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Kathleen Vanbeekom

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RE: Mary Evelyn's Koffee Klatch
11/14/2012 3:20:08 AM
Some people may not understand me or why I do things or say/type things, but when put into the perspective of being raised with a disabled older sister who worked her own way thru university, and took public transportation, walked to bus stops and train stations, and kept pushing herself every day and got her Master's Degree...that's a high standard and a nonstop role-model, and one time my Mom told me that my sister also walked in the rain both ways to get arthritis medicine for her because my Mom was in so much pain one day and there wasn't delivery from the pharmacy, and nobody else lived at home at that time...my sister was someone who never said "Never." If people WANT to accomplish something, if people HAVE a destination inside their head, they WILL go there, wherever "there" is...people need to decide WHERE they want to go with their own life and how far and how hard they can push themselves, because ourself is the one we can push the hardest without anyone pushing back.

Quote:

Sadly Myrna, probably not and are most likely blaming someone else or their environment, their upbringing and etc. It took me a long time to finally realize that if things in my life were going to change I had to be the one to do it so almost three years ago now I took a big step and have never looked back. :)

quit

Quote:
Oh this is a good one. I so agree. I get tried of people saying "I can't" Well did you try?
Several years ago, when I was 3 months in a home recovering I learned a lot of how people want this and want that, but don't do a darn thing to get it. Wave your magic wand and it will happen, well so they thought. These people really helped me, because I made up my mind I was going home asap. I have often wondered if those people that said "I can't ever learned it is up to them to make it happen.

Quote:
Inspirational Quote of the Day
You have brains in your head. You have feet in your shoes. You can steer yourself any direction you choose. You're on your own. And you know what you know. And YOU are the one who'll decide where to go...
~ Dr. Seuss
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RE: Mary Evelyn's Koffee Klatch
11/14/2012 12:27:53 PM

Very well said Kathleen and different things drive different people.

Quote:

Some people may not understand me or why I do things or say/type things, but when put into the perspective of being raised with a disabled older sister who worked her own way thru university, and took public transportation, walked to bus stops and train stations, and kept pushing herself every day and got her Master's Degree...that's a high standard and a nonstop role-model, and one time my Mom told me that my sister also walked in the rain both ways to get arthritis medicine for her because my Mom was in so much pain one day and there wasn't delivery from the pharmacy, and nobody else lived at home at that time...my sister was someone who never said "Never." If people WANT to accomplish something, if people HAVE a destination inside their head, they WILL go there, wherever "there" is...people need to decide WHERE they want to go with their own life and how far and how hard they can push themselves, because ourself is the one we can push the hardest without anyone pushing back.

Quote:

Sadly Myrna, probably not and are most likely blaming someone else or their environment, their upbringing and etc. It took me a long time to finally realize that if things in my life were going to change I had to be the one to do it so almost three years ago now I took a big step and have never looked back. :)

quit

Quote:
Oh this is a good one. I so agree. I get tried of people saying "I can't" Well did you try?
Several years ago, when I was 3 months in a home recovering I learned a lot of how people want this and want that, but don't do a darn thing to get it. Wave your magic wand and it will happen, well so they thought. These people really helped me, because I made up my mind I was going home asap. I have often wondered if those people that said "I can't ever learned it is up to them to make it happen.

Quote:
Inspirational Quote of the Day
You have brains in your head. You have feet in your shoes. You can steer yourself any direction you choose. You're on your own. And you know what you know. And YOU are the one who'll decide where to go...
~ Dr. Seuss
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RE: Mary Evelyn's Koffee Klatch
11/14/2012 12:29:13 PM
Inspirational Quote of the Day
Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.
~ Winston Churchill
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RE: Mary Evelyn's Koffee Klatch
11/15/2012 3:23:06 AM

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RE: Mary Evelyn's Koffee Klatch
11/15/2012 4:49:08 AM

Here's something I found interesting. It might be interesting to try for a couple of months and see if you really do get $15 worth of products for $7 and just what they are. Would they be products I would use or not.

Walmart Labs launches Goodies, a Birchbox-like service for food

November 14, 2012

Big box stores aren’t known for curating artisanal and ethnic foods — if anything, they’re usually associated with the opposite.

But Walmart is trying its hand at “discovery commerce” with a Birchbox-style subscription service for gourmet food. Called Goodies, the service launches Wednesday after a three-month-long beta test including 3,000 users in the U.S.The whole idea is around discovery,” said Ravi Raj, vice president of products at Walmart Labs. “We want to introduce you to new types of food that you haven’t heard of before, not things you’d find at most mainstream stores.”

Goodies is the latest service from WalmartLabs, the retail giant’s innovation arm that was created last year with the acquisition of social media startup Kosmix. In the past year, Walmart Labs has also launched Shopycat, a gift-giving Facebook app, and Polaris, the search engine powering Walmart.com.
With Goodies, subscribers pay $7 a month, including tax and shipping, to get a box of gourmet, organic and artisanal food valued at about $15. The boxed items are sample-sized but users can purchase full-sized products at goodies.co.
The service, which clearly follows Birchbox‘s model, is not the first to bring discovery commerce to food. Love With Food, which is backed by 500 startups, and Tasterie offer similar services. Lollihop provided a subscription service for healthy snacks, until it shut down earlier this year.

But Raj said Walmart aims to differentiate itself (and avoid the deadpool) by undercutting rivals with a cheaper price (most other products are about twice as expensive), offering a unique selection of items curated by in-house foodies and rewarding subscribers with a social loyalty program. For each review they write about the products, members earn points, which they’ll ultimately be able to redeem for a free box. During the beta period, members weren’t able to redeem their points, but half still submitted reviews for products, Raj said.

It’s a smart move for Walmart – they can get cheaper prices from food suppliers eager for a chance to distribute more widely in Walmart stores and then see which items might have mass appeal. (A formal arrangement isn’t in place yet, but Raj said items that resonate well have a good shot at ending up on store shelves.) And it could get the company in front of a different set of customers. Initially, Raj said they thought Goodies might appeal to younger, more urban customers, but they’ve found that it attracts a broad swath of consumers, from millennials to seniors.

But, going forward, it will be interesting to see how consumers respond to the new service. From the box that made its way to us, it looks like Goodies selections are certainly more interesting than the fare I’d expect to find at my local Walmart. But, while some items looked like they were from off the beaten path, others – like Smartfood Selects chips and a Nutella snack pack – would be hard to classify as “artisanal.”

For now, Raj said, the company is focused on food, which is Walmart’s largest category and naturally inspires social commentary. But he acknowledged that with a name like “Goodies” the door is open for expansion into other categories.

“Given time… there’s a chance we might be looking at other verticals,” he said.

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