The way I see it, this phase should be in your objective narrative because the MSC and the Client needs a math lesson@ceasesmith wrote:
I am not believing this. Ordered my sandwich, noted the server offered "double meat", which I accepted........................,....................................................................I guess what's puzzling me is that if the basic sandwich has 4 oz. of meat, a Deluxe with 50% more meat would have 6 oz. of meat, whereas a sandwich with double meat would have 8 oz. of meat on it. 50% and 100% (i.e., double) just aren't the same thing!
@LIJake wrote:
Maybe it's just new math. You are absolutely right but your snowball has already melted.
@SunnyDays2 wrote:
Actually, if they say "would you like 50% more meat" or "double the meat" it is the same. If the sandwich has 8 oz. of meat and they offer double the meat, they mean double the amount, which would be 16 oz. of meat. If they say 50% more meat or the "deluxe" portion, they are saying 16 oz of meat. I always ask what they mean by any of those terms..... This assignment was not for Intellishop but was for another popular company.
@ceasesmith wrote:
@SunnyDays2 wrote:
Actually, if they say "would you like 50% more meat" or "double the meat" it is the same. If the sandwich has 8 oz. of meat and they offer double the meat, they mean double the amount, which would be 16 oz. of meat. If they say 50% more meat or the "deluxe" portion, they are saying 16 oz of meat. I always ask what they mean by any of those terms..... This assignment was not for Intellishop but was for another popular company.
You're making me feel certain I will not get paid for the shop. I agree, if you start with 16 oz. of meat, 50% of
that IS 8 oz.
But 50% of 8 oz. is 4 oz. And 100% of 8 oz. is 16 oz.
I'm beginning to suspect the CLIENT thinks "double meat" and "50% more meat" is synonymous. They are NOT. However, if the CLIENT believes they are, I shall alter my shopping accordingly. I understand.
You say you always ask what they mean -- who do you ask, the poor schmo who made your sandwich, or the shopping company?
I do not care what fancy math you use, double is 100% more, not 50% more. Double means "twice as much", 50% means "half again as much".
This country is becoming too illiterate to survive. And yes, I personally believe math is part of literacy, just like knowing that we are a Republic, with an elected official called a "President" is part of literacy. And like knowing
that "we cost 10 times LESS than our competitor" is just so totally wrong -- but realizing that they say that,
because if they say "we cost only one tenth of what the competition charges", their customers wouldn't know
that one-tenth is 10%. That's illiterate, too.
Now, it may be absolutely brilliant marketing. If Subway can sell 50% more meat on a sandwich and convince their customers that's "double the meat", look at the enhanced profit! Brilliant! Sell 12 oz. of meat for the price
of 16 oz. Instant bottom-line improvement! Nefarious, evil, unethical, but brilliant.
And maybe their target demographic is the 200,000,000 Americans who don't know the difference between 50% more and twice as much.
@christinereed wrote:
You are correct in your math, but I'm not sure the MSC cares. If it were me, I would have just made the "correction" the company wanted and re-submit the report. Perhaps with a short paragraph to the editor explaining that 50% and 100% are not the same.
@SunnyDays2 wrote:
She said, "Would you like the deluxe portion?" I said, "What's that?" (I want to make sure she asks correctly to win the ticket). She said, "That's 50% more meat." I said, "What is 50% more?" She said, "It's twice as much." I said, "How much is twice as much?" She said, "Instead of 8 oz., you get 16 oz. of meat." .......(this was my first ticket winning shop![]()
I see what you guys are saying. If it's 8 oz. of meat and she offers you 50% more, she is offering you 12 oz. not 16 oz.
Thanks for clarifying everyone!
I feel like I am in math class