On Saturday 18 April 2009 23:58:29 Jeremiah MacGregor wrote: > In as much as it seems like you are making a noble gesture for metrication, > just blindly writing to a company can be the wrong thing to do. You never > know who will be answering your request. The person answering your request > may be very strongly anti-metric and either ignore you or provide you with > the same type of answer you received. > > First of all, you need to do some research on the company. You need to > know where they are headquartered and what type of people work for them. > When addressing a letter to a company it is best to address it to a > specific person, hopefully someone who well educated, has a position in the > company, and who can make things happen. You also have to come across as > someone who is a good customer of theirs. If they buy and sell > internationally, than that can be a plus for metrication. If they have a > foreign owner, then best to write the parent company.
The company is headquartered in Missouri, consists of farms in Missouri, Illinois, and South Carolina, and ships to the US, Bermuda, Iraq, and Hong Kong. Why Iraq and Hong Kong, but nowhere else near, I don't know. It doesn't have a parent company as far as I can tell. I haven't bought yet, but will next month. Pierre
