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Millersburg, PA. April 2022.
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. a customer maybe?? (((;
. a candid shot (((:
taken at yesterday's Opening of "Grupo Becerros Sueltos": at Centro Sol y Luna in Ajijic, Jalisco, Mexico
this show wll hang until 30 April 2010 !
here is more of this show:
utehagen.squarespace.com/becerros-sueltosapril-2010/becer...
A different approach to customer service. Seen in the Anchor Tap Bar London, One of the best bars I have visited in London.
For today’s Guy Wulfrunian photograph, we have moved to one of the depots acquired by West Riding in 1950 when they took over local rival Bullocks & Sons. Featherstone depot was closed in the 1980s but is the location where we find a vehicle that was intended to have been supplied to Johannesburg Municipality in 1962 as their fleet number 976.
It is a demonstrator for a tri-axle high-capacity replacement for earlier conventional Arabs. Unfortunately for Guy, there was an extended dock strike at Southampton and the vehicle was trapped inside the docks for over four months, during which time, the operator had a change of mind and when it eventually arrived in South Africa, the customer refused to accept it, saying that it had arrived too late. It was returned to the UK later that year.
Commenting on the fiasco at the time, Sidney Guy, who had retired from the company in 1957, called it “an embarrassment”.
In 1962, the UK’s new Construction and Use regulations allowed buses up to 36’ to use the roads, so Guy sent it north to the Crossgates factory of Charles H Roe, who had built the body, to have the destination aperture altered and to have it re-painted it into the livery of the West Riding Automobile Company of Wakefield. West Riding was already a committed Wulfrunian customer, so they had agreed to take it for evaluation.
On its return to the UK, it had been registered in Wolverhampton as 7122UK but, on arrival in Wakefield, it was given the cherished registration number from West Riding’s Chief Engineer Ronald Brooke’s Rover P4 company car, FHL104. It did not carry a fleet number
After only two weeks use at Featherstone depot, and after two serious incidents where various items of street furniture on bends and corners were knocked over, the recognised trade union refused to allow further use of the vehicle so it was towed ceremoniously to Belle Isle depot where it languished for a few months before being dismantled for parts.
What a waste.
Cortland, NY. February 2022.
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:D So... To celebrate getting 300 likes on FB.. Scarlett talked me into doing something fun to reward our customers for their awesome support!!
<3 SO... with that being said.. Here's my WIP-teaser! Should be coming to the mainstore tonight =) Will post when it gets dropped down.
geek.<3
Butler, PA. February 2017.
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CUSTOMER: Jan Verhaegh B.V., The Netherlands
TRUCK DEALER: Bakker Bedrijfswagen Groep
BODYBUILDER: LAKO Wegtransportmiddelen B.V.
Berlin, VT. October 2016.
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If you would like to use THIS picture in any sort of media elsewhere (such as newspaper or article), please send me a Flickrmail or send me an email at natehenderson6@gmail.com
Rocking it old school with a 1940's style Wonder Woman costume - classic.
In the background is a poster booth, and the guy running it, our neighbor for the weekend, was a real hothead. I don't know who taught him about customer service, but yelling at your customers for touching the posters doesn't seem like it would help sales out in the long run. Just sayin'.
At Luv Your Hair, a great place at 58 Gleneida Avenue, Carmel,NY for guys and gals to get their hair cut!
Store will be closing early April 2018
Rutland, VT. October 2016.
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Your customers are ignoring you by building a wall around themselves, brick by brick, using New Media tools.
From BCC website:
'What are Customer Service Points?
Customer Service Points are the old Area Housing Offices'
So now you know!
Remodel, Week 6
(cont.) Otherwise, the most visible difference period was the new location(s) of many, many grocery items – enough to where you could tell it was confusing most everyone, and aggravating plenty of others, my mom and myself included. The new gooseneck signs help a little with that, since they're in the correct places, but the aisle signs themselves have yet to be changed out, and thus reflect the previous locations of the now-moved items.
Pictured here is an old view of customer service post-painting from early July; nothing has changed here since, I just haven't had a chance to post the pic yet. So little work has taken place that I now have the space, haha!
(c) 2016 Retail Retell
These places are public so these photos are too, but just as I tell where they came from, I'd appreciate if you'd say who :)
Brochure published in 1966 to help buyers identify the changes to the Volkswagen over the past two decades. Of course, the real purpose was to show customers all the improvements that make buying a brand new one the best idea.
There are three parts, and the years are not in order.
Remodel, Week 1
This other view of the front end shows signage missing from customer service, and a repaint inside the area that actually began yesterday. The former photo center has been missing its sign for a while now, and it looks like the SmartStyle salon may be keeping its sign for now. Note the “happy to help” set of signs in the left photo, taken yesterday: gone as of this afternoon. No wonder Walmart never bothered to repair the wall when they installed the signs a few months ago! Random Retail saw a similar scene at the Olean, NY, Walmart back then. Could it, too, be prepping for a remodel?
(c) 2016 Retail Retell
These places are public so these photos are too, but just as I tell where they came from, I'd appreciate if you'd say who :)
The corner of the corncrib, again in the last of the afternoon light at Millbrook Village. Looks like it has weathered many storms...
My lessons learned (or in some cases, relearned) for the week!!:
It’s a pretty good indication that it’s going to be a good day when someone opens the door
for you at work and says, “I got you iced coffee. It’s in the fridge, because I love you.”
People with a sense of humor are the best people to work with. (reinforcement, I already knew this one!)
Being pulled downhill by a husky at full speed is much harder than being pulled uphill by the same husky.
It really doesn’t matter how long it takes to get somewhere as long as you make the most of your time once you get there. (and we did!)
If you “dress up” more than usual for work, you make everyone wonder what you are up to! (Yeessss!!!)
There seems to be an infinite number of ways to send unintended and strange messages from an iPhone. (sorry...haha!)
If your alarm clock doesn’t go off one day during the week, there is a pretty good chance it isn’t going to go off the next day either.
Sometimes half an hour spent sitting on the floor, helping a customer at work, can teach you far more than that same half an hour spent
just about anywhere else. (Smacking myself in the head....Lesson learned. So thankful I am able to run.... and walk, for that matter, and that I do have patience when needed.)
I am so thankful for the friends that always make me laugh (and put up with me!...”Torrie, why are you saving all of this stuff....of yeah, I forgot again, that’s part of your ‘Charm’ ....” )
It’s Saturday. I’m off.... places to go ...things to do.... crazy socks to wear! YES!!
It’s beautiful .... go out and have fun. And don’t forget to shuffle through the piles of leaves.... I bet you can’t do it without smiling! (I can’t)
Wasting morning light.... gotta go...
Babaji (old man) must be 80 Years or someting, buying cigarett packets for his day consumption at Murree, Pakistan.
Who said smooking is dangerous for health!!!!
"Just Waiting"
Original Painting by Cara Buchalter of Octavine Illustration
Painted in gouache on Plywerk, a hand-crafted substrate wood board handmade in Portland, Oregon.
For further information please visit my blog:
www.octavineillustration.blogspot.com
~*~*The Inspiration~*~*
Much of my time spent as an artist is in waiting. Waiting for the next show, waiting for the customer to call back, waiting for the paint to dry. Just Waiting. And while waiting, beginning other projects that will soon, in turn, be waiting themselves. If patience be a virtue, I have virtue in spades.
So I sit and wait. Not a bad thing. I sit in the sunshine and work, my art in constant revolution as each project takes a turn in time to become whole.
©2008 Cara Buchalter. Please don't take and use the images without permission, thanks.