Unprecedented customer service
To impress, some stores or service companies in the world 'psychologically attack' customers with unexpected care.
A grocery store in Montreal, Quebec (Canada) decided not to import vegetables but to grow them on the rooftop and broadcast them online to the shopping area so that customers could "trace the origin" most visually.
A supermarket in the Netherlands is so dedicated that it has set up a toilet paper testing area to help customers choose the right type of paper they like.
In IKEA stores, umbrellas cost $4.99 when it's sunny, but up to 50% off when it's raining.
In a restaurant in Johannesburg (South Africa), 400 close and frequent diners have their own knife, placed in a solemn area.
A Singaporean airline once surprised passengers arriving at Manila (Philippines) by giving each person a Christmas gift with a specific name on the conveyor belt, before their luggage appeared.
A taxi company in California (USA) decided to compete with other companies by installing a karaoke system in the car. Many passengers offered to go further to sing the finished songs.
A shoe store in the US prepares 3 different types of terrain for customers to experience the products.
If you forget to write the welcome information form or welcome your relatives, at Amsterdam airport (Netherlands), everyone has a banner printer available.
At a grocery store in Italy, if customers bring their pets, there is a special stroller for small dogs.
An airport in Columbus Ohio (USA) is especially considerate of women. They put a machine that provides free tampons and sanitary napkins in the toilets.