>but seriously, i can't believe that the only reason someone might not like
>Amp Fiddler is because they haven't been marketed to properly.

They might like it *if* they hear it - it takes the proper marketing to get
them to want to pick it up, not put it back down, bring it to the register
and buy it. The person has to be excited to buy it - not many people buy
CDs anymore thinking "yeah, I don't know, it might be ok"

if buy it then marketing has done the job and only has minor influence from
there on...

anyone have 98¢? - I've only got a dollar

MEK


                                                                       
                      Dave Cronin                                      
                      <[EMAIL PROTECTED]        To:       "'[EMAIL PROTECTED]'" 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [email protected]
                      er.com>                  cc:                     
                                               Subject:  RE: (313) Marketing 
and music taste
                      02/04/04 12:56 PM                                
                                                                       
                                                                       




dunno-- probably because they'd feel like idiots standing around with their
arms crossed and a sullen/disaffected look on their mugs while Amp rocked
it?

but seriously, i can't believe that the only reason someone might not like
Amp Fiddler is because they haven't been marketed to properly.



> From: Thomas D. Cox, Jr. [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> where do you think people get their tastes from? come on, why else
> would a "rock" crowd not want to hear amp fiddler? because theyve
> been trained to want a certain thing. real fans of music don't
> draw lines like that. people who buy into marketing do.
>
>> From: Dave Cronin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>>
>> So, maybe it's not even just about *marketing*, but actually
>> about people's taste in music?!



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