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Wrong! CPG clients. Looks like you didnt get the job
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I just want to reiterate that the answer is NOT grocery stores. It's CPG companies, as the original Anonymous said. Saying that the clients of NAM are grocery stores will likely stop you from proceeding forward in the interviewing process. Less
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Grocery stores
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Thank you for the comments. We appreciate all feedback to improve our hiring process. Our initial interview is a phone screen to learn as much as possible about you. This is why we ask the open ended question 'tell us about yourself'. We find the response offers insight into the candidate's background and thought process. It is very important to us that we follow up with all candidates. We make it a point to do so. However, this can take a few weeks as we take time to review all our applicants. We apologize if you have not yet heard back from us and encourage you to reach out to us if you have any questions about your particular interview. Thank you again. Less
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Thank you for the comments. We appreciate all feedback to improve our hiring process. Our initial interview is a phone screen to learn as much as possible about you. This is why we ask the open ended question 'tell us about yourself'. We find the response offers insight into the candidate's background and thought process. It is very important to us that we follow up with all candidates. We make it a point to do so. However, this can take a few weeks as we take time to review all our applicants. We apologize if you have not yet heard back from us and encourage you to reach out to us if you have any questions about your particular interview. Thank you again. Less
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You grow relationships with people by taking an interest in what interests them and by dropping the need to always be right. I love getting to know people, there is so much to be learned from others. Less
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By listening and communicating effectively while building rapports.
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Billboards. No brand association, neutral context, high reach.
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Two ways to answer that: Population of NYC = est. 8M. = 8M smartphones +/- 5% You'd have to skip the bottom of the Hudson to get an accurate count. Less
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It depends - the population of New York City is very different when we're talking about working hours and non-working hours. If we're worried about bandwidth, we need to take into account the huge influx of commuters, which would not be counted in population numbers. Commuters will also be more likely to have smartphones compared to the inherent 'population', which includes a larger portion of the blue collar classes and disadvantaged who can't afford to commute. You could do a random survey of 1000 commuters and a random survey of 1000 residents to get a percentage of smartphone users and multiply by both residential and estimated commuter populations (NY Transit Authority should have this estimate). If you have the right connections, you could also just ask the wireless providers to give you a count of the unique EIDs during M-F @noon and again @midnight and use the vendor portion of the EID to suss out smartphones vs regular phones. We could take a look at data users only on the EID list rather than just cell tower connections. Less