For those who may be confused by the acronym, NEO, it stands for New Economic Order participants in our modern economy. The Patagonia Passion Model has
no precedence that I am aware of other than a whimsical expression I
coined for a wonderful way to work and live while creating a business
based on sharing a unique and valuable experience with travelers ( or
other NEO and Evolver consumers ). Today’s ToMarket Geotourism Journeys
Blog seeks to blend the economic opportunity of reaching the NEO
marketplace audience – estimated for the American market by authors
Chris Norton and Ross Honeywell to be in the vicinity of one hundred
thirteen million consumers – with the kind of design faith and dedicated
product evangelism displayed by icons Steve Jobs at Apple and Yvon
Chouinard at Patagonia. The point here is to overlay a Patagonia Passion Model
with a geotourism product that can enrich the natural and human
communities while enlightening and entertaining international travel
enthusiasts.
Before you get started, be forewarned, this is not an invitation for
the faint of heart. Any time an individual entrepreneur endeavors to
follow the path of success demonstrated by incredibly successful
business leaders like Jobs or Chouinard, the odds are astronomically
assailed against the ultimate realization of outcomes similar to theirs.
Still, I believe it is an exhilarating and worthwhile experience to
push your limits as a business creator and environmentally concerned
activist while promoting an economic solution that can help balance the
needs of man and the planet. From my point of view, it begins with a
vision of how it all could work.
See more to review: http://www.toddlerbedcenter.com/
If your community agrees that your geographical region’s ecological
and/or cultural heritage assets and balance offer a uniquely interesting
or impressive natural setting and/or facets of history, you may have a
basis for inviting traveling guests to come and enjoy it with you and
your neighbors. The primary component determining the potential for
success lies in how well the place and the experience will
match up with prospective visitors’ desire to find trips that are
fulfilling to their particular sense of value. Following closely on
the heels of this determination, the place must also be found to have a true claim to being the best way to provide geotourists with the experience they seek. It’s an interesting puzzle to unravel.
As Steve Jobs repeatedly affirmed during his ascent to the position
of world famous visionary and business creator, the entrepreneur who is
considering a new product has a responsibility to consider product
designs that the consumer doesn’t yet know they will demand to purchase.
In simple terms, the consumer often doesn’t know what he/she wants
until they see it offered for purchase and use. Jobs proved to have a
uncanny ability to see products in terms of their design before industry
trends or conventional wisdom deemed a market could or would exist.
The products Apple and Pixar
created while Jobs served at their helm, often broke new ground leading
away from what the rest of the industry considered reasonable
alternatives to the features provided by competitors. Jobs proved to be
correct in his approach to dreaming up what he felt had value in terms
of the experience that new customers would receive and he could deliver.
Yvon Chouinard, at Patagonia,
built a company that honored an inherent dedication to supplying the
highest quality outdoor and mountain climbing gear that he and his
fellow adventurers would desire for their own use. As far as I could
tell, he did not set out to reap optimized profits. I do know that he
and his company focused on what they found they wanted for their own
use. They understood that other like minded adventurers (NEO’s and
Evolvers ) would appreciate the value of quality they designed into
their clothes and accessories. Always conscious of the environmental
impact of what he was doing, he led his company to a position of
satisfying customers (NEO’s & Evolvers) with products that were
typically more expensive than Patagonia’s competitors’ products.
Customers bought their products, relied on their products and helped
build the Patagonia brand name into a global leader because of the
unique ability of their products to satisfy the use and the experience
they found they appreciated. More traditional shoppers are
predominantly concerned with obtaining the lowest price on everything
they buy and evaluate their purchases as though all products are merely
commodities without significant differentiated values within each
product category. The difference between Traditional consumers vs. the
NEO or Evolver consumers rests on how they perceive value as it is
explained in the book by Chris Norton and Ross Honeywell mentioned
above. If you, as a tourism entrepreneur and concerned environmentalist
want to understand the details of how this marketplace can be
effectively penetrated, I would suggest reading their recently published
book.
Using the Apple, Pixar and Patagonia examples can be instructive for
planning a geo or ecotourism development project. Any geotourism place that does not differentiate it’s brand with a distinctive product vacation experience
that has a clearly discernible value that cannot be similarly obtained
from another or multiple competitors will ultimately fall victim to
lower priced copycats or national chain/franchise invasion.
The fundamental question for the creator lies within their own
honesty about the offering. Can “I” as a potential tourism visitor
sense the same translated value to “me” by making a trip to a competing
location? If the answer is not resoundingly NO, then revisit your core
brand and design construction. If the vacation experience can
be replicated in a way that approximates the same trip value to the potential traveler and is more cheaply or easily obtained, the tourist
will opt for the less expensive option. Therefore, whatever the branding
focus might be for place and experience, there must be an obsession
with making sure that the brand securely provides a distinct and
defensible barrier to another location claiming to have the ability to
deliver the same tourism product.
Now, for the basis of the passion. To get others to believe it is
essential that the creators are passionate about the place and the
experience, even if that combination doesn’t currently exist as a
deliverable product, yet. And, the passion must be tested. The message
and evangelism must be forged in the crucible of real, live people
making a decision to either purchase the travel option or not. The
process will likely produce very slow results initially. In hindsight,
if successful, it will appear to have been obvious all along. The
winners, like the renowned environmental visionaries Yvon Chouinard and
Doug Tomkins, for example, were not accepted and revered when they first
launched their expeditions, businesses and land conservancy projects in
Chile. Now, in retrospect, they have proven to the world that their
insights and vision of the future was wise, noble and productive.
However, whether they ultimately would have won or lost, their passion
for what they saw in their own conception of balance, responsibility and
a path to action supplied the energy to make it so in reality.
To learn about the philosophy they shared and reminisce with them
both about their Patagonia experiences, I would highly recommended that
interested readers rent or buy the documentary movie 180 South at
your earliest opportunity. The first impact that will strike you is
the superior cinematography that ushers you in to a luxurious view of
the beauty of Chile for those who have not traveled there yet. It is
also a multigenerational story of adventure that takes you along in the
present while simultaneously interlacing snippets of informal
conversations between Yvon Chouinard and Doug Tomkins looking back on
their fascinating endeavors. If you have an interest in how to model a
life that sustains environmental action, thrilling adventure and the
cultivation of pragmatic approaches to finding a balance between the
ecology of commerce and the balance of a healthy plant, this documentary
provides all of it for you.
Thứ Năm, 12 tháng 5, 2016
Thứ Tư, 26 tháng 8, 2015
Best Places To Buy a Toddler Bed Online
The internet has really revolutionised the way
we buy and sell stuffs. These days, you can sit right at the comfort of your
home and order just about anything and it will be delivered right at your
doorstep. You can buy both soft and hard good online, including toddler beds.
There are so many places you can buy toddler beds online, but be careful when
buying stuffs online in order to avoid being ripped off.
In this article, I am going to present some of
the best places you can shop for toddler beds online and be sure you are
getting the best deal.
1. Amazon
This is unarguably the biggest online retail
shop in the world. It provides a wide range of products and almost all brands
of toddler beds you can think of can be purchased here. The most interesting thing
about this website is the customer review portal where you are given the chance
to review a product and rate it based on your satisfaction level. I personally
like this portal because it allows me inform others on my experience of a
particular product I have used. The last product I reviewed there was the
Regalo My Cot toddler bed, which I loved very much. If you want to buy a
toddler bed for your kid, this is a good place to make your purchase. To get more information about toddler travel bed
before you purchase, you can visit www.toddlerbedcenter.com.
2. Ebay
Here is another very efficient retail website
where you can browse lots of toddler beds and make your final selection after
reading their features. It is similar to Amazon but the difference lies in the
fact that it’s an auction site. Also, I noticed that they don’t have a very
efficient customer service as Amazon does. Nonetheless, they still have high
quality toddler beds from some of the best brands in the world.
3. Wal-Mart
Wal-Mart was initially strictly an offline
store where you can only buy hard goods and see for yourself the goods you are
buying before making any payments. But the advent of the internet only means
that they have to join the online trade, otherwise they will be loosing a big
crunch of their customers to online retail stores. This led to the introduction of their online
portal to try and stay competitive. They
have high quality toddler beds from different manufacturers for door step
delivery.
Conclusion
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