It's natural and logical that they believe it and the answer lies in factorial increase. The number of combinations increases as a factorial as both company size and customer base increase, and that has a direct impact on interaction. Autodesk has more interactions with customers (total volume) than smaller companies but the sheer number of combinations makes it impossible to have the same level of intimacy between everyone at Autodesk M&E and every customer. So there is a very real reason why large organizations appear less intimate, they are. But it does not mean we either care less or communicate less or that small companies are necessarily more open. They won't tell you everything either. If asked all the companies discussed on this list to comment on the following question "Have never in the past nor will ever in the future consider selling yourself to Autodesk?" I wonder how many would really truthfully answer that question. maurice
Maurice Patel Autodesk : Tél: 514 954-7134 -----Original Message----- From: softimage-boun...@listproc.autodesk.com [mailto:softimage-boun...@listproc.autodesk.com] On Behalf Of Eric Thivierge Sent: Wednesday, April 02, 2014 1:09 PM To: softimage@listproc.autodesk.com Cc: Graham Bell Subject: Re: 答复: Re[2]: March 28, 2014 Then why is this what many might believe in the first place? On Wednesday, April 02, 2014 12:05:44 PM, Graham Bell wrote: > I'm sorry I wouldn't necessarily agree with the second point below. > > I'm not saying that we're perfect, but there are different levels of > engagement and we're not as invisible as many might seem to believe.
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