I'm sure it's just a temporary oversight....
Yeah ... like the first 60 days was! More likely that it's a ploy to get traffic to their website or any attention they can get.
I'm sure it's just a temporary oversight....
Yeah ... like the first 60 days was! More likely that it's a ploy to get traffic to their website or any attention they can get.
Just like a naughty neglected child... getting negative attention is better than NO attention.
Andria
Just have to say I agree. The plot thickens and they do need a public shaming.Plenty to see here, these guys needed to be called out
I have to disagree with you. Aspen Valley owns a business that sells their own private label of juices and they have a YouTube channel where they perform reviews.Meh, just chalk it up to inexperienced, scared shitless, vape marketers. Nothing to see here.
The words they used in the article about DIY are lies and are an insult to all who DIY, done for their gain....they are scum
But as one wise man once said, Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but not to their own truth.
I h
I have to disagree with you. Aspen Valley owns a business that sells their own private label of juices and they have a YouTube channel where they perform reviews.
Inexperienced is not something they are allowed to claim. They have been told a lot of people are finding this article to be misleading yet they refuse to take it down.
At this point we can safely say this article was completely designed to bolster the sales through shady tactics.
Ah, very true, very true. But they did not lie. Because DIY juice making can, in fact, be dangerous for some people. Some people are not safe in the way that they do things (they are clumsy) and, for those people, handling concentrations of nicotine can be dangerous, even if only mildly.
Just as driving a car is more dangerous for some than for others.
Some people should not even vape. Take those stories you heard (if they are even true) about babies and toddlers getting nicotine poisoning because their parents left the e-liquid where the toddler could access it. In those cases, e-liquid alone is very dangerous.
So I could write an article about how eliquid is dangerous because toddlers can get hurt from it if they get a hold of it.
I would not be lying in the slightest. I just would only be telling part of the truth and leaving out the part that proper parenting and using your brain, when part of the equation, can mitigate that risk to a degree where it becomes a non-issue.
But I would not be lying. I would only be lying if I said in the article that there was nowhere you can hide your ejuice so that a toddler cannot access it or if I said ejuice, just being present in the house, can kill toddlers even if they don't touch it.
The site mentioned in this thread isn't harming the vaping industry. Government officials already know the risks of handling nicotine bases. The only people they are attempting to hurt are the DIY suppliers, whom they feel are their competitors (but they aren't because probably 85% of people who seek to buy pre-made nicotine are not interested and will never be interested in DIY - not even if ejuice were to be banned by the govt. This is why I called them inexperienced marketers).
I'm not a lawyer, but in the US when sworn in to testify in a court, one swears to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. If you violate any of those, it's perjury.
Someone is trolling that channel pretty hard too because of their juice article.
Thats incredible. The proof is in the pudding right there! I think AVV needs to get some aloe on that burnAnd their pure hypocrisy as pointed out in the other thread
@Aspenvalleyvapes there is 1 easy way to fix this.
Simply remove the damn article from your website & fire the person who posted it.Then publicly apologize on all your social media sites.
Doing anything else at this point is just digging your own grave.
As my grandfather used to say.
"If you ever find yourself in a hole...it's time to stop digging!"
Possibly.Heh... maybe it was the owner of the company who posted it, trying to get some revenue back from all the DIYers. Now he's too ashamed to 'fess up.
Andria
Sure. but we are also allowed and even required in defense of DIY to call em out.What I meant by "inexperienced" was that they aren't very good at marketing. I find most vape shops owners are pretty lacking when it comes to advertising and marketing and business savvy. Having been a senior marketing consultant for a large marketing firm in my heyday, I take note of things like this.
It doesn't bother me that they use such tactics. They don't work and they will piss people off but that's their problem. All I look for is the products I want at the price I want...shipped fast. They aren't the only company in history that used scare tactics and (even if false) to try to gain or retain customers.
They're scared because the competition is fierce in vape, profit margins aren't what they used to be, and they are scared shitless as to the future of their business and the future of vape. Oh well, such is life.
If you don't like what they do, don't buy from them. There are a plethora of other places to buy from.
LololI had to write on the article comments, I thought this was beyond belief.
I said -
You have just essentially killed off your business if you leave this up.
It is complete rubbish as you know- mixing your own juice IS simple, and you DO just mix the ingredients to ‘magically’ make your own juice. It is simple, and you are making it sound like you need a degree, or that everyone else is too dumb to be able to do any math.
Due to this, I feel you should stop selling batteries- to use these safely, you need to calculate using maths. As your customers are not intelligent enough to do this, surely for their own safety you should stop selling them.