Remove tag consumers
article thumbnail

It’s the outcome that counts

The Source

As much as we like to think of ourselves as intelligent and discerning consumers, the reality is that many of the day-to-day purchasing decisions we make are driven by our primitive reptile brains.

Study 45
article thumbnail

Coronavirus: Who Gets a Hospital Bed?

CaseInterview.com

If they don’t, we tag them with a black tag indicating the patient is dead or “expectant” (expected to die) and walk away. In a resource-constrained environment, that necessitates not treating a patient that consumes too many resources or is not likely to survive even with treatment.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Why Amazon’s Grocery Store May Not Be the Future of Retail

Harvard Business

Our survey of 1,500 British consumers revealed that 19% would consider an app that tracked them an invasion of privacy. And will consumers like it? Starting in the mid-1990s, RFID was expected to transform inventory control by using electromagnetic fields to automatically identify and track tags attached to objects.

Retail 28
article thumbnail

The Psychology of Pricing: Customers Prefer Round Numbers

Strategy+Business

price tag, but a new study shows most consumers would rather pay $5.00.' Business managers may think they''re fooling customers with a $4.99

Study 53
article thumbnail

Why You Should Start Your Next Project Right Now

PM Alliance

Experienced project professionals are always in demand, and an organization supporting a busy project pipeline can easily consume a huge number of personnel resources. Your team members won’t be pulled off to support other efforts.

article thumbnail

I Scream, You Scream (But Only When the Price Goes Up)

Strategy+Business

The ice cream market reveals that consumers don''t mind smaller packaging as much as they do bigger price tags.'

article thumbnail

8 Ways Brands Can Fight Counterfeits in China

Harvard Business

But China also has a huge domestic market for fake goods: many consumers who buy counterfeits do so deliberately, because they want to pay a lower price for goods that look expensive. Not all Chinese consumers want knockoffs. Chamber of Commerce estimates is worth about $397 billion. Fake merchandise accounted for 12.5% Insight Center.