At the moment, all crime fans are clamoring for "Babylon Berlin," the series or the books about Detective Inspector Gereon Rath, who solves murder cases in Berlin in the 1920s and 1930s. Educated people don't read them for the suspense, of course, but for the meticulously researched contemporary history. And CRM experts read them to realize that nothing they make up is really new. In the novel "The Silent Death," the policeman gets the crucial clue from a fruit and vegetable seller who knows who regularly buys the newly imported kiwis from him, which have been in the stomachs of several murder victims.
Analytical CRM
Of red and green areas
This is very reminiscent of the oft-quoted "Uncle Ozgür" who has now replaced iraq telegram data the corner shop in many parts of the country, the friendly greengrocer with greatly extended opening hours and a Prussian willingness to work. He knows what his regular customers regularly buy and keeps it in stock - for the benefit of both parties. If you love peaches, he will give you a nectarine to try out - perhaps you will gain an additional fan. And because the retailer knows from experience that the holidays are coming up or that cold season is starting, he adapts his range to the presumed needs of his customers - fewer perishable bananas, more oranges. So everything is in the green zone. If you ask him nicely, he will even get the exotic ingredient for a recipe experiment from the wholesale market, even if it is not normally part of his range. But that only works as long as the customer actually picks up the goods. If they order and do not pick them up, the negligent customer quickly ends up on the imaginary red list. The store does not want to afford such a loss again.