For a period I was an IT consultant for a company dealing with Supermarkets. The owner taught me many things about this business. The grocery store has contracts with the suppliers telling at which level the product must be (people tend to buy what’s in the eye level) and how many columns of items the product will have (called facing IIRC). Like Hans Ketchup will be in the 4th shelf up and it’ll have 6 columns showing the front label. If the product is in a corner or in an island, everything is in the contract.
I’ve seen workers with papers printed with a picture of how the shelf must be organized.
He also told me about prices. Things that have the power of the brand will be always priced higher, like “product X will be priced 15% higher than the most expensive competitor in this store”.
That paper employees have is called a planogram. Some group in the corporate office creates them and sends them to the stores. They are supposed to match the type and size of shelving you have in a specific location. This only happens some of the time, the rest of the time, the manager gets upset you changed the planogram, even though it doesn't match what you have.
I stopped going for a while to one because they put the multipack crisps on the other side of the store to the larger bags though as I thought they'd just stopped stocking them
It's all well and good rotating things around but don't put stuff in nonsensical places
Why does everyone in marketing think that's how my brain works? I have NEVER bought anything because of an ad or being "exposed" to it. I know exactly what I want every time I shop and I WILL tell an employee to fuck off if they approach me with the old "can I help you find anything?". Pushing something into my face only ensures that I will NEVER even think about purchasing the product.
Might be the slight autism though. Maybe other people don't work this way I don't know.
It doesn't matter to them if that's how your brain, personally, works. They're playing the percentages. It's how -most people's- brains work. And they're not operating on a one-visit basis.
I like to think that I'm pretty aware of this kind of thing, but I'm also fairly sure I've walked past a product on my odyssey to acquire milk or bread and thought "oh hey I should try that.." then picked it up at a later date. If you asked me why I did that at the time I'm not sure I could have given you a straight answer.
Sure, it's annoying for you. It's annoying for me, too, because it fucking works on me.
There are times where there's something I want, but won't get it unless it happens to be convenient while getting things I need. Like ice cream; on my way out I'm going through exactly 1 frozen food aisle and if there's something else I want to check that's not in the ice cream aisle, then I just don't get ice cream (and if I do go through that aisle and I'm still unlikely to get it unless its on sale). The exposure only matters because being exposed to it means its convenient, not that I suddenly want something I hadn't considered.
No, telling a worker who’s required to ask your pudgy ass, while you autist walk to the frozen chicken tenders if you need anything in order to not starve to fuck off makes you an asshole.
Not realizing what I was talking about also makes you an asshole.
Then I am here to change that for them. Let's make the retail experience more like Germany. Stop entertaining this practice and it will end.
Also, I'm a contractor who works on construction sites. Not exactly a lot of overweight individuals in that field. Not everyone you meet on the Internet is a stereotype. So stop projecting. I never once said anything about you personally, so you're kind of being the asshole here.
I guess I am being one too, but no. You exclaiming that you tell retail workers to fuck off makes you an asshole, regardless if I am too. You aren’t changing any practice or attempting to.
Also if you’re claiming overweight people generally aren’t on construction sites then I don’t believe you’ve ever been on one.
Also to be clear, the only thing I’m basing any stereotypes on is the stereotypes for people you tell retail workers to fuck off, which are generally assholes.
Do you honestly think I go around to people and tell them directly to their face to fuck off? It's a metaphor for how I really feel. That's how I talk and converse in real life too. Sorry if you took it literally. Like, I can say any number of nasty things to you right now, but I'm not. What you see is what you get.