Lol and here I was debating between a Leesa and Casper for my new mattress. Guess that makes my choice easier.
I always assumed they were the same thing. If you told me some company owned both I wouldn't be surprised.
Lol and here I was debating between a Leesa and Casper for my new mattress. Guess that makes my choice easier.
They (at least) get their foams from the same distributors. (Same with Sealy, Simmons, Serta, etc.)I always assumed they were the same thing. If you told me some company owned both I wouldn't be surprised.
Those rolled/boxed foam mattresses from Casper, Purple, GhostBed, Nature's Sleep, etc... are all garbage.
Just buy a Tempurpedic.
This is great! Thanks for this!
not surprised. I have a memory foam one from another company and its just about the worst thing to sleep on. I feel like a banana my back is so curved when I sleep.
As a matter of fact, yeah, pretty much! I've worked in the bedding industry for around 7 years now, in just about every capacity you could think of, from sales, to marketing, to design.Am I supposed to believe you've tried all of these? lol
Any suggestions for a new mattress?
Challenger.... DEFEATEDAs a matter of fact, yeah, pretty much! I've worked in the bedding industry for around 7 years now, in just about every capacity you could think of, from sales, to marketing, to design.
I have to go to the home show in Vegas once a year for my job and meet with quite a few vendors and hear their pitches and try their products. And I've toured...like 9 plants at this point, from the big ones (Tempur in VA, Sealy in Medina) to the little ones (Comfort Solutions in Cleveland, Old West, Natures Sleep.)
Any suggestions for a new mattress?
I have to go to the home show in Vegas once a year for my job and meet with quite a few vendors and hear their pitches and try their products. And I've toured...like 9 plants at this point, from the big ones (Tempur in VA, Sealy in Medina) to the little ones (Comfort Solutions in Cleveland, Old West, Natures Sleep.)
I'd buy an inexpensive spring mattress before an inexpensive foam one. You can get a decent posterpedic set for around $600 if you look hard enough.Challenger.... DEFEATED
Heard the leesa is the best of the bunch though - assuming cost matters, is it a decent option or should people buy an inexpensive spring?
Ok jumping in slightly OT...I want a good mattress and was looking at modestly-priced mattresses, but my girlfriend wants to get a sleepnumber bed or some shit because she likes firm and I like something that doesn't feel like a fucking plank of wood. Suggestions?
Is Brooklyn mattress any good?
Give me Casper ads on podcasts over those fucking obnoxious Purple mattress ads on YouTube any day of the week.One of my favorite podcast was promoting them a year or so ago.
I only have experience with one company, but Brooklyn Bedding makes soft, medium, and firm mattresses
Tempurpedic is so much better than everything else its ridiculous. I get that theyre expensive but Ive yet to try a better bed, or even one close to as good.A lot of Gaffers have never slept on a Tempurpedic. I have a Cloud Luxe in my master and a 10" Nature's Sleep in my guest and they don't compare.
Though, when you've slept on garbage your entire life, something marginally better probably feels awesome if you don't feel like spending 4 thousand dollars.
Tempurpedic is so much better than everything else its ridiculous. I get that theyre expensive but Ive yet to try a better bed, or even one close to as good.
Their mattresses are absolute trash for anyone wondering.
Are they? I've been interested in getting a memory foam mattress and I could have sworn Casper was one of the more highly regarded brands in another GAF thread.
Casper had done this to a site I checked for comparison between the new popular mattress companies. After seeing how they bully sites I swore off them, I'll go purple instead.
Can second this.
Its a pos for sure. Cant believe I spent 900$ on it
Tempurpedic is so much better than everything else its ridiculous. I get that theyre expensive but Ive yet to try a better bed, or even one close to as good.
Tempurpedic is ridiculously expensive but good. I also bought a memory foam mattress from Amazon for two hundred bucks that is fantastic.
Casper is good. Leesa is better. That is the conclusion i came away with reading reviews and this article.
Lol and here I was debating between a Leesa and Casper for my new mattress. Guess that makes my choice easier.
In a motion to dismiss the case filed in July 2016, Derek blasted what he called Casper's attempt at censorship. The statements on his site were fundamentally his honest opinions: He claimed he had become less enthusiastic about the Casper–which he still called a good mattress–only because equal or better mattresses had entered the market, sometimes at lower prices. (A Casper queen-size runs $950 today, a Leesa queen $940; Derek's site also offered coupons that lowered the Leesa's price.)
According to the website analysis tool SimilarWeb, Derek referred 1.6 million visits to outside sites between February 2016 and July 2017. Much of this traffic went to Amazon.com (when Derek lacked a direct affiliate relationship, he was able to get at least some money as an affiliate of Amazon). A significant portion went to the mattress companies Purple, Loom & Leaf, and Nest Bedding.
A Loom & Leaf executive told me they had paid Derek $100,000 in 2016; Nest Bedding's CEO Joe Alexander said he had paid Derek a multiple of that. ”My life changed because of Derek," Alexander told me. ”He made me a millionaire."
But by far the most traffic during that period–some 400,000 visits–was referred out to the website of Derek's favorite mattress company, Leesa.
Derek's Leesa favoritism was no secret: he explicitly called it ”Sleepopolis's favorite mattress," and a sidebar touting Leesa affiliate-link coupons graced nearly every page of the site. Mattress reviewers say their art entails recommending different mattresses to different types of sleepers, but in the 14 categories on his site for which the Leesa was eligible, Derek declared it first in seven of them, second or third in all but two of the rest. The Leesa was Sleepopolis's best mattress for side sleepers, best mattress for kids, best mattress for back pain, and best mattress for sex.
It was possible that Derek genuinely loved the Leesa above all other mattresses; he'd reviewed it favorably even before Casper cut off his payments. But many people I spoke to suggested that other things were possible, too. If most mattress companies paid around $50 per commission, other companies paid two or three times that, even as much as $250. In one email I saw, an unscrupulous mattress reviewer said companies regularly approached him offering to ”buy" top placement on his site; so long as the reviewer liked the mattress, he'd happily negotiate a price. ”Honestly, the FTC has to step in at some point and make review sites divulge what they are paid for each bed or brand," Nest Bedding's Joe Alexander, told me. ”This industry is a freight train out of control."
Was Leesa playing this highest-bidder game with Sleepopolis? At first, I heard many rumors to that effect. I called Leesa's CEO David Wolfe in February, in an effort to find out. The middle-aged Wolfe, though now a resident in Virginia Beach, retained a charming British accent, and was a former marketer himself. The mattress industry has long been attractive to marketers, I learned, even before the internet got involved. As a mattress industry analyst recently told Freakonomics Radio: ”You have to be a strong marketer to be in the mattress industry, because they're really selling identical, rectangular slabs."
Wolfe denied offering higher affiliate rates than competitors, saying he had always paid $50 per mattress, apart from one month when he had paid 60. He later repeated this assertion and had his lawyer call me to confirm it, and said he felt it was important for mattress companies and affiliates to operate on a level playing field.
I asked Wolfe if he had ever offered Derek Hales a guaranteed income. Our friendly conversation took a swift turn. ”The answer is no," he said, adding, ”You should leave this to the attorneys." Later, he added, ”I don't want to say something that could affect a pending lawsuit where Leesa is not a party."
SimilarWeb suggested that Derek referred 400,000 visits to Leesa.com between February 2016 and July 2017. If you assumed that about one in 12 referred visits ultimately led to a purchase—a conservative estimate according to people in the mattress industry I interviewed—that would suggest Sleepopolis helped sell 33,000 mattresses. Even a $50 commission per mattress meant $1.6 million paid by Leesa to Derek over those 18 months. When I approached Leesa's David Wolfe with these numbers, he called them inflated (SimilarWeb provides only estimates), but conceded that Derek was essentially Leesa's top salesman, accounting for 18% of the brand's total sales, which reached about $80 million last year.
All told, these numbers suggested Derek may have been making as much as $2 million per year by 2016. And his site, in a hypothetical sale, would be worth a multiple of that. (A considerably less trafficked mattress-reviewing site recently went on the market for $1.4 million.)
Derek had made millionaires among the new mattress entrepreneurs–and he himself was one of them. So while Derek's pockets weren't nearly so deep as Casper's, they certainly weren't shallow. He had stumbled into what was, outside of financial products, one of the more lucrative niches in affiliate marketing. If this was a David-and-Goliath battle, it was worth remembering that David became a king.
In February, Derek Hales faced a new salvo: A letter from Casper's attorney to the judge alleged that while Derek was reviewing Leesa's mattresses enthusiastically, he was not only receiving affiliate commissions but also payments for SEO consulting he provided Leesa. Reading this, I suddenly understood David Wolfe's skittishness about the last questions I had put to him over the phone.
Those rolled/boxed foam mattresses from Casper, Purple, GhostBed, Nature's Sleep, etc... are all garbage.
Just buy a Tempurpedic.
Those rolled/boxed foam mattresses from Casper, Purple, GhostBed, Nature's Sleep, etc... are all garbage.
Just buy a Tempurpedic.
Their mattresses are absolute trash for anyone wondering.
Can second this.
Its a pos for sure. Cant believe I spent 900$ on it
I thought Casper was good?
Lol and here I was debating between a Leesa and Casper for my new mattress. Guess that makes my choice easier.