Article in Winston-Salem paper ( Home of RJR)

Status
Not open for further replies.

EddardinWinter

The Philosopher Who Rides
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Jun 13, 2012
8,866
28,169
Richmond, Va
Ugh. Listen to this tool.

Vince Williams, vice president of communications for Campaign for tobacco-Free Kids, said the growing use of e-cigs and increased marketing “underscore the need for the FDA to quickly assert jurisdiction over all tobacco products.”

“The lack of regulation has allowed manufacturers to get away with claims that these products have been proven to be safer or can help smokers quit without having to provide any scientific evidence to a government agency that these claims are true,” Williams said. “We also don’t know what’s really in these products and what impact they have on health.

Okay, the last part he said is partially true. We don't know what impact they have on health. We do know what is in them. Manufacturers cannot claim they are proven safer, the FDA has sued several to assert that limitation. Liar liar pants on fire for everything but "we don't know the impact on heath".

As to RJR, come on in, the water is warm. They have been involved for a while now. Altria (Phillip Morris) is also getting in to, just more quietly. They will be good for the industry, in my opinion. More money, oodles of flavor research, and they could help with study financing. We need to keep an eye on them, but my initial reaction is positive.
 

IntelligentDesigner

Super Member
ECF Veteran
Feb 13, 2013
538
453
Raleigh, NC
Mixed reactions here. I like all the money they can put into development and research of the products, but hate the idea of them adding 5 billion chemicals to our e-liquids like they did with tobacco.

And Blu sold out for $135 million? They should've held out. Would've been worth WAY more a bit further down the road.
 
Last edited:

Platemail

Senior Member
ECF Veteran
Jan 18, 2013
147
132
Vamo, Florida
While at first I was unsure of BT getting involved in ecigs I think with all the things going on with the FDA we need that money funnel.

I agree completely. If BT gets their hands in the pot, the FDA will back down. We don't have to buy their products because new vapers will, and with any hope they will end up here with an APV and a cleaner set of lungs and better smelling clothing :)
 

meli.

Ultra Member
ECF Veteran
Jul 10, 2012
1,030
938
Private Suite GroenDakkies
"Bonnie Herzog, a Wells Fargo Securities analyst, thinks the e-cig craze has shifted from “fad” to “here to stay,” in part because Lorillard and R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. are generating more consumer confidence in the products than most of the little-known marketers have to date."

Seems Most people in the Real world are not averse or fearful of BT involvement. How refreshing.
 

WinstonSmith

Senior Member
ECF Veteran
Jan 13, 2013
93
357
Ohio
The article mentions RJ Reynolds test marketing their own e-cig called the Vuse. I think it is also called the Vuse Solo. Has anybody seen or tried the Vuse? From what I have read they are only testing them in a very limited way at a handful of Virginia stores. I am curious, with all their money, if they have actually developed something different, or are just adding branding to an already existing product.
 

EddardinWinter

The Philosopher Who Rides
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Jun 13, 2012
8,866
28,169
Richmond, Va

meli.

Ultra Member
ECF Veteran
Jul 10, 2012
1,030
938
Private Suite GroenDakkies
I was just thinking that today, as I read an article about NJoy...
http://gothamist.com/2013/01/22/e-cigs_e-cigarettes_njoy_vaping_vap.php

Thanks for that article DC2.
Sadly one couldn't accuse the photographer of trying to glamorize the industry.lol

What caught my eye was the decision of the SOTTERA, INC.(NJOY) v. FOOD & DRUG ADMIN case.

Interesting reading, explains the necessity of E-Cig Mrfs/ Distributors/ Vendors avoiding the promotion of devices as therapeutic. Based on this decision, I also think the FDA will struggle to implement heavy handed regulations on the industry.
 

nosaint

Senior Member
ECF Veteran
Feb 5, 2013
94
74
Memphis
As to RJR, come on in, the water is warm. They have been involved for a while now. Altria (Phillip Morris) is also getting in to, just more quietly. They will be good for the industry, in my opinion. More money, oodles of flavor research, and they could help with study financing. We need to keep an eye on them, but my initial reaction is positive.

I disagree, look at Blu, Njoy, and probably Vuse. They all sell prefilled carto's. That's it. It's the same old marketing strategy for BT, get 'em addicted and then force them to buy overpriced refills from you. the Tobacco industry is betting the FDA will basically outlaw ejuice, and then get ecigarettes covered under the PACT act which will mean no more USPS delivery and so many regulatory requirements that the internet sales will vanish. That's one reason Blu is making such a big push to get into retail stores.

imho
 

Luther

Senior Member
ECF Veteran
Mar 5, 2011
218
168
68
Winston-Salem, N.C.
I disagree, look at Blu, Njoy, and probably Vuse. They all sell prefilled carto's. That's it. It's the same old marketing strategy for BT, get 'em addicted and then force them to buy overpriced refills from you. the Tobacco industry is betting the FDA will basically outlaw ejuice, and then get ecigarettes covered under the PACT act which will mean no more USPS delivery and so many regulatory requirements that the internet sales will vanish. That's one reason Blu is making such a big push to get into retail stores.

imho

I agree with nosaint. That is what I was thinking when I said I fear they are going to ruin things. That along with the money they infuse will make it a bigger target which will bring the government at a greater pace with their ever growing taxation. The old sin tax routine.
They will try to fuse the public perception towards vapers so closely with analog smokers that to the uniformed, we will be one in the same.
I agree that the small e-liquid providers will be the targets because BT will see the real money for them will be in the pre-filled cartridge market. They have the money and influence to make the production of e-liquid so difficult and expensive that many will be driven out. They can afford a laundry list of regulations, fees and licences. The small guy or girl cannot.
We are in the golden age of vaping. I am afraid it is about to become very different in the next few years.
I'm really trying not to be paranoid but what has the government not screwed up lately?
I honestly hope I'm wrong but whenever something gets big, the small usually are the ones who pay the most.
May the golden age continue!
 

Thucydides

Force of Nature
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Dec 23, 2012
448
609
Washington, DC
Like most things in life, Big Tobacco entering the e-cigarette market a mixed bag representing a series of trade-offs.

On the one hand, Big Tobacco will bring credibility, marketing savvy, and probably substantial innovation to e-cigarettes by investing large amounts of cash into the creation, branding, and messaging of e-cigarettes. They'll also have the resources to prevent an all-out ban by the FDA.

On the other hand, they'll almost certainly be pushing for tighter FDA regulation of e-cigarettes. They will make a substantial investment in e-cigarettes, and FDA regulation will enable them to protect that investment. (Government regulation invariably acts to increase barriers to market entry in ways that favor large companies, because large companies can always afford to jump through regulatory hoops that tend to be cost-prohibative to smaller companies.)

Will it ruin e-cigarettes? Or is it merely part of the natural, profit-driven process of market penetration and maturation? It depends on the way you frame the question. I tend to believe it's just a market penetration and maturation process.

In 1984, even many of the most conservative voices predicted disaster when the feds broke up AT&T's telephone monopoly. There was, admittedly, some charm in the one-phone-line-per-household telephone model, with the Andy Griffith ads and whatnot, but the telecom market has moved on. That's life. Over time, the pain of losing the familiar decreases as people adapt and move on to new things.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Users who are viewing this thread