Website : https://www.retailor.az
Address : Binəqədi, Azerbaijan
Retailor LLC specializes in Retail Audit, Retail Census, and Team Outsourcing services across Central Asia and the Caucasus. With over 15 years of experience in FMCG and Project Management, and 10 years in Retail Audit management, Retailor stands out for its in-depth knowledge of the retail market and advanced data collection and reporting tools. The company is committed to connecting retail execution with strategy, ensuring reliable and actionable data for partners like Coca-Cola, Unilever, and Colgate-Palmolive.
Linkedin : https://www.linkedin.com/company/retailor-llc/
Keywords:
project management in retail
retail business intelligence
retail market research
retail technology solutions
retail market analysis
retail strategy consulting
retail execution management
retail business operations
retail audit services
retail census solutions
team outsourcing for retail
retail strategy implementation
fmcg market insights
advanced retail data collection
retail reporting technology
retail execution optimization
retail data accuracy
retail partner support
retail market efficiency
retail audit management
comprehensive retail audits
data driven retail insights
outsourced retail team expertise
retail strategy implementation solutions
cutting edge fmcg market analysis
efficient project management in retail
innovations in retail data collection
technology driven retail reporting
optimizing retail execution strategies
data accuracy in retail analytics
partner support for retail success
enhancing retail market efficiency
tailored retail technology solutions
streamlined retail business operations
effective retail audit management
strategic retail consulting services
in depth retail market research
business intelligence for retail success
proactive retail execution management
retail audit and analysis
strategic insights for retail growth
professional retail team outsourcing
retail strategy implementation tactics
comprehensive fmcg market insights
proven project management in retail
cutting edge retail data solutions
optimal retail execution strategies
accuracy in retail data analytics
partner support for retail excellence
streamlining retail market efficiency
efficient retail business operations
expert retail audit management
targeted retail audit and analysis
1 note
·
View note
2024's Game-Changing Technologies for Metaverse Development
Picture a universe where virtual and physical worlds blend seamlessly, allowing you to interact with digital elements in real-time. As 2024 draws near, groundbreaking technologies are shaping this metaverse, making such interactions more immersive and dynamic than ever.
The metaverse, an expansive network of virtual environments, is evolving rapidly as we approach 2024, driven by several key technologies. Virtual Reality (VR) and Augmented Reality (AR) are at the forefront, enabling immersive experiences that blend the physical and digital worlds. VR technology has advanced significantly, offering users enhanced graphics, realistic simulations, and responsive feedback that create fully immersive digital environments.
AR enhances the physical world by overlaying digital information, enriching experiences in retail, healthcare, and entertainment through interactive and engaging environments.
Blockchain technology is essential for the metaverse, providing a secure and transparent method for managing digital assets and transactions. Non-fungible tokens (NFTs) allow users to own unique digital assets like virtual real estate and art, while smart contracts facilitate automated and secure transactions. The decentralized nature of blockchain promotes trust and reliability, making it a crucial component of the metaverse's infrastructure.
Artificial Intelligence (AI) further enhances user experiences by creating intelligent virtual agents, personalized interactions, and realistic simulations. AI-driven non-player characters (NPCs) provide engaging and adaptive experiences, and AI technologies enable natural language processing and speech recognition for seamless communication between users and virtual environments.
Edge computing and 5G technology are critical for the seamless operation of the metaverse. By bringing data processing closer to users, edge computing reduces latency and improves the responsiveness of virtual environments. 5G networks provide the high-speed internet required for real-time interactions, supporting scalable and complex virtual environments.
The Internet of Things (IoT) and spatial computing further enhance the metaverse by capturing physical movements and translating them into virtual actions, creating realistic and immersive experiences.
Elevate your business with Intelisync's cutting-edge metaverse solutions. Reach out to Intelisync today and learn how our advanced technologies in VR, AR, AI, and blockchain can revolutionize your operations, enhance customer engagement, and drive your Learn more...
0 notes
Amazon's bestselling "bitter lemon" energy drink was bottled delivery driver piss
Today (Oct 20), I'm in Charleston, WV at Charleston's Taylor Books from 12h-14h.
For a brief time this year, the bestselling "bitter lemon drink" on Amazon was "Release Energy," which consisted of the harvested urine of Amazon delivery drivers, rebottled for sale by Catfish UK prankster Oobah Butler in a stunt for a new Channel 4 doc, "The Great Amazon Heist":
https://www.channel4.com/programmes/the-great-amazon-heist
Collecting driver piss is surprisingly easy. Amazon, you see, puts its drivers on a quota that makes it impossible for them to drive safely, park conscientiously, or, indeed, fulfill their basic human biological needs. Amazon has long waged war on its employees' kidneys, marking down warehouse workers for "time off task" when they visit the toilets.
As tales of drivers pissing – and shitting! – in their vans multiplied, Amazon took decisive action. The company enacted a strict zero tolerance policy for drivers returning to the depot with bottles of piss in their vans.
That's where Butler comes in: the roads leading to Amazon delivery depots are lined with bottles of piss thrown out of delivery vans by drivers who don't want to lose their jobs, which made harvesting the raw material for "Release Energy" a straightforward matter.
Butler was worried that he wouldn't be able to list his product on Amazon because he didn't have the requisite "food and drinks licensing" certificates, so he listed his drink in Amazon's refillable pump dispenser category. But Amazon's systems detected the mismatch and automatically shifted the product into the drinks section.
Butler enlisted some confederates to place orders for his drink, and it quickly rocketed to the top of Amazon's listings for the category, which led to Amazon's recommendation engine pushing the item on people who weren't in on the gag. When these orders came in, Butler pulled the plug, but not before an Amazon rep telephoned him to pitch him turning packaging, shipping and fulfillment over to Amazon:
https://www.wired.com/story/amazon-let-its-drivers-urine-be-sold-as-an-energy-drink/
The Release Energy prank was just one stunt Butler pulled for his doc; he also went undercover at an Amazon warehouse, during a period when Amazon hired an extra 1,000 workers for its warehouses in Coventry, UK, in a successful bid to dilute pro-union sentiment in his workforce in advance of a key union vote:
https://jacobin.com/2023/10/the-great-amazon-heist-oobah-butler-review
Butler's stint as an Amazon warehouse worker only lasted a couple of days, ending when Amazon recognized him and fired him.
The contrast between Amazon's ability to detect an undercover reporter and its inability to spot bottles of piss being marketed as bitter lemon energy drink says it all, really. Corporations like Amazon hire vast armies of "threat intelligence" creeps who LARP at being CIA superspies, subjecting employees and activists to intense and often illegal surveillance.
But while Amazon's defensive might is laser-focused on the threat of labor organizers and documentarians, the company can't figure out that one of its bestselling products is bottles of its tormented drivers' own urine.
In the USA, the FTC is suing Amazon for its monopolistic tactics, arguing that the company has found ways to raise prices and reduce quality by trapping manufacturers and sellers with its logistics operation, taking $0.45-$0.51 out of every dollar they earn and forcing them to raise prices at all retailers:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/04/25/greedflation/#commissar-bezos
The Release Energy stunt shows where Amazon's priorities are. Not only did Release Energy get listed on Amazon without any quality checks, the company actually nudged it into a category where it was more likely to be consumed by a person. The only notice the company took of Release Energy was in its logistics and manufacturing department – the part of the business that extracts the monopoly rents at issue in the FTC case – which tracked Butler down in order to sell him these services.
The drivers whose piss Butler collected don't work directly for Amazon, they work for a Delivery Service Partner. These DSPs are victims of a pyramid scheme that Amazon set up. DSP operators lease vans and pay to have them skinned in Amazon livery and studded with Amazon sensors. They take out long-term leases on depots, and hire drivers who dress in Amazon uniforms. Their drivers are minutely monitored by Amazon, down to the movements of their eyeballs.
But none of this is "Amazon" – it's all run by an "entrepreneur," whom Amazon can cut loose without notice, leaving them with unfairly terminated employees, outstanding workers' comp claims, a fleet of Amazon-skinned vehicles and unbreakable facilities leases:
https://pluralistic.net/2022/04/17/revenge-of-the-chickenized-reverse-centaurs/
Speaking to Wired, Amazon denied that it forces its drivers to piss in bottles, but Butler clearly catches a DSP dispatcher telling drivers "If you pee in a bottle and leave it [in the vehicle], you will get a point for that" – that is, the part you get punished for isn't the peeing, it's the leaving.
Amazon's defense against the FTC is that it spares no effort to keep its marketplace safe. As Amazon spokesperson James Drummond says, they use "industry-leading tools to prevent genuinely unsafe products being listed." But the only industry-leading tools in evidence are tools to bust unions and screw suppliers.
In her landmark Yale Law Review paper, "Amazon's Antitrust Paradox," FTC Chair Lina Khan makes a brilliant argument that Amazon's alleged benefits to "consumers" are temporary at best, illusory at worst:
https://www.yalelawjournal.org/note/amazons-antitrust-paradox
In Butler's documentary, Khan's hypothesis is thoroughly validated: here's a company extracting hundreds of billions from merchants who raise prices to compensate, and those monopoly rents are "invested" in union-busting and countermeasures against investigative journalists, while the tools to keep you from accidentally getting a bottle of piss in the mail are laughably primitive.
Truly, Amazon is the apex predator of the platform era:
https://pluralistic.net/ApexPredator
If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/10/20/release-energy/#the-bitterest-lemon
My next novel is The Lost Cause, a hopeful novel of the climate emergency. Amazon won't sell the audiobook, so I made my own and I'm pre-selling it on Kickstarter!
7K notes
·
View notes
Corrina - Owner & Operator 🖤
Corrina had always dreamed of creating a space where women could be uplifted and confident in their own skin. Salon Soho is a full-service salon offering anything from hair to nails to luxury self-care products. it is a one stop shop for every it-girl in San Myshuno. with this being her lifelong dream, she is a very hands-on owner.
You can find her currently doing interviews for a new full-time esthetician and hairstylists this week. Her salon recently went viral on SimTok causing an influx of new clients. As business picks up, Corrina quickly realizes she has more clientele than her staff can handle.
When she isn't at the salon, Corrina is most likely indulging herself in some retail therapy.
Credit to the wonderful cc creators featured here - @simstrouble - @twisted-cat - @serenity-cc @sentate
246 notes
·
View notes