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Harrah's Las Vegas 8/5 Bonus Poker Gone

In a message dated 10/10/2007 11:36:13 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
npf15251@yahoo.com writes:

So the poorer paytables only result
in higher profits if there are actually people in the casino playing
them.

It is amazing how many otherwise intelligent businesspeople don't realize
that 100% of zero is still zero.

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[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

It is amazing how many otherwise intelligent businesspeople don't

realize

that 100% of zero is still zero.

I think this is funny. Losing customers
that yield less than your desired target and
replacing them with customers that lose more
is a smart strategy. There are legions of
suckers pounding their way to the strip. When
I see tumbleweeds in their casinos I'll start
worrying about their business.

--- In vpFREE@yahoogroups.com, "worldbefree22001" <krajewski.sa@...>
wrote:

I think this is funny. Losing customers
that yield less than your desired target and
replacing them with customers that lose more
is a smart strategy. There are legions of
suckers pounding their way to the strip. When
I see tumbleweeds in their casinos I'll start
worrying about their business.

There are already a lot of tumbleweeds blowing through high limit
areas. I was in five Strip casino high limit areas recently on a
Saturday night. In four out of five there were only 2 or 3 other
players in there. That's lots of machines sitting idle.

My previous post suggests not to burn your bridges with Harrahs. If
you did and the new management loosens the paytables a bit you'd
have to start over again to establish the good rating you've already
earned. Instead, play elsewhere and wait them out. If the situation
gets better, return and reward yourself for your patience. And if it
doesn't, then you can always burn them in 2008 for whatever perks
you're already due.

oxymoron ?

..... bl

ยทยทยท

--- In vpFREE@yahoogroups.com, vp1040@... wrote:

intelligent businesspeople