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Posted On: 09/21/2020 4:33:38 PM
Post# of 36542
You want a higher price you need to produce and maintain a solid performance...."unlock the value" .....well we are still waiting ......Joe has been outsmarted , the bottom line his PR's and plans have not generated the expected revenue and pps to be listed. Any future "vision" will take many Q's to build up substantial revenues and it appears the "unexpected" Covid may give us a boost, thanks to von Hofe if successful. I still believe we need an experienced well respected outside source to restore credibility, trust and reasonable timelines. Let's hope Management ego's will not destroy this company. The board imo is not an independent board and very unlikely they will suggest to make any changes. The best way to show assumptions are not accurate is to deliver results !!
Nice little paragraph: reflection of "healthy food"
The problem When a single person at the top makes decisions for a business based on how it reflects on him or her, rather than how the business performs, then the service can suffer as a result. Being a larger-than-life character can sometimes work for a business, but often it simply smothers it. The brand of the business can become one character, the person’s look, values, tone of voice, etc. At that point, the character is under constant scrutiny and if he or she looks bad then so too does the business. Take, for example, a boss who is rude to a paying customer who gives the business a less-than-perfect review on a social media platform. The boss who wants to retain his status as being in charge and dominant sacrifices the business service for a personal power play– by leveling criticism and judgment back at the customer. In return, everyone else on that social media feed looks in shock at the rudeness of the boss and judges the service to be bad. This has indeed happened countless times in the real world. In the United Kingdom there was an incident called “cakegate,” for instance, where a customer gave a good review but said the cakes on sale should be covered up while on sale for food health reasons. The business owner responded with a very personal insult and banned the customer. This response was captured and went viral, making cover stories for newspapers. The business is no longer running.
Nice little paragraph: reflection of "healthy food"
The problem When a single person at the top makes decisions for a business based on how it reflects on him or her, rather than how the business performs, then the service can suffer as a result. Being a larger-than-life character can sometimes work for a business, but often it simply smothers it. The brand of the business can become one character, the person’s look, values, tone of voice, etc. At that point, the character is under constant scrutiny and if he or she looks bad then so too does the business. Take, for example, a boss who is rude to a paying customer who gives the business a less-than-perfect review on a social media platform. The boss who wants to retain his status as being in charge and dominant sacrifices the business service for a personal power play– by leveling criticism and judgment back at the customer. In return, everyone else on that social media feed looks in shock at the rudeness of the boss and judges the service to be bad. This has indeed happened countless times in the real world. In the United Kingdom there was an incident called “cakegate,” for instance, where a customer gave a good review but said the cakes on sale should be covered up while on sale for food health reasons. The business owner responded with a very personal insult and banned the customer. This response was captured and went viral, making cover stories for newspapers. The business is no longer running.
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