Glossary entry (derived from question below)
Polish term or phrase:
satysfakcjonalista
English translation:
middle-of-the-roader/conventionalist/goldilocks/
Added to glossary by
Frank Szmulowicz, Ph. D.
Mar 14, 2017 21:07
7 yrs ago
Polish term
satysfakcjonalista
Polish to English
Marketing
Marketing
Procesy zakupowe poszczególnych konsumentów mogą się od siebie różnić: długością trwania (od bardzo krótkich do bardzo rozciągniętych w czasie), poziomem skomplikowania (od prostych, rutynowych zakupów do bardziej pogłębionych stadiów poszukiwania i oceny, który uwzględnia ścieżki alternatywne), a także różnym stopniem zaangażowania w nie (satysfakcjonalista szuka produktów „wystarczająco dobrych”, podczas gdy maksymalista będzie poszukiwał najlepszego produktu z dostępnych).
Proposed translations
(English)
3 +2 | middle-of-the-roader/conventionalist/goldilocks/ | Frank Szmulowicz, Ph. D. |
3 +1 | middle-grounder | Jacek Kloskowski |
2 +1 | agreeable shopper | geopiet |
Change log
Mar 28, 2017 10:40: Frank Szmulowicz, Ph. D. Created KOG entry
Proposed translations
+2
1 hr
Selected
middle-of-the-roader/conventionalist/goldilocks/
The Goldilocks principle states that when some quality of the items in a sufficiently large given sample can be arranged on a scale ranging from one extreme to another extreme (for example from extremely cold to extremely hot), some items will fall in a moderate range between these extremes. When the effects of the principle are observed, it is known as the Goldilocks effect.
The name of the Goldilocks principle is derived from a children's story, The Three Bears, in which a little girl named Goldilocks finds a house owned by three bears. Each bear has its own preference of food and beds. After testing all three examples of both items, Goldilocks determines that one of them is always too much in one extreme (too hot or too large), one is too much in the opposite extreme (too cold or too small), and one is "just right".[1]
The Goldilocks principle is not a hard law, but examples in which it applies are found across many disciplines, particularly developmental psychology, biology,[2] economics and engineering.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goldilocks_principle
The name of the Goldilocks principle is derived from a children's story, The Three Bears, in which a little girl named Goldilocks finds a house owned by three bears. Each bear has its own preference of food and beds. After testing all three examples of both items, Goldilocks determines that one of them is always too much in one extreme (too hot or too large), one is too much in the opposite extreme (too cold or too small), and one is "just right".[1]
The Goldilocks principle is not a hard law, but examples in which it applies are found across many disciplines, particularly developmental psychology, biology,[2] economics and engineering.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goldilocks_principle
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "Selected automatically based on peer agreement."
+1
3 hrs
agreeable shopper
shopper characteristics - https://goo.gl/lkZtJI
-----
agreeable shopper
get -along, go along consumers esp susceptible to advertising and most likely to shop at discount store
practical shopper
smart shoppers who research purchases and look for the best deal
https://quizlet.com/144206620/retail-management-flash-cards/
-----
agreeable shopper
get -along, go along consumers esp susceptible to advertising and most likely to shop at discount store
practical shopper
smart shoppers who research purchases and look for the best deal
https://quizlet.com/144206620/retail-management-flash-cards/
+1
11 hrs
middle-grounder
Definition of middle–grounder
: one that maintains a stand between extremes
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/middle–grounder
: one that maintains a stand between extremes
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/middle–grounder
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Frank Szmulowicz, Ph. D.
: When you stand in the middle, you get run over from both sides.
2 hrs
|
Indeed :)
|
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