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American personal care brand From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dr. Squatch is an American personal care company selling products marketed towards men.[1] The company was founded in 2013 in San Diego, and is now based in Los Angeles.[1] Originally producing bar soap, the company has since added items like toothpaste and deodorant to its offerings.[2] Its products are marketed as "natural", and their branding relies on natural-sounding product names such as "Eucalyptus Greek Yogurt" and "Grapefruit IPA", based on an association with a natural ingredient.[3] As of late 2021, its products were only sold online and by subscription. [4] Now they are also sold in physical stores as well.
Industry | Personal care products |
---|---|
Founded | 2013San Diego, California | in
Headquarters | , |
Products | Hygiene and personal care products for men |
Website | drsquatch |
In 2016 Dr. Squatch used a Kickstarter campaign to generate funding.[5] The company grew its visibility by targeting Generation Z on TikTok advertisements in 2021 before signing up for a Super Bowl commercial at that year's game.[6] The advert featured "all white men" engaging in "manly things that men do", including a man opening a pickle jar and another having their hair braided by their daughter.[7] Yardbarker criticised the ad as containing juvenile humor and "trying way too hard."[8]
As of 2021, the company's annual revenue was $100 million per year.[9] In 2023, Unilever cited Dr. Squatch among the companies that were a significant source of competition.[10] Dr. Squatch and Unilever entered an intra-industry dispute resolution process initiated by the latter, triggered by the former's combative advertising practice of using the skull and crossbones symbol to accent the message that their products do not contain non-"natural" ingredients found in competitors' products. In late 2023, the National Advertising Division of the BBB National Programs made a determination that the practice should be discontinued, but that Dr. Squatch may keep labelling their products as having "no harmful ingredients".[11][12] The company received significant attention in late 2024 after an ad campaign featuring actress Sydney Sweeney as a "body wash genie."[13][14][15]
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