They are found in more than two-thirds of
Japanese households and visitors to the country have marvelled at their
heated seats, posterior shower jets and odour-masking function.
But for the company that has sold over 30
million high-tech toilets, commonly known as Washlets, global lavatory
domination remains elusive, especially among shy US consumers.
"It's because of the cultural taboo over
talking about toilets," said Hiromichi Tabata, head of the international
division at Washlet-maker TOTO, a company that also makes bath tubs,
kitchen taps, basins and plumbing fixtures.
"Americans avoid talking about those kinds of
things so we can't expect success from word-of-mouth, even if they
recognise our products are excellent.
"Many celebrities say they love the Washlet when they visit Japan, but the fervour is temporary," he added.
Pop diva Madonna gushed about Japanese
culture during a 2005 visit and pointed to the Washlet as a key draw,
saying "I've missed the heated toilet seats" -- the kind of free
marketing most companies dream about.
For a nation that claims globally recognised
brand names such as Sony and Toyota, the Washlet's relative lack of
overseas presence comes as a surprise to many foreign visitors, even if
they're initially baffled by its dizzying array of functions and
Japanese signage.
In technology and hygiene-obsessed Japan,
where restaurants provide a steaming hot towel for customers' hands,
they're found in public toilets, office lavatories and over 70 percent
of Japanese households.
"We thought that Japanese people, who are clean freaks, would like the idea of the Washlet," said spokeswoman Atsuko Kuno.
But when it hit the market in the booming 1980s, the high-tech toilet wasn't an immediate success in conservative Japan either.
Some viewers were irate over a 1982
television commercial for the newly-released Washlet which featured a
girl trying to wipe black paint off her hand with paper, making a mess
in the process.
"Paper won't fully clean it," she told viewers. "It's the same with your bottom."
But the provocative marketing eventually paid off by putting the unique toilets into the minds of consumers.
TOTO designed its Washlet by asking hundreds
of its employees to test a toilet and mark, using a string stretched
across the bowl and a piece of paper, their preferred location for the
water jet target area.
The Washlet's functions, laid out on a
computerised control panel with pictograms, include water jets with
pressure and temperature controls, hot-air bottom dryers and ambient
background music.
Another function produces a flushing sound to
mask bodily noises -- a hit among the easily-embarrassed -- while some
models have a lid that automatically swings open when users enter the
restroom.
Others feature seats and lids that glide back
into horizontal position, possibly solving gender battles over
flipped-up toilet seats in the home.
Business continues to be robust for the toilet maker, whose rivals in the key domestic market include Lixil Group.
In the full-year to March 2012, TOTO posted a
net profit of 9.27 billion yen ($114 million) on global sales of 452.7
billion yen, up 4.4 percent from a year earlier.
But only about 14 percent of that revenue figure was from overseas sales.
Despite the challenges in reaching foreign
consumers, tapping the hotel market has met with some success,
executives say, while China and other East Asian nations have seen
growing demand "because they have cultures similar to Japan", Tabata
said.
Localising products is also key.
Washlets sold in tropical markets such as
Indonesia don't come with heated seats and blast lukewarm water into
users' nether regions instead of the hot spray offered in chillier
climes.
Despite the Washlet's relatively expensive
price tag -- the cheapest sells for about $900 -- TOTO executives figure
that liberal Europeans are a hugely promising bet, especially now that a
Swiss rival is selling a similar product.
"We expect Europe will eventually get used to the idea of a heated toilet seat with warm water," Tabata predicted.
Monday is World Toilet Day, a day designed to
raise awareness of the plight of people around the world without access
to adequate sanitation.
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