Anyone got the source for that? Not that I doubt it, I just want to share the original source rather than a reddit screenshot
From the looks of it, what they're calculating is a net promoter score. The idea is that, in some context, what you actually want to know is whether your target audience would be willing to actually promote your business to their friends and family or not.
It's very common in retail and other competitive markets, because a customer that had an "okay" experience could still go to a competitor, so only customers who had a great experience (7+ out of ten) are actually loyal, returning clients.
Don't know if that's the best method to gather impressions on workplace environment though, I don't think many people would consider their workplace "amazing"
Not sure whether it means something else in English, but in french a vernissage is the first opening of an art exhibition
Hey, I'll let you know that I'm a judgmental asshole and I happen to be french, but I don't hate the world, only the parts that aren't french
Oh, I couldn't find words to describe it to my friends but "digital art student Summer projects" is exactly what it looks like!
So it's more like "female cat, I farted"
And yet Clair Obscur Expedition 33 is both super fun and breathtakingly beautiful
Very true in YouTube's comment section
"Sir, we fired a single warning shot on the edge of their formation and their whole fleet just sank!"
Our form of capitalism is just what happens when capitalists try to placate the working class by giving them just barely enough breathing room that they stop actually revolting and keep to grumbling. And even that is under attack nowadays, under the pretext that their's suddenly not enough money to sustain it even though the rich keep getting richer
This, plus I don't want to be followed around by a salesperson when I'm shopping
Just so you know: GDPR has (mostly) nothing to do with those cookie banners. It's a very broad text that doesn't go into specifics like that.
What you're seeing is a result of the 2002 E-Privacy directive that has been reinterpreted by data privacy authorities in light of the new definition of consent brought by the GDPR.
Basically, since 2002, websites are required to ask users for consent before depositing cookies. The issue was that there was no definition of what this consent meant. What the GDPR did is simply to define the concept of consent as a free expression of will that must come from a positive act (i.e. it must be explicit rather than implicit).
The GDPR was supposed to come out with a sister regulation called the E-Privacy regulation, but due to intense lobbying that text was buried. Local data protection authorities in Europe then decided to reinterpret that old directive in light of the GDPR to fill the gap.
All in all, blame the lobbyists, not the GDPR