank statements each month, leaving them slightly unsure how much they spend on subscripti­ons.

But the more subscripti­ons people have, the less likely they’ll be able to operate that way, Mccarthy predicted, saying it’s easier to spot hundreds of dollars gone each month than $40.

Miller agreed, though she said she watches her statement closely. She canceled both Winc and Birchbox when she was between jobs, a time when she said cutting back on spending was important.

“It’s something to be aware of, because it could get out of control,” she said.

 ?? [ADAM CAIRNS/DISPATCH] ?? Maria Fehl packs a monthly subscripti­on box with bottles of strawberry lemonade and blackberry mint lemonade at the Simple Times Mixers production facility in Gahanna.
[ADAM CAIRNS/DISPATCH] Maria Fehl packs a monthly subscripti­on box with bottles of strawberry lemonade and blackberry mint lemonade at the Simple Times Mixers production facility in Gahanna.

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