1. Field of the Invention
The invention concerns a device and method which allows a consumer to test products, especially personal care liquid products prior to purchase in a retail establishment.
2. The Related Art
Retail stores and especially the department and specialty cosmetic stores have counters displaying open packages for allowing consumers to test products. Some of these products are open jars containing creams. More frequently test samples are in pump dispenser bottles. Usually there is very little supervision in the sampling. Chances are high for microbial contamination. Although apparently secure, even pump bottles are sometimes unscrewed so a consumer can more accurately smell the fragrance component of a lotion/cream on display.
In instances where a consumer is favorably inclined after sampling to purchase, the product may be difficult to locate. This results from the sample dispenser not being located closely adjacent to a purchasable unit of product.
Still another issue is the scarcity of shelf space. Retailers prefer to use shelf space for purchasable product rather than for bulky non-revenue generating sample dispensers.
Accordingly, it is a prime object of the present invention to co-locate units of merchandisable product with a sample dispenser allowing consumers to evaluate product prior to purchase. Moreover, the present invention seeks to minimize the footprint on-shelf of a sample dispenser.
A combined sample dispenser and merchandising unit product display is provided which includes:
Further advantages and features of the present invention will better be understood through consideration of the following drawing in which:
Now there has been discovered a structural arrangement wherein the footprint of a sample dispenser can be co-located with a related merchandising unit product display. Not only can a consumer evaluate product, but a purchasable container filled with identical sample product is readily at hand.
The invention is intended for placement on a shelf of a retail store alongside either rows of plastic bottles or other trays with rows of plastic bottles containing purchasable product. A consumer prior to purchase can sample a dollop of the liquid product from the sample dispenser.
The combined sample dispenser and merchandising unit product display operates in the following manner. A consumer wishing to evaluate advertised product will place their hand palm upwards within the U-shaped housing of the sample dispenser. The consumer's hand will then apply upward pressure against lever 36. Upward motion of the lever initiates a downward stroke of pump 34 resulting in a discrete amount of sample moving from the flexible bladder reservoir 42 downstream to the pump and from there through a conduit 56 exiting at nozzle 38. Evacuation of product from the reservoir 42 causes vacuum contraction of the flexible bladder and will eventually require replacement. The collapsing mechanism does not require a dip tube for transporting liquid from a bottom closed end towards the pump. In the present system, sample product at the distant end of the bladder is the last portion of product to be evacuated.
Amounts of sampling substance can be monitored through a window 62 of carton 44. In a preferred embodiment, a colored area is positioned below the flexible bladder reservoir 42. As the bladder evacuates, it flattens and becomes more transparent. In turn, the colored area as viewed from window 62 becomes visibly more intense. The level of the color intensity signals the level of remaining sampling amount.
A concept, but not the only one of the present invention, is that the lever 36 for actuating dispensing as well as the reservoir 42 is positioned below the dispensing nozzle 38. The arrangement allows easy access of a human hand in a single action to receive a dollop sample from the nozzle concomitant with moving the lever. Systems of this type ordinarily position product sump about the nozzle/lever. By moving the sump or reservoir below the pump and nozzle/lever, space is left at an upper end to allow product display in a merchandising unit.
An anti-collapse beam 68 is positioned along a length of the bladder inside thereof to support upper and lower bladder walls 70 and 72. The anti-collapse structure may come in a variety of different shapes but all function to insure that as sample substance is pumped from the bladder, the resultant vacuum should not cause sectional collapse of the bladder that might prevent full sample substance evacuation. Structure 68 may include apertures within the wall, may be a T-shape, and/or have only a plastic wire frame to minimize excess structural plastic.
Surrounding the bladder is the elongate rectangular paperboard carton 44. A paperboard second wall 74 is adhesively glued along one of the side walls of carton 44. Second wall 74 ensures a good friction fit within walls of the lower compartment 31 of the tray. The second wall 74 does not fully extend to the front end of the reservoir thereby leaving that end with a single wall cross-sectional footprint. The smaller sized footprint at the front end allows the carton to engage with receiving slots 76 in housing 32.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3308961 | Chesley | Mar 1967 | A |
7611033 | Ganzeboom | Nov 2009 | B2 |
20080006692 | Gillespie et al. | Jan 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0 134 142 | Aug 1984 | EP |
2637168 | Oct 1988 | FR |
2712471 | Nov 1993 | FR |
02053085 | Jul 2002 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090294479 A1 | Dec 2009 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61057914 | Jun 2008 | US |