Wednesday 24 October 2018

How to sabotage your own business

One day, whilst out for a Sunday afternoon stroll, my wife and I found a coffee shop that was exactly to our liking.

It was quirky, filled with art work from local artists and they used genuine artisan coffee from a newly established local small scale coffee roasting business and they sold genuine home baked cakes from a local small baker who baked her cakes at home.

Over the next several months we became regular visitors on most Sundays and during the rest of the week at random intervals if we both happened to have a day off that coincided.

We became friendly with the owners and the staff and would still have been visiting their coffee shop if the following event had not happened and made almost certain we would never even consider going back there.

One day we were sat at our usual table my wife had her black coffee, my coffee was with milk and my wife said: "There's something wrong with my coffee. It doesn't taste the same!"

I tried my coffee and had to agree that it was not up to their usual high standards.

I tasted my cake and I immediately knew that it was not home made. My wife tasted her cake (mine was chocolate, my wife's was coffee and walnut) and she pulled a face. "If this is home made, I'm a..." she did not finish her sentence. 

Meanwhile the owner was chatting to a friend of hers in the cafe. "Yes, we stopped using that coffee chap. He was good, but we can get much cheaper coffee from the big wholesaler on the industrial estate. And I'll tell you something else. Since we have switched from using that woman who bakes cakes at home and started buying big catering cakes from the same wholesaler, our profit margins have shot through the roof! And our customers can't tell the difference!"

My wife looked at me and whispered: "We certainly can. And I don't want to come back if they are going to rip us off!" To which I agreed. I never give people a second chance to cheat me.

The coffee shop used to be packed but it looks to be struggling a little, sometimes closing early, these days.

And all because the owners decided to sabotage their own business by cheating their customers. What remarkable folly!

How IKEA has taken advantage of immersive technology.

Meet Laduma's President Dan Rutstein

Saturday 20 October 2018

That's Books and Entertainment: Human Resource Alignment

That's Books and Entertainment: Human Resource Alignment: In his book  Human Resource Alignment human resources guru Stephen M Flynn offers his readers a highly useful, practical advice on how to ...

Friday 12 October 2018

AFC Liverpool, sponsored by Laduma on why people should support Non-Leag...

Criminal scam reporting is far too hard

The following item is written by Mark Oldroyd of Bardfield Consulting.

 That's News is not associated with Mr Oldroyd or Bardfield Consulting and his comment piece is published on this blog as a matter of public service. 

"Earlier this year I was the victim of a sophisticated financial scam. The scam involved purchasing Pre IPO shares in Alibaba and through a company listed on the FCA website as EEA approved. I reported the scam to both the FCA and Action Fraud.

"Yesterday I was contacted by a different company also listed on the FCA website as EEA approved offering me Pre IPO shares in Uber. As few quick checks revealed that this was the same scam just using different names.

"I contacted Action Fraud gave them the details and asked for a someone to help me with what effectively was a crime in progress. I was told that was not possible, and that all that they could do was open a new report which would be looked at sometime in the next two months.

"I said hang on, if I report that a bank is being robbed I don't expect to be told that someone will possibly review my report in a couple of months time.

"Surely there is some prioritisation for crimes in progress. I was told that there was not.

"I then contacted the Crime Commissioner's Office for Essex, who were sympathetic but said all they could do was raise the issue at the next appropriate meeting.

"Finally I contacted the office of James Cleverly my local MP. I have had no response.

"No wonder that Cyber crime and fraud are on the increase, there appears to be absolutely no way to get any law enforcement help even when there is a crime in progress and a member of the public willing to help."

Mark Oldroyd.

https://www.bardfield-consulting.com