Hello everybody.
I am reading 'The Power of Fifty Bits' by Bob Nease.
Most economists look at hard data rather than warm fuzzies when trying to figure out what’s driving purchasing decisions.
I know what hard data and warm fuzzies mean but I can't understand what the writer trying to say as a whole.
Hard data means real data or data that can be proved and warm fuzzies mean feeling of happiness. But I can't make the relationship between these two.
Thanks ??
Jamal 1315 I know what hard data and warm fuzzies mean but I can't understand what the writer trying to say as a whole. That's just bad "writing". Don't worry about it.
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Jamal 1315I know what hard data and warm fuzzies mean but I can't understand what the writer trying to say as a whole.
That's just bad "writing". Don't worry about it. Modern "writers" talk into a recorder and have someone type what they said. "Warm fuzzies" is not parallel with "hard data", as you say, and no amount of goodwill on the part of the reader wi
Jamal 1315I can't understand what the writer trying to say as a whole.
Economists do not draw conclusions about the economy by thinking or guessing about how they or others feel about it; they draw conclusions based on the scientific analysis of objective numerical data that does not involve feelings.
CJ