sudsmobile
New member
- Jan 10, 2018
- 970
- 2
I'm telling you, you guys are really sensitive. Am I really knocking it? No. I'm saying it's not an effective way to advertise. Do you know what the word anecdotal means? Your stories and mine are anecdotal. They don't mean anything in the big picture, they're taken on their own. I sold a huge job one day leaving the super market. I was literally loading groceries into my rig when the phone range and a guy said "Hey, I just saw you in the parking lot and I want to schedule details for two cars." Does that mean I should spend all my time in grocery store parking lots? No, that's anecdotal. And I would expect that the number of CFOs and CEOs that watch their kids play little league is roughly equivalent percentage wise to how many CFOs and CEOs there are in any one area of the particular city you're in. And what is that anyway? CFOs and CEOs are the only ones that get their cars detailed? I do work for all kinds of people, teachers, nurses, guys that work at tire stores, a guy that works at Pep Boys, I mean you name it. So, again, that's the cross section you're looking for. Average person in your town, not the CFOs and CEOs only which will run you out of potential customers in a hurry.
I mean seriously stop getting so butt hurt when somebody disagrees with you. I'm certainly not saying that supporting your local little league is a bad idea, in fact I think it's great for little league. I'm just telling you that it's not an effective way to spend your advertising dollar. I always assumed that people supported little league for the charity aspect of it, not because it led to a ton of business. I mean if little league advertising were really the way to go, Nationwide, Coca Cola and Disney would be all over it instead of Big Lou's Wood Fired Pizza.
I mean seriously stop getting so butt hurt when somebody disagrees with you. I'm certainly not saying that supporting your local little league is a bad idea, in fact I think it's great for little league. I'm just telling you that it's not an effective way to spend your advertising dollar. I always assumed that people supported little league for the charity aspect of it, not because it led to a ton of business. I mean if little league advertising were really the way to go, Nationwide, Coca Cola and Disney would be all over it instead of Big Lou's Wood Fired Pizza.