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CensoredSpeech on scored.co
1 year ago13 points(+0/-0/+13Score on mirror)5 children
If a company is advertising a product or service, that means it's not a good product or service. That's my take anyway. The best products and services in the world do 0 advertising.
A good comparison is jobs. All the best jobs in the world never put out ads for the job unless there's some legal requirement because there's already a lineup for the job before it is even posted for. Only jobs no one wants to work are advertised for. The worse the job, the more job postings for the job you'll find.
1 year ago8 points(+0/-0/+8Score on mirror)1 child
Idk who he is, personally. I don't know what account got banned originally either (obviously). He hasn't said anything downvoted or spammy on this board before. He is a mgtow psyop believer though, so it's possible his original account was a blackpill fag, I've seen a lot of them around.
Is merely commenting on the MGTOW board really enough of a reason to ban someone?
like i don't these MGTOW fags either because its funny that SFAMIA (who grilled my balls for banning people who pretended to be other people) is very light-handed with the bans
did "CensoredSpeech" said anything remotely subversive on this board?
I don't know, I don't know what his original account was. I'm just guessing that he *might* have been a blackpill subverter because he's posting on mgtow on this alt, which most blackpill subverters do.
This account? I can't find anything subversive, but it's also brand new. The original could have been a lot more so.
1 year ago5 points(+0/-0/+5Score on mirror)1 child
That's a false dichotomy about jobs and products, but you've at least come up with something interesting to think about.
Advertising is a necessity if your product is unknown. Nobody will try it otherwise. If you're trying to break into an established market, it's vital. Advertising is a psychological tactic meant to associate the product with familiarity in you brain.
If you go to the supermarket and see 30 brands of soda, you are likely to buy either a brand you've tried, or a brand you're familiar with. This familiarity is established by normal means (you've tasted it and know it) or by association, such as it being recommended to you. Advertisement is a proxy for recommendation and familiarity. Your brain remembers that advertisement and associates it with you "knowing" the product, which makes you more likely to buy it in a sea of unknown choices. This isn't the only factor that determines what you buy, but it gives an edge which is why people do it. Advertising also has other uses not even relating to what people buy, but that's a story for another time.
Also, there are no companies which do "zero" advertising, you just don't see it because you're not targeted. Products like Rolex and Rolls Royce advertise, they just don't mass market, which is the difference. If you go to places and associate with people who are in the market for these products, you will see the advertising. It maintains the brand, which is another aspect of advertising. You want people who already own your product to feel pride about owning it. Advertisements bolster that feeling.
MUG likely doesn't advertise because they've captured the market on cheap root beer. Their sales are fine, and they don't need to increase market share. Everyone is familiar with MUG because they've likely had it before, somewhere. Those under 26 probably have tasted it in their house when their parents bought it. It's a subsidiary of PepsiCo. (acquired in 86'), so it's not a flagship product and lives off the back of Pepsi. I haven't seen a Pepsi commercial in years either, probably because Pepsi is a Mega Corp which owns many brands. They're actually bigger than the Coca-Cola company, despite selling less soda.
Rolex has ads in tennis matches. The paper Economist back when I was getting that used to have ads for a lot of weird rich-people stuff like fancy watches and fractional jet ownership.
A good comparison is jobs. All the best jobs in the world never put out ads for the job unless there's some legal requirement because there's already a lineup for the job before it is even posted for. Only jobs no one wants to work are advertised for. The worse the job, the more job postings for the job you'll find.
It's +8 so it's not that pedojeet stuff. I didn't know we had rules aside from that.
like i don't these MGTOW fags either because its funny that SFAMIA (who grilled my balls for banning people who pretended to be other people) is very light-handed with the bans
did "CensoredSpeech" said anything remotely subversive on this board?
This account? I can't find anything subversive, but it's also brand new. The original could have been a lot more so.
Advertising is a necessity if your product is unknown. Nobody will try it otherwise. If you're trying to break into an established market, it's vital. Advertising is a psychological tactic meant to associate the product with familiarity in you brain.
If you go to the supermarket and see 30 brands of soda, you are likely to buy either a brand you've tried, or a brand you're familiar with. This familiarity is established by normal means (you've tasted it and know it) or by association, such as it being recommended to you. Advertisement is a proxy for recommendation and familiarity. Your brain remembers that advertisement and associates it with you "knowing" the product, which makes you more likely to buy it in a sea of unknown choices. This isn't the only factor that determines what you buy, but it gives an edge which is why people do it. Advertising also has other uses not even relating to what people buy, but that's a story for another time.
Also, there are no companies which do "zero" advertising, you just don't see it because you're not targeted. Products like Rolex and Rolls Royce advertise, they just don't mass market, which is the difference. If you go to places and associate with people who are in the market for these products, you will see the advertising. It maintains the brand, which is another aspect of advertising. You want people who already own your product to feel pride about owning it. Advertisements bolster that feeling.
MUG likely doesn't advertise because they've captured the market on cheap root beer. Their sales are fine, and they don't need to increase market share. Everyone is familiar with MUG because they've likely had it before, somewhere. Those under 26 probably have tasted it in their house when their parents bought it. It's a subsidiary of PepsiCo. (acquired in 86'), so it's not a flagship product and lives off the back of Pepsi. I haven't seen a Pepsi commercial in years either, probably because Pepsi is a Mega Corp which owns many brands. They're actually bigger than the Coca-Cola company, despite selling less soda.
Consuuuuume.