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Paraphrasing from the recent "Supermarkets: The tricks of the trade"
episode of "Tonight": A supermarket sells two kinds of wine, one for £ 3.79 (Brand A) and another for £ 4.49 (Brand B), which differ only in quality. On average, about two-thirds of customers buy Brand A and one-third buy Brand B. Problem: Increase total turnover without cutting or raising prices. Solution: Introduce a third and better kind of wine (Brand C) selling at £ 9.99. It turns out that even though very few customers will buy Brand C, about half of those who used to buy Brand A will shift to Brand B, thereby increasing total turnover. http://www.itv.com/news/2016-01-21/s...trade-tonight/ -- Bob The joint that time is out of www.kanyak.com |
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On 1/25/2016 4:33 AM, Opinicus wrote:
> Paraphrasing from the recent "Supermarkets: The tricks of the trade" > episode of "Tonight": > > A supermarket sells two kinds of wine, one for £ 3.79 (Brand A) and > another for £ 4.49 (Brand B), which differ only in quality. On > average, about two-thirds of customers buy Brand A and one-third buy > Brand B. Problem: Increase total turnover without cutting or raising > prices. Solution: Introduce a third and better kind of wine (Brand C) > selling at £ 9.99. It turns out that even though very few customers > will buy Brand C, about half of those who used to buy Brand A will > shift to Brand B, thereby increasing total turnover. > > http://www.itv.com/news/2016-01-21/s...trade-tonight/ That is a tactic that is used for many things, I'm sure there is a name for it. nancy |
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Nancy Young wrote:
> On 1/25/2016 4:33 AM, Opinicus wrote: > > Paraphrasing from the recent "Supermarkets: The tricks of the trade" > > episode of "Tonight": > > > > A supermarket sells two kinds of wine, one for £ 3.79 (Brand A) and > > another for £ 4.49 (Brand B), which differ only in quality. On > > average, about two-thirds of customers buy Brand A and one-third buy > > Brand B. Problem: Increase total turnover without cutting or raising > > prices. Solution: Introduce a third and better kind of wine (Brand C) > > selling at £ 9.99. It turns out that even though very few customers > > will buy Brand C, about half of those who used to buy Brand A will > > shift to Brand B, thereby increasing total turnover. > > > > http://www.itv.com/news/2016-01-21/s...trade-tonight/ > > That is a tactic that is used for many things, I'm sure there is > a name for it. > Hmmmm...in the bar and resto biz it's sometimes called "upselling"... ;-) I visited Trader Joe's yesterday, and I noticed that they do this sort of thing very "subtly" - of course ensuring that you are getting "top value" for your money...all grocery stores do this to some extent. Anyways, I went in looking for a bottle of their "$2.99 Chuck", but left with something two dollars more... -- Best Greg -->> "gullible" |
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On 1/25/2016 9:55 AM, Gregory Morrow wrote:
> Nancy Young wrote: > >> On 1/25/2016 4:33 AM, Opinicus wrote: >>> Paraphrasing from the recent "Supermarkets: The tricks of the trade" >>> episode of "Tonight": >>> >>> A supermarket sells two kinds of wine, one for £ 3.79 (Brand A) and >>> another for £ 4.49 (Brand B), which differ only in quality. On >>> average, about two-thirds of customers buy Brand A and one-third buy >>> Brand B. Problem: Increase total turnover without cutting or raising >>> prices. Solution: Introduce a third and better kind of wine (Brand C) >>> selling at £ 9.99. It turns out that even though very few customers >>> will buy Brand C, about half of those who used to buy Brand A will >>> shift to Brand B, thereby increasing total turnover. >>> >>> http://www.itv.com/news/2016-01-21/s...trade-tonight/ >> >> That is a tactic that is used for many things, I'm sure there is >> a name for it. > Hmmmm...in the bar and resto biz it's sometimes called "upselling"... ;-) > > I visited Trader Joe's yesterday, and I noticed that they do this sort of thing very > "subtly" - of course ensuring that you are getting "top value" for your money... > all grocery stores do this to some extent. And appliance stores and department stores and ... > Anyways, I went in looking for a bottle of their "$2.99 Chuck", but left with > something two dollars more... It works! Heh. nancy |
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On Mon, 25 Jan 2016 10:04:18 -0500, Nancy Young
> wrote: > On 1/25/2016 9:55 AM, Gregory Morrow wrote: > > Nancy Young wrote: > > > >> On 1/25/2016 4:33 AM, Opinicus wrote: > >>> Paraphrasing from the recent "Supermarkets: The tricks of the trade" > >>> episode of "Tonight": > >>> > >>> A supermarket sells two kinds of wine, one for £ 3.79 (Brand A) and > >>> another for £ 4.49 (Brand B), which differ only in quality. On > >>> average, about two-thirds of customers buy Brand A and one-third buy > >>> Brand B. Problem: Increase total turnover without cutting or raising > >>> prices. Solution: Introduce a third and better kind of wine (Brand C) > >>> selling at £ 9.99. It turns out that even though very few customers > >>> will buy Brand C, about half of those who used to buy Brand A will > >>> shift to Brand B, thereby increasing total turnover. > >>> > >>> http://www.itv.com/news/2016-01-21/s...trade-tonight/ > >> > >> That is a tactic that is used for many things, I'm sure there is > >> a name for it. > > > Hmmmm...in the bar and resto biz it's sometimes called "upselling"... ;-) > > > > I visited Trader Joe's yesterday, and I noticed that they do this sort of thing very > > "subtly" - of course ensuring that you are getting "top value" for > your money... > > all grocery stores do this to some extent. > > And appliance stores and department stores and ... > > > Anyways, I went in looking for a bottle of their "$2.99 Chuck", but left with > > something two dollars more... > > It works! Heh. > Only if people don't know which end is up. -- sf |
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On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 8:55:36 AM UTC-6, Gregory Morrow wrote:
> Nancy Young wrote: > > > On 1/25/2016 4:33 AM, Opinicus wrote: > > > Paraphrasing from the recent "Supermarkets: The tricks of the trade" > > > episode of "Tonight": > > > > > > A supermarket sells two kinds of wine, one for £ 3.79 (Brand A) and > > > another for £ 4.49 (Brand B), which differ only in quality. On > > > average, about two-thirds of customers buy Brand A and one-third buy > > > Brand B. Problem: Increase total turnover without cutting or raising > > > prices. Solution: Introduce a third and better kind of wine (Brand C) > > > selling at £ 9.99. It turns out that even though very few customers > > > will buy Brand C, about half of those who used to buy Brand A will > > > shift to Brand B, thereby increasing total turnover. > > > > > > http://www.itv.com/news/2016-01-21/s...trade-tonight/ > > > > That is a tactic that is used for many things, I'm sure there is > > a name for it. > > > > > Hmmmm...in the bar and resto biz it's sometimes called "upselling"... ;-) > > I visited Trader Joe's yesterday, and I noticed that they do this sort of thing very "subtly" - of course ensuring that you are getting "top value" for your money...all grocery stores do this to some extent. > > Anyways, I went in looking for a bottle of their "$2.99 Chuck", but left with something two dollars more... > > -- > Best > Greg -->> "gullible" They GOT you!! :-( John Kuthe... |
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On Mon, 25 Jan 2016 06:55:24 -0800 (PST), Gregory Morrow
> wrote: > Anyways, I went in looking for a bottle of their "$2.99 Chuck", but left with something two dollars more... > If you were looking for a cooking wine, you wasted your money. If you plan to drink it, you made a wise choice. -- sf |
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On 25/01/2016 9:24 AM, sf wrote:
> On Mon, 25 Jan 2016 06:55:24 -0800 (PST), Gregory Morrow > > wrote: > >> Anyways, I went in looking for a bottle of their "$2.99 Chuck", but left with something two dollars more... >> > If you were looking for a cooking wine, you wasted your money. If you > plan to drink it, you made a wise choice. > One is supposed to use the same wine for both drinking with and cooking in that dish:-) I had a cookbook that had a recipe for Duck Margaux. That is a duck casserole where the cooking wine was a whole bottle of Chateau Margaux. That wine often goes for around $1000 per bottle!! I let that book go with my ex when we split:-) Graham -- "Although it is not true that all conservatives are stupid people, it is true that most stupid people are conservative." -John Stuart Mill |
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On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 12:46:30 PM UTC-5, graham wrote:
> I had a cookbook that had a recipe for Duck Margaux. That is a duck > casserole where the cooking wine was a whole bottle of Chateau Margaux. > That wine often goes for around $1000 per bottle!! > I let that book go with my ex when we split:-) > Graham > That's a complete waste of money. The nuances of such a wine are completely lost in cooking. It also sounds like too much Claret for a duck. http://www.richardfisher.com |
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On Mon, 25 Jan 2016 10:46:29 -0700, graham > wrote:
> On 25/01/2016 9:24 AM, sf wrote: > > On Mon, 25 Jan 2016 06:55:24 -0800 (PST), Gregory Morrow > > > wrot.e: > > > >> Anyways, I went in looking for a bottle of their "$2.99 Chuck", but left with something two dollars more... > >> > > If you were looking for a cooking wine, you wasted your money. If you > > plan to drink it, you made a wise choice. > > > One is supposed to use the same wine for both drinking with and cooking > in that dish:-) Wake up. You're Canadian by way of Britain and you're taking it far too literally. Julia was an American talking to other Americans who were still shaking off Puritanism and Prohibition... she was referring to cooking wine vs. drinking wine. Cooking wine is a thin, cheap base wine to which salt and food coloring have been added. At the grocery store, it is found in the same section as vinegar, not in the liquor department. Julia was simply telling people not to cook with a salty wine they can't drink. > I had a cookbook that had a recipe for Duck Margaux. That is a duck > casserole where the cooking wine was a whole bottle of Chateau Margaux. > That wine often goes for around $1000 per bottle!! Might as well a flush wine like that down the toilet. > I let that book go with my ex when we split:-) > Graham Good move. -- sf |
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On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 11:23:52 AM UTC-5, sf wrote:
> > > If you were looking for a cooking wine, you wasted your money. If you > plan to drink it, you made a wise choice. > > -- > > sf Not true. A cheap wine will ruin a good dish. The usual problem is acid or tannin. http://www.richardfisher.com |
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On 1/25/2016 1:49 PM, Helpful person wrote:
> On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 11:23:52 AM UTC-5, sf wrote: >>> >> If you were looking for a cooking wine, you wasted your money. If you >> plan to drink it, you made a wise choice. >> >> -- >> >> sf > > Not true. A cheap wine will ruin a good dish. The usual problem is acid or tannin. > > http://www.richardfisher.com > What do you consider cheap? $5 or less $15 or less? I find $10 and up to be great for cooking and usually pretty good for drinking. More expensive is usually better, but as the price goes up the value increases much slower. True of pretty much everything. |
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On Mon, 25 Jan 2016 10:49:19 -0800 (PST), Helpful person
> wrote: > On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 11:23:52 AM UTC-5, sf wrote: > > > > > If you were looking for a cooking wine, you wasted your money. If you > > plan to drink it, you made a wise choice. > > > > -- > > > > sf > > Not true. A cheap wine will ruin a good dish. The usual problem is acid or tannin. > Two Buck (now $3) Chuck works well. -- sf |
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On 26/1/2016 03:24 sf wrote:
> On Mon, 25 Jan 2016 06:55:24 -0800 (PST), Gregory Morrow > > wrote: > >> Anyways, I went in looking for a bottle of their "$2.99 Chuck", but left with something two dollars more... >> > If you were looking for a cooking wine, you wasted your money. If you > plan to drink it, you made a wise choice. In my experience, there are good cheap wines, but you have to drink and discard a lot of bad ones to find them. -- Bruce |
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On Mon, 25 Jan 2016 19:55:34 -0000 (UTC), Bruce >
wrote: > On 26/1/2016 03:24 sf wrote: > > > On Mon, 25 Jan 2016 06:55:24 -0800 (PST), Gregory Morrow > > > wrote: > > > >> Anyways, I went in looking for a bottle of their "$2.99 Chuck", but left with something two dollars more... > >> > > If you were looking for a cooking wine, you wasted your money. If you > > plan to drink it, you made a wise choice. > > In my experience, there are good cheap wines, but you have to drink and > discard a lot of bad ones to find them. Did you miss that a specific wine was the topic? -- sf |
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Gregory Morrow wrote:
>Nancy Young wrote: >>Opinicus wrote: >> > Paraphrasing from the recent "Supermarkets: The tricks of the trade" >> > episode of "Tonight": >> > >> > A supermarket sells two kinds of wine, one for £ 3.79 (Brand A) and >> > another for £ 4.49 (Brand B), which differ only in quality. On >> > average, about two-thirds of customers buy Brand A and one-third buy >> > Brand B. Problem: Increase total turnover without cutting or raising >> > prices. Solution: Introduce a third and better kind of wine (Brand C) >> > selling at £ 9.99. It turns out that even though very few customers >> > will buy Brand C, about half of those who used to buy Brand A will >> > shift to Brand B, thereby increasing total turnover. >> > >> > http://www.itv.com/news/2016-01-21/s...trade-tonight/ >> >> That is a tactic that is used for many things, I'm sure there is >> a name for it. > >Hmmmm...in the bar and resto biz it's sometimes called "upselling"... ;-) >I visited Trader Joe's yesterday, and I noticed that they do this sort of thing >very "subtly" - of course ensuring that you are getting "top value" for your >money...all grocery stores do this to some extent. Anyways, I went in looking >for a bottle of their "$2.99 Chuck", but left with something two dollars more... I would have left with a case of 1.75 L bottles of Crystal Palace Vodka, $14.99 per with a 10% discount for buying the case of six. I'd do much better knocking down the alcohol content of vodka to that of wine with ice and Fresca with a wedge of lemon/lime than drinking cheap wino swill. |
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On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 11:05:11 AM UTC-6, Brooklyn1 wrote:
> Gregory Morrow wrote: > >Nancy Young wrote: > >>Opinicus wrote: > >> > Paraphrasing from the recent "Supermarkets: The tricks of the trade" > >> > episode of "Tonight": > >> > > >> > A supermarket sells two kinds of wine, one for £ 3.79 (Brand A) and > >> > another for £ 4.49 (Brand B), which differ only in quality. On > >> > average, about two-thirds of customers buy Brand A and one-third buy > >> > Brand B. Problem: Increase total turnover without cutting or raising > >> > prices. Solution: Introduce a third and better kind of wine (Brand C) > >> > selling at £ 9.99. It turns out that even though very few customers > >> > will buy Brand C, about half of those who used to buy Brand A will > >> > shift to Brand B, thereby increasing total turnover. > >> > > >> > http://www.itv.com/news/2016-01-21/s...trade-tonight/ > >> > >> That is a tactic that is used for many things, I'm sure there is > >> a name for it. > > > >Hmmmm...in the bar and resto biz it's sometimes called "upselling"... ;-) > >I visited Trader Joe's yesterday, and I noticed that they do this sort of thing > >very "subtly" - of course ensuring that you are getting "top value" for your > >money...all grocery stores do this to some extent. Anyways, I went in looking > >for a bottle of their "$2.99 Chuck", but left with something two dollars more... > > I would have left with a case of 1.75 L bottles of Crystal Palace > Vodka, $14.99 per with a 10% discount for buying the case of six. I'd > do much better knocking down the alcohol content of vodka to that of > wine with ice and Fresca with a wedge of lemon/lime than drinking > cheap wino swill. That drink is better with cleaner, and admittedly a bit higher priced vodka. It's also better with a little fresh squeezed grapefruit juice (and optionally, a little sweetener) added, but Fresca is a good mixer for vodka. --Bryan |
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MisterDiddyWahDiddy wrote:
> On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 11:05:11 AM UTC-6, Brooklyn1 wrote: >> Gregory Morrow wrote: >>> Nancy Young wrote: >>>> Opinicus wrote: >>>>> Paraphrasing from the recent "Supermarkets: The tricks of the trade" >>>>> episode of "Tonight": >>>>> >>>>> A supermarket sells two kinds of wine, one for £ 3.79 (Brand A) and >>>>> another for £ 4.49 (Brand B), which differ only in quality. On >>>>> average, about two-thirds of customers buy Brand A and one-third buy >>>>> Brand B. Problem: Increase total turnover without cutting or raising >>>>> prices. Solution: Introduce a third and better kind of wine (Brand C) >>>>> selling at £ 9.99. It turns out that even though very few customers >>>>> will buy Brand C, about half of those who used to buy Brand A will >>>>> shift to Brand B, thereby increasing total turnover. >>>>> >>>>> http://www.itv.com/news/2016-01-21/s...trade-tonight/ >>>> >>>> That is a tactic that is used for many things, I'm sure there is >>>> a name for it. >>> >>> Hmmmm...in the bar and resto biz it's sometimes called "upselling"... ;-) >>> I visited Trader Joe's yesterday, and I noticed that they do this sort of thing >>> very "subtly" - of course ensuring that you are getting "top value" for your >>> money...all grocery stores do this to some extent. Anyways, I went in looking >>> for a bottle of their "$2.99 Chuck", but left with something two dollars more... >> >> I would have left with a case of 1.75 L bottles of Crystal Palace >> Vodka, $14.99 per with a 10% discount for buying the case of six. I'd >> do much better knocking down the alcohol content of vodka to that of >> wine with ice and Fresca with a wedge of lemon/lime than drinking >> cheap wino swill. > > That drink is better with cleaner, and admittedly a bit higher priced > vodka. It's also better with a little fresh squeezed grapefruit juice > (and optionally, a little sweetener) added, but Fresca is a good mixer > for vodka. > > --Bryan > Wow, alky advice... |
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Brooklyn1 wrote:
> I would have left with a case of 1.75 L bottles of Crystal Palace > Vodka, $14.99 per with a 10% discount for buying the case of six. I'd > do much better knocking down the alcohol content of vodka to that of > wine with ice and Fresca with a wedge of lemon/lime than drinking > cheap wino swill. Besotted alky talk... |
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Sheldon wrote:
> Gregory Morrow wrote: > >Nancy Young wrote: > >>Opinicus wrote: > >> > Paraphrasing from the recent "Supermarkets: The tricks of the trade" > >> > episode of "Tonight": > >> > > >> > A supermarket sells two kinds of wine, one for £ 3.79 (Brand A) and > >> > another for £ 4.49 (Brand B), which differ only in quality. On > >> > average, about two-thirds of customers buy Brand A and one-third buy > >> > Brand B. Problem: Increase total turnover without cutting or raising > >> > prices. Solution: Introduce a third and better kind of wine (Brand C) > >> > selling at £ 9.99. It turns out that even though very few customers > >> > will buy Brand C, about half of those who used to buy Brand A will > >> > shift to Brand B, thereby increasing total turnover. > >> > > >> > http://www.itv.com/news/2016-01-21/s...trade-tonight/ > >> > >> That is a tactic that is used for many things, I'm sure there is > >> a name for it. > > > >Hmmmm...in the bar and resto biz it's sometimes called "upselling"... ;-) > >I visited Trader Joe's yesterday, and I noticed that they do this sort of thing > >very "subtly" - of course ensuring that you are getting "top value" for your > >money...all grocery stores do this to some extent. Anyways, I went in looking > >for a bottle of their "$2.99 Chuck", but left with something two dollars more... > > I would have left with a case of 1.75 L bottles of Crystal Palace > Vodka, $14.99 per with a 10% discount for buying the case of six. I'd > do much better knocking down the alcohol content of vodka to that of > wine with ice and Fresca with a wedge of lemon/lime than drinking > cheap wino swill. Just between you and me, I much prefer the likse of Crystal Palace to that cheap wino swill... ;-) -- Best Greg |
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On Mon, 25 Jan 2016 12:59:09 -0800 (PST), Gregory Morrow
> wrote: >Sheldon wrote: > >> Gregory Morrow wrote: >> >Nancy Young wrote: >> >>Opinicus wrote: >> >> > Paraphrasing from the recent "Supermarkets: The tricks of the trade" >> >> > episode of "Tonight": >> >> > >> >> > A supermarket sells two kinds of wine, one for £ 3.79 (Brand A) and >> >> > another for £ 4.49 (Brand B), which differ only in quality. On >> >> > average, about two-thirds of customers buy Brand A and one-third buy >> >> > Brand B. Problem: Increase total turnover without cutting or raising >> >> > prices. Solution: Introduce a third and better kind of wine (Brand C) >> >> > selling at £ 9.99. It turns out that even though very few customers >> >> > will buy Brand C, about half of those who used to buy Brand A will >> >> > shift to Brand B, thereby increasing total turnover. >> >> > >> >> > http://www.itv.com/news/2016-01-21/s...trade-tonight/ >> >> >> >> That is a tactic that is used for many things, I'm sure there is >> >> a name for it. >> > >> >Hmmmm...in the bar and resto biz it's sometimes called "upselling"... ;-) >> >I visited Trader Joe's yesterday, and I noticed that they do this sort of thing >> >very "subtly" - of course ensuring that you are getting "top value" for your >> >money...all grocery stores do this to some extent. Anyways, I went in looking >> >for a bottle of their "$2.99 Chuck", but left with something two dollars more... >> >> I would have left with a case of 1.75 L bottles of Crystal Palace >> Vodka, $14.99 per with a 10% discount for buying the case of six. I'd >> do much better knocking down the alcohol content of vodka to that of >> wine with ice and Fresca with a wedge of lemon/lime than drinking >> cheap wino swill. > > >Just between you and me, I much prefer the likse of Crystal Palace to that cheap wino swill... ;-) 'Zactly... vodka has a clean taste and you can change the vintage with different sodas... Fresca is good but so is Sprite, and 7Up cranberry, etc. And naturally different fruits; lemon, lime, orange... if one is constipated prepare a pile driver with vodka and prune juice LOL |
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Brooklyn1 wrote:
> I would have left with a case of 1.75 L bottles of Crystal Palace > Vodka, $14.99 per with a 10% discount for buying the case of six. I'd > do much better knocking down the alcohol content of vodka to that of > wine with ice and Fresca with a wedge of lemon/lime than drinking > cheap wino swill. Try Fresca and ice with cheap (but not less than about $12 per handle) gin. Bob |
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On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 7:12:07 AM UTC-6, Nancy Young wrote:
> On 1/25/2016 4:33 AM, Opinicus wrote: > > Paraphrasing from the recent "Supermarkets: The tricks of the trade" > > episode of "Tonight": > > > > A supermarket sells two kinds of wine, one for £ 3.79 (Brand A) and > > another for £ 4.49 (Brand B), which differ only in quality. On > > average, about two-thirds of customers buy Brand A and one-third buy > > Brand B. Problem: Increase total turnover without cutting or raising > > prices. Solution: Introduce a third and better kind of wine (Brand C) > > selling at £ 9.99. It turns out that even though very few customers > > will buy Brand C, about half of those who used to buy Brand A will > > shift to Brand B, thereby increasing total turnover. > > > > http://www.itv.com/news/2016-01-21/s...trade-tonight/ > > That is a tactic that is used for many things, I'm sure there is > a name for it. > > nancy It's called marketing! Being sold to! Think for yourself. Some say "think outside the box", I say there in no box!! Retailers are trying to box you in to further their agenda! The only way to win this game is to not play their game!! I always feel like I'm in shackles in a grocery store! Chained to THEIR game!! **** that!! I'll buy what *I* want to buy!! And it's not most of what YOU are selling!!! John Kuthe... |
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John Kuthe wrote:
> The only way to win this game is to not play their game!! I always feel like I'm in shackles in a grocery store! Chained to THEIR game!! **** that!! I'll buy what*I* want to buy!! Yeah...WHERE? Go on then, tell us WHERE you'll do that, you scrotum shaving pedophile! |
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On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 11:45:36 AM UTC-6, cibola de oro wrote:
> John Kuthe wrote: > > The only way to win this game is to not play their game!! I always feel like I'm in shackles in a grocery store! Chained to THEIR game!! **** that!! I'll buy what*I* want to buy!! > > Yeah...WHERE? > > Go on then, tell us WHERE you'll do that, you scrotum shaving pedophile! Wherever I shop! I strive always to eschew marketing ploys. Why am I talking to a SOCK PUPPET? Get a real name if you want any kind of credibility!! John Kuthe... |
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John Kuthe wrote:
> On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 11:45:36 AM UTC-6, cibola de oro wrote: >> John Kuthe wrote: >>> The only way to win this game is to not play their game!! I always feel like I'm in shackles in a grocery store! Chained to THEIR game!! **** that!! I'll buy what*I* want to buy!! >> >> Yeah...WHERE? >> >> Go on then, tell us WHERE you'll do that, you scrotum shaving pedophile! > > Wherever I shop! I strive always to eschew marketing ploys. You hypocrite, you DO shop in grocery stores! > Why am I talking to a SOCK PUPPET? Get a real name if you want any kind of credibility!! > > John Kuthe... Go shave yer scrotum again, pedo-****er! |
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On 26/1/2016 02:44 John Kuthe wrote:
> On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 7:12:07 AM UTC-6, Nancy Young wrote: >> On 1/25/2016 4:33 AM, Opinicus wrote: >> > Paraphrasing from the recent "Supermarkets: The tricks of the trade" >> > episode of "Tonight": >> > >> > A supermarket sells two kinds of wine, one for £ 3.79 (Brand A) and >> > another for £ 4.49 (Brand B), which differ only in quality. On >> > average, about two-thirds of customers buy Brand A and one-third buy >> > Brand B. Problem: Increase total turnover without cutting or raising >> > prices. Solution: Introduce a third and better kind of wine (Brand C) >> > selling at £ 9.99. It turns out that even though very few customers >> > will buy Brand C, about half of those who used to buy Brand A will >> > shift to Brand B, thereby increasing total turnover. >> > >> > http://www.itv.com/news/2016-01-21/s...trade-tonight/ >> >> That is a tactic that is used for many things, I'm sure there is >> a name for it. >> >> nancy > > It's called marketing! Being sold to! Think for yourself. Some say "think outside the box", I say there in no box!! Retailers are trying to box you in to further their agenda! The only way to win this game is to not play their game!! I always feel like I'm in shackles in a grocery store! Chained to THEIR game!! **** that!! I'll buy what *I* want to buy!! And it's not most of what YOU are selling!!! So what do you buy in a supermarket? -- Bruce |
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On Wednesday, January 27, 2016 at 3:14:07 AM UTC-6, Bruce wrote:
> On 26/1/2016 02:44 John Kuthe wrote: > > > On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 7:12:07 AM UTC-6, Nancy Young wrote: > >> On 1/25/2016 4:33 AM, Opinicus wrote: > >> > Paraphrasing from the recent "Supermarkets: The tricks of the trade" > >> > episode of "Tonight": > >> > > >> > A supermarket sells two kinds of wine, one for £ 3.79 (Brand A) and > >> > another for £ 4.49 (Brand B), which differ only in quality. On > >> > average, about two-thirds of customers buy Brand A and one-third buy > >> > Brand B. Problem: Increase total turnover without cutting or raising > >> > prices. Solution: Introduce a third and better kind of wine (Brand C) > >> > selling at £ 9.99. It turns out that even though very few customers > >> > will buy Brand C, about half of those who used to buy Brand A will > >> > shift to Brand B, thereby increasing total turnover. > >> > > >> > http://www.itv.com/news/2016-01-21/s...trade-tonight/ > >> > >> That is a tactic that is used for many things, I'm sure there is > >> a name for it. > >> > >> nancy > > > > It's called marketing! Being sold to! Think for yourself. Some say "think outside the box", I say there in no box!! Retailers are trying to box you in to further their agenda! The only way to win this game is to not play their game!! I always feel like I'm in shackles in a grocery store! Chained to THEIR game!! **** that!! I'll buy what *I* want to buy!! And it's not most of what YOU are selling!!! > > So what do you buy in a supermarket? > > -- > Bruce I buy what *I* am looking for, not what they are trying to sell me! For example, my current shoping list (shopping tomorrow, Thurs 1/28)) is: 1. One XL sourdough loaf from STLBreadCo. 2. My weekly produce shopping from the Market In The Loop. 3. 5# ground beast from Straub's 4. From a grocer's: soap, razor blades, ScotchBrite sponge scrubbee's, 2 boxes (one for backup) of 1 qt. Ziplocks John Kuthe... |
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On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 7:12:07 AM UTC-6, Nancy Young wrote:
> On 1/25/2016 4:33 AM, Opinicus wrote: > > Paraphrasing from the recent "Supermarkets: The tricks of the trade" > > episode of "Tonight": > > > > A supermarket sells two kinds of wine, one for £ 3.79 (Brand A) and > > another for £ 4.49 (Brand B), which differ only in quality. On > > average, about two-thirds of customers buy Brand A and one-third buy > > Brand B. Problem: Increase total turnover without cutting or raising > > prices. Solution: Introduce a third and better kind of wine (Brand C) > > selling at £ 9.99. It turns out that even though very few customers > > will buy Brand C, about half of those who used to buy Brand A will > > shift to Brand B, thereby increasing total turnover. > > > > http://www.itv.com/news/2016-01-21/s...trade-tonight/ > > That is a tactic that is used for many things, I'm sure there is > a name for it. > I can always get a bottle of a good, local Missouri sweet wine for under $8.. I like water better with delicate food, and beer with more robust food. > > nancy --Bryan |
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On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 10:12:10 AM UTC-6, MisterDiddyWahDiddy wrote:
> On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 7:12:07 AM UTC-6, Nancy Young wrote: > > On 1/25/2016 4:33 AM, Opinicus wrote: > > > Paraphrasing from the recent "Supermarkets: The tricks of the trade" > > > episode of "Tonight": > > > > > > A supermarket sells two kinds of wine, one for £ 3.79 (Brand A) and > > > another for £ 4.49 (Brand B), which differ only in quality. On > > > average, about two-thirds of customers buy Brand A and one-third buy > > > Brand B. Problem: Increase total turnover without cutting or raising > > > prices. Solution: Introduce a third and better kind of wine (Brand C) > > > selling at £ 9.99. It turns out that even though very few customers > > > will buy Brand C, about half of those who used to buy Brand A will > > > shift to Brand B, thereby increasing total turnover. > > > > > > http://www.itv.com/news/2016-01-21/s...trade-tonight/ > > > > That is a tactic that is used for many things, I'm sure there is > > a name for it. > > > I can always get a bottle of a good, local Missouri sweet wine for under $8. > I like water better with delicate food, and beer with more robust food. > > > > nancy > > --Bryan Sweet wines are for children, not that children should be drinking alcohol! And water is the BEST beverage!! Mostly what I drink, daily! 1/2 gallon a day, more in warmer months. John Kuthe... |
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On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 10:41:35 AM UTC-6, John Kuthe wrote:
> On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 10:12:10 AM UTC-6, MisterDiddyWahDiddy wrote: > > On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 7:12:07 AM UTC-6, Nancy Young wrote: > > > On 1/25/2016 4:33 AM, Opinicus wrote: > > > > Paraphrasing from the recent "Supermarkets: The tricks of the trade" > > > > episode of "Tonight": > > > > > > > > A supermarket sells two kinds of wine, one for £ 3.79 (Brand A) and > > > > another for £ 4.49 (Brand B), which differ only in quality. On > > > > average, about two-thirds of customers buy Brand A and one-third buy > > > > Brand B. Problem: Increase total turnover without cutting or raising > > > > prices. Solution: Introduce a third and better kind of wine (Brand C) > > > > selling at £ 9.99. It turns out that even though very few customers > > > > will buy Brand C, about half of those who used to buy Brand A will > > > > shift to Brand B, thereby increasing total turnover. > > > > > > > > http://www.itv.com/news/2016-01-21/s...trade-tonight/ > > > > > > That is a tactic that is used for many things, I'm sure there is > > > a name for it. > > > > > I can always get a bottle of a good, local Missouri sweet wine for under $8. > > I like water better with delicate food, and beer with more robust food. > > > > > > nancy > > > > --Bryan > > Sweet wines are for children, not that children should be drinking alcohol! > Sweet wines are for long walks through the forest; they're for wine spritzers on a hot summer day. They go great with fresh fruit, nuts and cheeses. Yummy. http://www.montelle.com/wine-store/r...house-red.html > > And water is the BEST beverage!! Mostly what I drink, daily! 1/2 gallon a day, more in warmer months. > Water doesn't alter the flavor of food. > > John Kuthe... --Bryan |
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On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 11:04:25 AM UTC-6, MisterDiddyWahDiddy wrote:
> On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 10:41:35 AM UTC-6, John Kuthe wrote: > > On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 10:12:10 AM UTC-6, MisterDiddyWahDiddy wrote: > > > On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 7:12:07 AM UTC-6, Nancy Young wrote: > > > > On 1/25/2016 4:33 AM, Opinicus wrote: > > > > > Paraphrasing from the recent "Supermarkets: The tricks of the trade" > > > > > episode of "Tonight": > > > > > > > > > > A supermarket sells two kinds of wine, one for £ 3.79 (Brand A) and > > > > > another for £ 4.49 (Brand B), which differ only in quality. On > > > > > average, about two-thirds of customers buy Brand A and one-third buy > > > > > Brand B. Problem: Increase total turnover without cutting or raising > > > > > prices. Solution: Introduce a third and better kind of wine (Brand C) > > > > > selling at £ 9.99. It turns out that even though very few customers > > > > > will buy Brand C, about half of those who used to buy Brand A will > > > > > shift to Brand B, thereby increasing total turnover. > > > > > > > > > > http://www.itv.com/news/2016-01-21/s...trade-tonight/ > > > > > > > > That is a tactic that is used for many things, I'm sure there is > > > > a name for it. > > > > > > > I can always get a bottle of a good, local Missouri sweet wine for under $8. > > > I like water better with delicate food, and beer with more robust food. > > > > > > > > nancy > > > > > > --Bryan > > > > Sweet wines are for children, not that children should be drinking alcohol! > > > Sweet wines are for long walks through the forest; they're for wine spritzers > on a hot summer day. They go great with fresh fruit, nuts and cheeses. > > Yummy. http://www.montelle.com/wine-store/r...house-red.html > > > > And water is the BEST beverage!! Mostly what I drink, daily! 1/2 gallon a day, more in warmer months. > > > Water doesn't alter the flavor of food. > > > > John Kuthe... > > --Bryan Sweet wines are like what my baking buddy Scott used to call my cream and sugar in my coffee: little girl's coffee! Sweet wines are for little girls too. Sweet wines are made by either adding sugar to the grape juice pre and sometimes even post fermentation!! A "real" wine is made by fermenting the juice until the alcohol content kills the fermentation yeasts, then it is "done"! Or until the fermentation yeasts run out of natural sugars to eat!! Either way, the yeasts die and fermentation stops. John Kuthe... |
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On 1/25/2016 11:41 AM, John Kuthe wrote:
> > Sweet wines are for children, not that children should be drinking alcohol! > > And water is the BEST beverage!! Mostly what I drink, daily! 1/2 gallon a day, more in warmer months. > > John Kuthe... > When we were kids, it was a big treat at a holiday dinner to have a few ounces of Mogen David wine. OMG, that is so sweet. I've learned to appreciate better wines for meals. Agree on the water. Still the best drink. At lunch I have 1 to 1 1/2 liters. First thing I drink in the morning, last thing before going to bed at night. |
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On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 12:35:30 PM UTC-6, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> On 1/25/2016 11:41 AM, John Kuthe wrote: > > > > > Sweet wines are for children, not that children should be drinking alcohol! > > > > And water is the BEST beverage!! Mostly what I drink, daily! 1/2 gallon a day, more in warmer months. > > > > John Kuthe... > > > > When we were kids, it was a big treat at a holiday dinner to have a few > ounces of Mogen David wine. OMG, that is so sweet. I've learned to > appreciate better wines for meals. Yep, made us feel so grown up too! > Agree on the water. Still the best drink. At lunch I have 1 to 1 1/2 > liters. First thing I drink in the morning, last thing before going to > bed at night. Absolutely! After all, water is the basis of everything we drink anyway, so why not just drink the best stuff! Pure clean delicious WATER!! YUM!! John Kuthe... |
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MisterDiddyWahDiddy wrote:
> I can always get a bottle of a good, local Missouri sweet wine for under $8. MD 20/20 is a Missouri product? |
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On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 11:44:22 AM UTC-6, cibola de oro wrote:
> MisterDiddyWahDiddy wrote: > > I can always get a bottle of a good, local Missouri sweet wine for under $8. > > MD 20/20 is a Missouri product? No. MD 20/20 is bad, fortified sweet wine. http://www.montelle.com/wine-store/r...house-red.html --Bryan |
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MisterDiddyWahDiddy wrote:
> On Monday, January 25, 2016 at 11:44:22 AM UTC-6, cibola de oro wrote: >> MisterDiddyWahDiddy wrote: >>> I can always get a bottle of a good, local Missouri sweet wine for under $8. >> >> MD 20/20 is a Missouri product? > > No. MD 20/20 is bad, fortified sweet wine. > > http://www.montelle.com/wine-store/r...house-red.html > > --Bryan > Leave it to a sot to know the answer... |
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"Opinicus" wrote"
.... > Paraphrasing from the recent "Supermarkets: The tricks of the trade" > episode of "Tonight": > > A supermarket sells two kinds of wine, one for £ 3.79 (Brand A) and > another for £ 4.49 (Brand B), which differ only in quality. On > average, about two-thirds of customers buy Brand A and one-third buy > Brand B. Problem: Increase total turnover without cutting or raising > prices. Solution: Introduce a third and better kind of wine (Brand C) > selling at £ 9.99. It turns out that even though very few customers > will buy Brand C, about half of those who used to buy Brand A will > shift to Brand B, thereby increasing total turnover. The Montgomery Ward catalog had three qualities for a great many of their products and they were called Good, Better and Best. I wonder if they may have been early adopters of this technique. |
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