@ORDER_66
This is what I'm talking about. Just being uniformed and acting like people are being jealous and petty.
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@ORDER_66
This is what I'm talking about. Just being uniformed and acting like people are being jealous and petty.
so you know the business now?its one thing to simply feature white people in an ad
its another thing to be a company dedicated towards catering to a specific type of hair which is the hair black people have, and then changing that shyt up so white people can use it too.. thats 2 completely different hair textures, obviously the same product isnt going to work for both people.. so them including white people may indicate that the products which black people use will not be the same as before because theyre trying to "expand" their customer base
call it a business move all u want, but changing your formula to disservice your core base isnt good business
the whole reason black people gravitated towards shea moisture was because there was finally a product for their problems and not white people products that dont work on them.. low and behold shea is trying to cater to white people now![]()
for all of you saying how this is business 101, do ya'll condone cacs being allowed to come into hip hop and eventually controlling every aspect of it? why do black people always feel the need to include people who have historically excluded you?
so you know the business now?
you say it's not good business.. for who? did you do any market research? did you crunch any numbers? do you think every black woman on earth is on twitter and will suddenly see this ad and stop buying it? does the majority race of this nation plan on adding enough buyers to add to their revenue?
...
yea they want to avoid bad press.. but at the end of the day, every company you named, will ride right past the little protests and boycots and be right back to making billions in no time...Business tactics & advertising as a whole is changing. It's no longer dollars and cents.
Marketers are focusing more & more on the "emotional" level. This is what drove Pepsi to incorrectly align themselves with the various protests. Brands want to align themselves to a cause that will develop a deeper connection to consumers, believing that this deeper connection would increase sales.
For instance, its no longer "I'm catching an Uber". Now it's "I wouldn't be caught dead in an Uber b/c they don't support immigrants" and "My twitter community will ostracize me if I'm on the wrong side of history."
This group think phenomenon is mostly a millennial thing but a lot of advertisers see them as the next big consumer wave.
@ORDER_66
Look at the earlier posts. This is just from the first page.
This is from Mr. Problack himself.
This is what I'm talking about. Just being uniformed and acting like people are being jealous and petty.
It's not white owned?Here is the thing sista. As a brotha who has gone in business, has worked with other black men and women in business and who supports blacks businesses. Black folks love to talk that support black businesses until it comes to paying that money or convenience.
You will have sistas go to korean hair shops instead of the sista shanique who just opened her shop because the korean shop got the weave they want for 10 dollars less a bag. Even though the korean owner treats them like shyt and doesn't employ black folks.
You got brothas who will have thousands of dollars in a bank that will close one of their accounts for lack of activity and treat them like a number. bytch about it but refuse to put their money in a black bank cause they ain't got enough ATM machines or they business hours 8:00 to 5:00.
Years ago when my wife use to wear weaves there was a brotha who owned a shop we would do business with. He owned the shop with his wife and his kids worked in the shop. Anyway he sold weave (same weave and quality as the koreans) maybe 15 bucks a bag more than the korean stores in america. Dude would go to korea and get the weave. But he didn't have the connections the koreans had so he would have to pay more.
Anyway my wife asked me hey I want to get some weave I see the brotha we know sells his for 15 bucks more a bag than the korean shop. Which one should I buy my weave at. I calmly told my wife you buy it from the brotha and his wife. Then the next time you get weave you buy it from the brotha and his wife......rinse and repeat.
It makes no sense that black folks can buy all the expensive overpriced useless shyt from white folks and others and then nickle and dime black business folks.
Then be on some support black folks talk.
I said it before the only thing that saves black barbers and beauticians is that asians or arabs don't feel like it is worth going into business in those fields. Cause all it would take is some asian women doing black hair or some arab barbers cutting black hair a few dollars cheaper than black folks in those fields........and black folks would flock to them giving they money away cash in hand.
She should've bought it where it was more affordable. If a korean could price their hair that low, then so could the black male. & guess what? The black male bought that weave from a non black just like the korean. It is all coming from the same place.Years ago when my wife use to wear weaves there was a brotha who owned a shop we would do business with. He owned the shop with his wife and his kids worked in the shop. Anyway he sold weave (same weave and quality as the koreans) maybe 15 bucks a bag more than the korean stores in america. Dude would go to korea and get the weave. But he didn't have the connections the koreans had so he would have to pay more.
I said it before the only thing that saves black barbers and beauticians is that asians or arabs don't feel like it is worth going into business in those fields. Cause all it would take is some asian women doing black hair or some arab barbers cutting black hair a few dollars cheaper than black folks in those fields........and black folks would flock to them giving they money away cash in hand.