I knew it was only a matter of time
[QUOTE=IrishLaddie;2960840]Got to see her last night for quick visit.
When she was walking up to my car, I was very pleased. 5'10-5'11, with very long tan legs. She was wearing a very sexy pair of shorts. She is very slender and has a very pretty face. The one thing that pleased me is she was a very sweet girl and we had a great talk about how things are going. I told her of some unflattering things a few people on this board are insinuating but every thing we did was covered and she reiterated that she did not do BBFS. I would never desire nor every ask for BBFS so I guess I'm not on the list of sick puppies that has been mentioned.
I will see her again. She would be up there with any of the best ladies we have around.
Just my opinion.[/QUOTE]And I would be vindicated. Your review plus one other is completely consistent with mine! Just goes to show you who you can believe. Now, did anyone else see the resemblance to Lynda Carter (Wonder Woman)?
Coke, Hotels, Reviews and Education
Coke is a product whereas hotels are service oriented. Different marketing schemes for Products and Services. Products focus on the "specific needs" of using a product that is produced and services focus on an experience the consumer is wanting. Every product and service have their niche markets that they try and obtain market share within. Products desire to become "Name Brands", example Coke and Kleenex. Services want to become the leader of their experience, example Verizon vs. AT&T cellular air time. Sometimes products and services crossover each other as in the case of Verizon who sells phones, a product, to get the consumers to buy cellular frequency time, a service. Now Marilyn Monroe was many things, an actress whose existence became a product and she provided services to many including JFK. Don't think for a minute she wasn't compensated for her time and the experience she provided.
The hobby is a service industry not a product like coke, so please educate oneself before trying to manufacturing sex and then trying to sell it as a product. It only produces a product, sperm that is sometimes sold for fertilizing eggs. Now that one individual has been properly educated on the difference between a product and a service, let's discuss refusing either a product or service to a consumer because the last I heard doing that is now against the law. Unless of course your religious freedoms have been infringed on. Any product or service by law is available to any consumer who has the legal capability to consume a product or obtain an experience. The cost of the product or the service is directly related to "specific needs" or the "experience desired" by the consumer.
So the hobby is a bunch of mongers searching for an experience and the type of experience they are willing to pay for is many times directly related to the cost of the service provider. Take a Hot SW who is dabbling with H and is charging $40 for a car date and a BBJCIM. She is picked up at a corner by an senior member who tells her she is good at her profession and she could be making a lot more money if she got off the streets and the H. She now advertises on USA-Adult Classifieds and she is making $200 per experience and starts rehab. That is a 500% increase in the service revenue. Now after some good incoming cash flow she improves her service by becoming clean and much more physically desirable. Then some high roller comes into town and sees her ad, meets up with her and tells her she is worth so much more. So she becomes a high end provider by getting her own website, educates her self by reading the "Art of the Seduction" and the "Guide to Getting it On", hires an assistant to screen and raises her rates to $1,000 an hour, another 500% increase in service revenue. Now with her raking in all the big $ she goes back to dabbling with H and soon she is back on the same corner she started at.
The point is her services from SW to high end provider are niche markets, each with specific consumers willing to pay up to a certain amount for an experience. No product was ever created to achieve these various levels of service, only a service that transformed it's experience from a Budget Inn to the Ritz-Carlton. However her rise and fall is also too often a common scenario as can be seen in some of the comments and blogs written about some providers on this board. Services change and normally it's because the entrepreneur changes something to make the experience more or less desirable.
Now this board is a [B][red]SERVICE[/red][/B] review board not a product review board. The other difference is, since the services reviewed here are already illegal then the service provider can illegally deny services for basically anything they want which includes A-Hole mongers. Once again products cross over to the service industry by providers using "Needed Products" such as software that they use to screen potential service customers. The other problem is since this is an illegal service industry the reviews are all hearsay with little or no ability to determine the credibility of the review. That is why multiple reviews that describe a good experience still outweigh the very select few that describe a bad experience. As Jjbee described in his post of the hotel. One bad apple didn't spoil the barrel, but he was able to determine the truth because the facts, not anonymous hearsay, were available once he did his research. Slandering a service provider by by providing a false review is also difficult to prove since facts are hard to determine. That is why credibility is important and developing that credibility takes time and a lot of accurate communication with providers and mongers.
Moral of the stories: Fuck a chick and provide an accurate experience; don't slander a provider out of personal spite; providers can change for a variety of reasons so a review or post warning others is sometimes necessary; don't make assumptions about other mongers unless you were in the room with him and her (I personally volunteer to watch in order to provide credibility for anyone's review); a preponderance of the feedback / reviews are important in making an informed decision; don't forget to do research and last but not least communicate with others behind the scenes and learn who has credibility and can be trusted.