Fascinating news this month. Best Buy is moving to smaller stores in denser communities as the suburbs and suburban malls decline. So did Standard and Poor's misunderstand the strategy when they downgraded Best Buy?
NineShifter Paul Franklin comments: "Best Buy is interesting. Many of the big boxes are seeking smaller store in more dense areas. Big move afoot by Walmart in Portland to find new locations in closer to the city center.
"Very interesting move. One reason S&P downgraded Best Buy was their product strategy. S&P thinks they need to move away from big TVs and the like and into more mobile/small technology. They did wrongly attriubute Best Buys move to more dense areas as something other than you and I see it as. This one will be interesting to follow."
Content quite touching and provides a lot of information. Your blog first impression feeling is write very lively and interesting.
Posted by: Cheap Supra Footwear | September 07, 2012 at 08:26 PM
En av de mest bemerkelsesverdige i tilfelle av jeans og sko med. Bukser små blyant jeans er det beste valget for lav øvre MBT Sko, slik at bukser å bare sitte på den øvre, er dette bare; rette jeans og velg høy-top sko, uavhengig av bukser å legge ned eller rullet opp kan skape en stilig og uformell effekt.
Posted by: MBT Sko | June 14, 2012 at 03:40 AM
Speaking of the "new economy," how are we supposed to start it when everybody you know doesn't have the money to afford college or a new business?
How many parents or families do you know that have $20,000.00 laying around?
http://thinkprogress.org/special/2012/04/27/473096/romney-borrow-money-parents/
I also have to wonder about the source of that $20,000.00 figure. Somewhere in the back of my mind is a story, perhaps 10 years old, that if any teenager could invest $20,000.00 in some sort of fund, he could be pretty sure of becoming a millionaire by his retirement age. Obviously, this was before the Wall Street fumble-stumble, but even more obviously, one has to ask where the typical teenager is going to get the $20,000.00!
What planet do these people live on?
Posted by: D. P. Lubic | April 28, 2012 at 12:37 AM