Tagged: business
LinkedIn All-Stars Discover Bosses Furious
Earlier this year LinkedIn celebrated its tenth anniversary. With ten years under its belt, the Silicon Valley tech giant has finally fallen prey to researchers. The findings aren’t pretty. Among a newly released 500-page report there are some notable discoveries:
- 63% of LinkedIn Users report spending time each day to see if the infinite scroll really is infinite.
- Of those users, 25% admit feeling “genuinely disappointed” when, upon reaching the end, they read “There are no more updates at this time” instead of congratulations for beating the game.
- 84% of Users have achieved All-Star Profile Strength.
- Of those Users, 100% believe they are more likely to receive a promotion within the next 6 months because of it.
- Of those Users, zero worked in companies whose promotion decisions factored in their employee’s LinkedIn Profile Strength.
- Of those Users, 100% believe they are more likely to receive a promotion within the next 6 months because of it.
And most damning,
- After not having the heart to crush their employee’s hopes and dreams and tell them, “No, browsing LinkedIn is not what I’m paying you to do,” 100% of Bosses spend at least 10-minutes wishing for the “good ol’ days” when employees earned their pay.
Finally, the researchers noted first, that despite these findings, employees generally felt that they were more productive because of LinkedIn and second, that more research should be done to validate their findings.
Do Your Dentures Fit Like…
Up until this very moment, he had only heard about what he recently experienced on a road trip. Some called it heaven, others nirvana, others ecstasy. If he had to put a name on it, he would call it “Primal Joy.” But as he spoke those words, they sounded wrong, sounded too weak. Suffice it to say, the feeling was unmatched, and incredibly difficult to name properly.
What caused this feeling you ask? The great unknown. Not just any unknown, but one that follows an especially compelling preamble. We all have had lesser experiences of this happen in our lives. We’re just listening to someone speak, and next thing you know they say something like, “So then I said…” And as the “de” in “said” is made audible the anticipation builds. Sometimes it is only mild. Other times it is frighteningly exciting. These instances are characterized by the listener asking themselves within these varied levels of excitement, “I wonder what he/she is going to say next?” That is where he was at. The billboard began, “Do your dentures fit like…”
Analyzing this for a moment, we can deduce at least three facts. First, this is likely an ad for a dentist or orthodontist. Second, the size and quality of the sign tell us that this denture-pusher is small time. Third, given the small/local nature of the shop, we can expect the metaphor describing poor-denture-fit to be colloquial and meant for a very specific target audience–being the denture wearing residents of that small town; itself a group who presumably have a lot in common with each other even before counting teeth.
Surely by now, you have developed some metaphors of your own to complete the ad. Perhaps you have the upper hand and know some denture wearing folks and have heard them lament about poor fitting dentures with witty metaphors. Perhaps you even wear dentures. You’ll still never guess the rest of the sign.
The metaphor proved itself worthy as he nearly shed tears while merrily explaining the sign to his fellow road warriors.
Savor this moment. Remember that a fellow human, made of the same parts as the rest of us, decided that this was the best way to relay his services to potential customers.
Our characters own tendencies to become over-excited signaled that this creative tooth-peddler probably couldn’t live up to the fantasy he had imagined him/her to be, but that didn’t stop him from desiring to meet the individual who came up with this billboard. If only the phone number was as memorable as this:
“Do your dentures fit like socks on a rooster?”
For reasons beyond his control, he could only assume this situation would be miserable.