TIP: Get Better Results with this 10-Second Tip
Skincare products that sit on the surface of your skin have little to no benefit. Massage the creams/lotions into your skin until they have vanished. Here are the added benefits:
1. Dr. Obagi recommends applying products vigorously in a circular motion. You’re giving your skin added exercise to stimulate dormant cells.
2. You’ll enhance the activity of the functional ingredients, because you’re increasing penetration and absorption.
It only takes a few seconds. Give your skin a little extra exercise today!
A Day in the Life of Zein Obagi, MD
I learned something new on Saturday; in fact, I learned a lot.
There were 600+ women who began lining up outside a Nordstrom store at 7 am to see Dr. Obagi and a few other celebrities like Kate Somerville and Deborah Lippman. It’s a big show, but that’s not what impressed me.
Sitting next to Dr. Obagi, while he visited with people was a great experience. Even for me, and I’ve known and worked with him for a while. What made it most interesting was not what he said, but the people with whom he met—some of whom had traveled thousands of miles to see him. A few of the surprises:
- Many people told him that he had changed their life—given them self-confidence and happiness, because he treated difficult skincare problems that other dermatologists refused. We’re not talking lines and wrinkles here—we’re talking very serious and debilitating skin diseases.
- The mother who brought her son, who had severe nodular acne. Dr. Obagi asked this woman why she had not taken her son to a doctor before this. She said that she wouldn’t let anyone else treat him, because she herself had the same condition 25 years ago, and only Dr. Obagi was able to correct her skin. So she waited—and waited—until she could see Dr. Obagi. He gave her his card, and asked her to bring her son to his clinic right away.
- The number of different races and ethnicities that were represented. Part of the reason is because Dr. Obagi led the dermatology profession in the treatment of different skin colors. Only about 25 years ago, many dermatologists treated skin like it came in only two different colors: fair-skinned and slightly tan. They were color blind; they didn’t understand anything other than Caucasians. Dr. Obagi changed all of that. Now he’s a hero to people with skincare problems, all over the world.
- The number of different languages that they spoke. And he talked right back–in four different languages.
- There were some women whom he admitted that he couldn’t help—they had diseases for which there was no treatment. One woman left in tears, because he said, “I don’t want to mislead you. My products won’t help you.” Understandably and unfortunately, she was desperate for a solution. But at least he was honest.
- His 18-year old daughter, who sat and listened, so very proud of her father. She has heard it all before, I’m sure, but she wanted to hear it again.
- The number of people who came to him because they were disillusioned with skincare products that didn’t work. They left feeling stronger and optimistic, that this time will be different. They left with hope; but more than that, they left with solutions.
- Scores of women who use the Obagi® Nu-Derm® products that Dr. Obagi developed, and just wanted to thank him, personally.
It’s not very often that Dr. Obagi makes a personal appearance, but if you have the opportunity, join him some time.
For me, it was a day that I’ll never forget. For him, it was just another day.
Skincare Products–Who is the Fairest of them All?
Skin Care Products—Who is the Fairest of them All??
Are skincare companies treating you fairly? Or are you being ripped off?
In recent weeks there have been a number of articles and ads comparing the effectiveness of a skincare products in relationship to their cost. While these reports raise some interesting questions, they generally don’t provide any meaningful answers. Consumer Reports concluded that just because a product is expensive doesn’t mean that it’s effective, and just because it’s inexpensive doesn’t mean that it’s worthless. I agree—to a point.
How do you know? That’s a complex issue. I want you to make informed decisions, so let’s face the facts and see what factors influence the cost of skincare products.
- The nature of active skincare ingredients. Some ingredients (peptides, entrapped or encapsulated active ingredients and rare extracts) are very expensive. That’s because frequently these ingredients are patented, and sometimes are very difficult to manufacture.
Some of the least expensive ingredients are water, alcohol and glycerin – they’re basic, generic ingredients that are mass-produced. They may be nice additions, but they won’t affect a change in your skin.
Other inexpensive skincare products contain heavy fillers which can clog your pores. Some inexpensive skincare products contain an ingredient that’s almost like glue—it may tighten your skin temporarily, but it also clogs the pores and prevents your skin from breathing.
You shouldn’t have to be a polymer chemist to figure out which products contain skincare ingredients that really work.
- The number of skincare ingredients. Some of the least expensive products (typically sold on infomercials and via multi-level marketing) have very few ingredients, because they’re quicker and easier to produce. Since water is an ingredient in most skincare products, the fewer the ingredients, the more watered-down the formula. Do you want to pay a lot for a product that is mostly water?
If a manufacturer wants to produce a product that is highly active, that generally requires “loading” the formula, so you get a long list of ingredients, and obviously, that adds to the cost. A good case in point here is the ZO® Skin Health Oraser Daily Hand Repair. Instead of just producing a product that made softer, smell-good hands, I wanted a skin care solution that would provide immediate and long-term anti-aging benefits, and that includes lightening age spots, softening hands, strengthening the skin and reducing wrinkles. The Oraser Daily Hand Repair is jam-packed with active ingredients. Could we have produced something less ambitious? Sure. But there are already too many hand lotions that don’t do anything.
- The concentration of active skin care ingredients. This, I think, is one of the biggest scams in the industry. Two products can have the EXACT same list of ingredients, and one is highly effective, and the other totally useless. The difference is the concentration of those ingredients. One product may use only a miniscule amount, the other uses a clinically active level but unfortunately, there’s no way to understand that distinction. That’s because all ingredients are supposed to be listed in order of their concentration—but for ingredients with a concentration less than 1%–they can be listed in any order. There’s a big difference—an enormous difference—between a concentration of .01% and 1%. But you’d never know it from the label.
Since formulations are proprietary, cheap products can easily disguise themselves as looking like quality products. So just reading the labels when comparing two products is not sufficient. The credentials of the manufacturer, and the positive results experienced by bona-fide customers make all of the difference in skincare.
- Skincare Innovation. Most mass market companies either use the same inexpensive ingredients in their skin care products that they have been using for years, or try to copy quality products by claiming that they have the same ingredients. Companies like ZO Skin Health by Zein Obagi are always working towards new and innovative formulas with the latest technology. They may take years to develop, test, refine and produce a new lotion, and spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on research and development. After the product has been available for several years, those R and D costs have been amortized. But initially, the manufacturer will attempt to recover some of those costs.
If you want a skincare product that is innovative, there is usually a premium to be paid. The old adage holds true, you get what you pay for.
As an analogy to another industry, Dell Computers is known for its low costs and mass market appeal, and it used to brag about the fact that it didn’t even have a Research and Development department. Understandably their costs can be lower, if they don’t create or innovate anything.
- Sunscreens. I believe that there is no better example of the disparity between cheap, mass-marketed skincare products and effective, high quality products, than in sunscreen. I am constantly amazed at mass-marketers who tout outrageously high SPF ratings on their sunscreens. They mislead people into believing that just because their SPF numbers are high, they’re more effective. Nothing could be further from the truth. In fact, those sunscreens with ultra-high SPFs are loaded with chemicals. The increase in protection is negligible. And they claim things like “waterproof”. There is no sunscreen that is waterproof—mine or any other. I’m happy that the ZO Skin Health Oclipse SPF 30 sunscreen was named the #1 sunscreen in the US—and part of that is because we don’t misrepresent the product.
In my next blog I’ll talk about some of the other factors that influence the cost—and effectiveness—of skincare products.

