Not exact matches
What I've found difficult though, is finding deeper advice for
really keeping customers at the heart of
everything you do (
product development, partnerships, etc.) when there's so much noise out there that isn't
about loving your customers.
Everything is
about your customer
really not your
product.
I love
everything about this
product — the
really cool packaging, where you open the gloss by pressing a button (no more angst for your lip
product opening in your handbag!)
I was not
really happy with the
product but the customer service was great and I got a refound for
everything I was not happy
about so I am still very satisfied.
For the most part I
really liked
everything, but i'll go into more detail
about each
product below.
We're doing 10 episodes and I think the interesting part
about it is exactly what you said,
everything's changed so much; the line between film and TV has blurred so much over the years, I think Jack Ryan is a
product of that blurring so much that I think that they're not even
really considering it a TV show, they're calling it a movie that's being told in 10 parts; and that's not just an argument of semantics, it's actually true.
Here at YouDidWhatWithYourWeiner, free does not equal good so
everything we say is
really how we feel
about the
product.
The answers to the questions above can help you make smarter decisions
about everything from
product selection (so you don't make the same mistake Walmart did) to marketing... after all, you don't
really want to give a coupon to the customer who is there every week anyway; you're much better off trying to get your occasionally
Graham's original pitch posters are fascinating to look at ten years later; TreeHugger started with
products, with stuff, but it was
really about the lifestyle and it is still one we promote, and while Graham missed the bike movement, he got most
everything else right.