Re:Wrong! Yes you do (Re: Would you use this service ???)



On Sun 12 Mar 2006 02:39:52p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it
ms_pea***?


"jmcquown" <jmcquown@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:JW%Qf.4654$X7.195@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
ms_pea*** wrote:
"jmcquown" <jmcquown@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:7pXQf.5061$wQ6.3610@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
BeaverStadium@xxxxxxxxx wrote:
Thanks for the input. Yes, as with any retial storefront, it's
location, location, location. I live just south of Phoenix, AZ and
we will most likley put the store in Scottsdale because of the
demographics. This concept appeals to mothers with children who are
running their children around to sports practices, movies, friends'
houses, school, etc and when it's time for dinner, they look in the
cupboard and the fridge and have nothing to make... so it's either
mac and cheese or grilled cheese, etc.

Please allow to preface by saying I am not a mother. But if they
are so busy doing all that, when will they find the time to come to
your store, shop then prep meals? Will you have a place for the
kids to be entertained
while mom stands there chopping and cutting? Or do you expect the
mother to
squeeze in an hour of shopping/prep work during Billy's soccer
practice and
Tina's ballet lessons? They could be doing that prep at home during
those same times or while the kids do their homework after school.
Just sayin'.

Jill

There is no "prep" at those places. The ingredients are already
chopped or sliced or whatever. You just dump them in to the
containers.

Ms P

Not according to his original post, from which I quote: "You prepare
the meal at the store...slice, dice, cut, etc. When you are done, you
go home with all of your meals in containers... all you have to do is
take them out of your freezer and heat them up." I see no real
convenience or time saving efforts with this concept.

Jill

It doesn't matter what someone who does not own a store or work in one
posted. Read the web site. It clearly says "All of the ingredients
will be ready for you."

http://www.entreevous.com/how.jsp

Ms P

"Ready for you" is open to interpretation. It could mean that they've been
procured and are simply at hand for your use. Or, it could mean that
they've been washed, peeled, diced or chopped, even measured into
appropriate quantities. Simply saying they're "ready for you" doesn't mean
a damn thing, apart from the fact that you don't have to go buy them
yourself.

--
Wayne Boatwright o¿o
____________________

BIOYA
.