среда, 4 марта 2015 г.

jikMan Celebrating 101st Birthday At Restaurant That Gives Discounts Based On Age Gets $0.07 Refund On Mealde

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There are many perks of growing old — seeing your kids have kids, wearing shirts that say “World’s Best Grandma,” calling rowdy youngsters “whippersnappers” and more — and getting discounts on things is definitely not the least of those. But one centenarian learned that he’d reached a point where you can actually get a free mail and get paid just for your age.

A 101-year-old New Hampshire man had breakfast on the house at a Manchester restaurant that rewards customers dining on their birthdays with a discount based on their age, reports WMUR.com.


So for example, if you’re turning five years old, the restaurant covers 5% of your bill. If you’re 85, you get 85% of your tab paid. That means that at 100, your birthday meal is free — and at 101, you actually get 101% of your meal paid for — or a 1% refund.


Thus, after chomping on scrambled eggs and ham and a piece of chocolate cake for free, the World War II veteran got $0.07 back from the restaurant. Not a bad birthday gift, if you ask me.


Man, 101, eats birthday breakfast on the house [WMUR.com]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

jikIs Netflix Trying To Have Its Net Neutrality Cake And Eat It Too?de

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netflixhackgrab Last week’s vote by the FCC to approve new net neutrality rules was seen as a big win for streaming services like Netflix, as it prevents ISPs from throttling or blocking access to online content and from prioritizing any data. And indeed, Netflix has been one of the more vocal corporate cheerleaders for neutrality. But that apparently hasn’t stopped the company from making deals that calls into question Netflix’s actual stance on the issue.


When Netflix launches in Australia later this month, some broadband users won’t have to worry that their binge-watching might push them over their monthly limits. That’s because Netflix is making deals Down Under that would exempt its data from counting against data caps.


The question is whether or not this sort of “zero-rating” offering — similar to how T-Mobile doesn’t count certain streaming music services against data caps — violates the neutrality rules’ prohibition against prioritization.


It definitely offers consumers an incentive to use the data-sponsoring service rather than a competitor whose data will go against their monthly cap. At the same time, there is no actual speeding up or improving of the data involved.


There is no cut-and-dry answer in the FCC’s new rules, as they do not explicitly forbid or allow sponsored data. Under the order’s standard of conduct, the FCC can look at specific zero-rating offers to determine if they are a threat to neutrality, but there is no blanket ban against them.


And as DSLreports.com points out, the streaming video market in Australia has a more flexible attitude toward sponsored data, with multiple media companies footing the bill for their users’ usage.


Regardless of whether or not such arrangements would violate net neutrality guidelines in the U.S., Australia, or Antarctica, Netflix leadership had previously been very clear on its position regarding this topic.


In 2012, Netflix CEO Reed Hastings accused Comcast of violating the original neutrality rules by not counting data coming through its Xfinity streaming services against data caps.


“Comcast should apply caps equally, or not at all,” he wrote at the time. “In what way is this neutral?”


And in a statement to The Verge, Netflix simultaneously acknowledges the shortcomings of sponsored data while saying it’s going to do it if the other guys do it.


“Zero rating isn’t great for consumers as it has the potential to distort consumer choice in favor of choices selected by an ISP,” reads the statement. “We’ll push back against such efforts, but we won’t put our service or our members at a disadvantage.”


As mentioned above, the door isn’t shut on sponsored data stateside. You can expect ISPs and deep-pocketed content companies to push the boundaries on these deals to see exactly what the FCC will and won’t allow.




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

jikAbercrombie Sells Corporate Jet, Shelves Phil Collins CD For Goodde

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For me, one of the most memorable things that the public learned from an age-discrimination lawsuit against a former pilot for Abercrombie & Fitch’s corporate jet was not that the attendants were male models required to wear flip-flops, boxer briefs, and A&F cologne. It was that CEO Michael Jeffries required that the jet play the song “Take Me Home” by Phil Collins whenever it was headed back to Ohio. Now the jet is for sale and the CD has been shelved for good.


That was one piece of information shared during the teen-oriented clothing company’s quarterly results conference call. While the sale of the jet may be promising information for investors, the company’s financial results were not so promising.


Abercrombie is in a tough spot right now, not really knowing who it is as a company. They’re experimenting with things that former CEO Jeffries never would have allowed, like evaluating managers based on how much money a store takes in and not on how hot the employees are. They will sell clothes in the color black, and pants with zippers, and maybe some items for women that come in size extra-large. They say that they also plan to maybe experiment with turning the music down and the lights up inside their stores.


Abercrombie & Fitch’s Identity Crisis: From Clueless Preppy to Sullen Teen [Bloomberg]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

jikYou Can Make Almost $100K A Year Finding Ideal Bathrooms For Seattle Bus Driversde

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It might be smelly work, but somebody’s gotta do it: Seattle officials are looking to hire a “Comfort Station Coordinator” in Seattle, a veritable Goldilocks tasked with finding bathrooms that are just right for bus drivers. And stench aside, the gig pays pretty well, at a salary of $97,000 per year.

It’s not easy for bus drivers to just pull over and find a place to go while they’re on the job, so the new potty spotter will be responsible for finding easily-accessible restrooms for the almost 2,600 bus drivers in King County, reports KOMO News.


“It’s not just somebody running around telling drivers where they can pee. We have an obligation under the law. We take it really seriously,” said Jeff Switzer, a spokesman for Metro Transit.


“It’s our job to make sure they have access to restrooms, so when we’re driving commuters, when we’re driving passengers downtown, bus drivers can also stop and use the bathroom, too,” he added.


This, after an audit by the state Department of Labor and Industries last November found that drivers weren’t given unrestricted access to restrooms. Some even admitted to wearing diapers because they said they felt pressured to stick strictly to their routes.


“If there’s not a bathroom there, we have to kind of hold it until we can find one,” one driver of 10 years. “Because of the uniform, most people are pretty nice to us. They’ll let us use them.”


The agency says the $97,000 ballpark salary figure depends on the employee’s experience, and that it will be accepting applicants through March 5. Candidates should have a number of years of experience, with the agency calling the salary comparable to other managerial positions.


Metro Transit hiring ‘bathroom czar’ to solve potty problem [KOMO News]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

jikScience Says You Shop Differently If You’re Looking Up At Productsde

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Just about everyone knows that the vital shelf space on a supermarket shelf is right below eye level, where your eyes are naturally drawn to products and you don’t have to crouch or crane your neck to see. A new study claims that vertical positioning on a shelf doesn’t just impact whether or not we see a product, but what kinds of purchasing decisions we make.

This is according to a study published in the Journal of Consumer Research that looks at whether we perceive items differently based on whether we’re looking up or down at them.


The idea tested by researchers from Ghent University in Belgium is that humans process different stimuli when looking down versus up. More precisely, that because we so often look downward at detailed items that are within close proximity — books, computers, watches — humans seek out more concrete information than when we turn our view upwards to take a more generalized look at things in the distance.


“Consumers may be so used to paying detailed and focused attention when they are looking down that they

might also do this when selecting a product from a low shelf,” suggests the report. “Similarly, consumers may be so used to taking a broader perspective when looking up that they will also do this when selecting a product from a higher shelf.”


In one experiment, college students were blindfolded and seated in a chair that positioned their heads at either 30% upward or 30% downward while someone described a scene at a lake with a boat on it. When asked afterward to estimate how far away they imagined the boat to be, subjects with downward-tilted heads said around 29 feet on average, while those whose heads had been tilted up estimated an average of 83 feet, more than 2.5 times as far away.


The researchers believe this shows that, because the subjects were blindfolded, the perception difference has more to do with the body movement of looking up or down than the actual seeing of these items.


A later study more directly related to retail involved making a purchase decision with subjects heads at different angles.


Subjects were instructed to keep their heads tilted upward, downward, or keep them level while responding to a series of questions. One question asked them to make a decision about buying a printer between two models.


Printer A was described as “higher in reliability (with a score of 9 out of 10) and slightly lower in quality (with a score of 8 out of 10)” while Printer B was “lower in reliability (scoring 8 out of 10) but higher in quality (scoring 9 out of 10).” So Printer A, according to the researchers, is a product that scores higher in a more concrete aspect — reliability — while Printer B outscores the other product in the more generalized “quality” aspect.


Test subjects were asked to decide on a printer by dividing 100 points between the two competing items then rate the quality and reliability of each product on a 9-point scale.


The results show that subjects who looked up were more likely to choose Printer B (the “higher quality” but less reliable model) than either those who looked down or looked straight ahead. And those who looked down were the least likely to select Printer B.


“[E]ngaging in bodily movements that enable consumers to look down increases the importance of feasibility attributes over desirability attributes,” explain the researchers, “while engaging in bodily movements that enable consumers to look up increases the importance of desirability attributes over feasibility attributes.”


In terms of how their findings can impact the marketing of retail products, the researchers believe that established brands with large market shares may benefit from shelf positions that require the consumer to look down a bit, as their study found subjects more often selected their most preferred brands when looking down.


“Consequently, when all competitive brands appear in low positions, the market share of the market leader (which is often the most preferred brand) is likely to become even larger when all competitive brands appear in low rather than high positions,” explains the report. “Similarly, our results suggest differences in the processing of in-store ads that hang from the store ceiling, floorboards attached to the store floor, and eye-level ads on shelves.”


The research may also impact online commerce, as most of us are looking downward at our laptop and smartphone screens when we shop at Amazon and the like. In fact, a consumer’s purchase-related decision making may be influenced by whether they’re browsing a site at work, where they are more likely to be looking straight ahead at their monitor, or on a tablet or phone, which is usually positioned much lower.


The study authors believe that more research on the actual retail implications of their findings is needed.




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

jikDick’s Sporting Goods: Relax, There Will Still Be Plenty Of Adidas Stuff On Shelvesde

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Yesterday we heard that Dick’s Sporting Goods stores would be ditching some Adidas and Rebook merchandise in order to make room for the chain’s new women’s workout line Calia, with Carrie Underwood as the face of the brand. And now the company is reassuring customers who were apparently worried this meant the store would be dropping the other brands completely.

Perhaps Adidas was a bit worried that Dick’s didn’t love it anymore, as the retailer’s CEO Ed Stack said today that the Germany company “Is a large and important partner,” reports the Wall Street Journal (warning: paywall in place).


Yesterday during an earnings call Dick’s CEO Ed Stack said that the space for the Calia line “would be coming out of primarily Adidas and Reebok,” but then stressed the fact today during an investor conference that those brands wouldn’t disappear completely by any means.


“The idea that we are kicking Adidas off the shelves, nothing could be further from the truth,” Stack said Wednesday. “For all the Adidas fans, there will be plenty of Adidas product.”


Dick’s Sporting Goods Says There Will Be Plenty of Adidas Products [Wall Street Journal]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

jikPrairie Farms Introduces Peeps-Branded Easter Milks And Easter Egg Nogde

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easter milkLast year, we brought you the news that Prairie Farms sells Easter-themed dairy beverages: specifically, jellybean milk and Easter egg nog. Now the company has partnered with Just Born, creators of Peeps marshmallow-shaped holiday treats, to sell Peep-flavored milk. Yes, that just means sugar, artificial flavors, and food coloring. That’s what Peeps are.


Whether you think this is a neat cross-branding opportunity or a holiday mashup nightmarescape, it doesn’t matter what your opinion is. Peeps milk will continue to exist. Last year, when we learned that Easter egg nog was a thing, we learned that it wasn’t a new thing: spring nogs have been on the market since the ’90s.


Of course, nothing stops anyone from making their own egg nog at any time of year. The more important question is whether we really need heavily-sugared milk beverages to encourage milk-drinking in children. Jelly beans and sugar-coated marshmallows are great foods in moderation, but that doesn’t mean we ought to mix every beverage up with them. It’s like wrapping every food in bacon.


Prairie Farms and PEEPS® Team Up to Bring You America’s Newest Milk Flavors! [Prairie Farms] (Thanks, JT!)




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist