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Reason: None provided.

corporations and modern women act almost exactly the same

It applies to gaming, relationships, media, politics, religion, everything. Nerdrotic tried to explain this to the foolish executives years ago. Yes there are two kinds of consumer, the loyal fans and normies, but you can't guarantee the fans will stay in "the cave". Normies are the "easy lay". They come and go following trends and you might get lucky and score by riding the coattails of your previous products, but they're usually gone in the morning. True fans are harder to win. You've got to wine and dine them and treat them like the most important people in the world. Once you get them they are extremely loyal and always willing to give you the benefit of the doubt, but once you betray them - by diluting your core product to capture a new audience - they are gone forever. You can always try to appeal to new consumers, but without sticking to your product's core strengths, you not only lose the fans but there's nothing differentiating your product from the next Digital Consumable from Company B. Your true fans are a base of support that provide immeasurable PR beyond your marketing budget, and can keep the company afloat during market downturns when other customers aren't biting.

1 year ago
2 score
Reason: Original

corporations and modern women act almost exactly the same

It applies to gaming, relationships, media, politics, religion, everything. Nerdrotic tried to explain this to the foolish executives years ago. Yes there are two kinds of consumer, the loyal fans and normies, but you can't guarantee the fans will stay in "the cave". Normies are the "easy lay". They come and go following trends and you might get lucky and score by riding the coattails of your previous products, but they're usually gone in the morning. True fans are harder to win. You've got to wine and dine them and treat them like the most important people in the world. Once you get them they are extremely loyal and always willing to give you the benefit of the doubt, but once you betray them - by diluting your core product to capture a new audience - they are gone forever. You can always try to appeal to new consumers, but without sticking to your products core strength's, you not only lose the fans but there's nothing differentiating your product from the next Digital Consumable from Company B. Your true fans are a base of support that provide immeasurable PR beyond your marketing budget, and can keep the company afloat during market downturns when other customers aren't biting.

1 year ago
1 score