jimswside wrote:I saw the results of an intersting study of what a sampling of Tweets content consisted of, 40.55% were put into the pointless babble category, way to much noise vs substance for me to bother.
jimswside wrote:Restaurants that only relay specials, or other info only by Twitter kind of annoy me, just keep your website up to date.
Tower gotta say I dont have much use at all for Twitter, Ive never sent a text message, and if someone texts me I dial there number and call them, not interested in typing a message(seems like going backwards in time imho).
I am not anti technology(I like all the newest electronic toys), but I dont find the need to follow anyones life minute by minute, and I dont need to be staring at my cellphone or pc non stop. 10 hours a day at work is more than enough for me.
Restaurants that only relay specials, or other info only by Twitter kind of annoy me, just keep your website up to date.
I saw the results of an intersting study of what a sampling of Tweets content consisted of, 40.55% were put into the pointless babble category, way to much noise vs substance for me to bother.
aschie30 wrote:
How exactly does that differ from LTH? Whereas lately, LTH is heavy on repeat Kuma's posts saying "me too," inquiries as to where the "best" brunch, hot dog, taco, etc. places are, and the fifth page about the latest burger joint.
aschie30 wrote:
In sum, I think Twitter is a boon for the people with the hand-helds, who are on-the-go and always looking at their feeds. In addition to this convenience, it has put me in touch with a broader spectrum of Chicago food folks, and in that regard, I like it a lot.
In addition to this convenience, it has put me in touch with a broader spectrum of Chicago food folks, and in that regard, I like it a lot.
jtobin625 wrote:Interesting post from Ellen Malloy (found on twitter) about how groupon effects restaurants economically http://unplugged.restaurantintelligenceagency.com/
- Let's say a restaurant participates, 5772 Groupons are sold.
- If they had sold that many dinners full price, $80, they would have raked in $461,760.
cilantro wrote:
- Let's say a restaurant participates, 5772 Groupons are sold.
- If they had sold that many dinners full price, $80, they would have raked in $461,760.
I stopped reading here.
jtobin625 wrote:Interesting post from Ellen Malloy (found on twitter) about how groupon effects restaurants economically http://unplugged.restaurantintelligenceagency.com/
- Let's say a restaurant participates, 5772 Groupons are sold.
- If they had sold that many dinners full price, $80, they would have raked in $461,760.
- They instead are going to gross $230,880 after the discount.
eatchicago wrote:Once I got to her calculations I realized that she forgot to calculate how many people don't actually use their coupons, which I have no doubt is significant. There are studies out there that show anywhere from 20% to 60% of people actually use gift certificates and coupons that they own, regardless of whether or not they paid money for them. This is a number the Groupon people would not want to publicize ("They say I'm unlikely to use it?! Then I'm not buying it!")
So, she says the restaurant is making $20 right away on 5772 groupons. Let's be conservative and say 60% are used. That's 2309 unused groupons or another $46k of free money (and that's being conservative, 25% usage would be $86k). And I'm not sure I agree with her back of the envelope calculations that get her to -$76k.
Mike G wrote:The other issue is that I think like a clearance sale, Groupon is as much about cutting losses as anything. Rent and staff costs are sort of already a loss at that point, regardless of whether you bring in Groupon-discounted bodies or not.
David Hammond wrote:Fine point, EC, though unlike gift certificates (which never made the slightest bit of sense to me), I think people probably buy Groupon coupons with a "date" in mind ("I'll buy this coupon and use it for dinner on X date") rather than a gift certificate, which people give (for some odd reason) and then leave it up to the recipient to figure out how and when to use. I'm guessing the Groupon usage rate is higher than 60%, but that's just my speculation, and it'd be interesting to see the actual numbers.
eatchicago wrote:So, she says the restaurant is making $20 right away on 5772 groupons. Let's be conservative and say 60% are used. That's 2309 unused groupons or another $46k of free money (and that's being conservative, 25% usage would be $86k). And I'm not sure I agree with her back of the envelope calculations that get her to -$76k.
stevez wrote:eatchicago wrote:So, she says the restaurant is making $20 right away on 5772 groupons. Let's be conservative and say 60% are used. That's 2309 unused groupons or another $46k of free money (and that's being conservative, 25% usage would be $86k). And I'm not sure I agree with her back of the envelope calculations that get her to -$76k.
Actually, my guess (and it strictly conjecture) is that the Groupon folks are making all that extra money from the purchased, but unused, Groupons; not the restaurants.
eatchicago wrote:stevez wrote:eatchicago wrote:So, she says the restaurant is making $20 right away on 5772 groupons. Let's be conservative and say 60% are used. That's 2309 unused groupons or another $46k of free money (and that's being conservative, 25% usage would be $86k). And I'm not sure I agree with her back of the envelope calculations that get her to -$76k.
Actually, my guess (and it strictly conjecture) is that the Groupon folks are making all that extra money from the purchased, but unused, Groupons; not the restaurants.
So, Groupon get's 50% of used coupons and 100% of unused coupons? Who would enter into that deal?
My conjecture says this: Groupon says, "You sold 5000 at $10. That's $50,000. After our 50% fee, we're cutting you a check for $25k and it's your responsibility to now honor the coupons."