[edit] It also seems like this is the sort of thing that marketing pretty strongly encourages misrepresentation of. “All children are above-average,” in that the restaurant wants to present itself as serving healthy, cheap, tasty food, while also paying its employees well and having good returns for its investors. But several of those variables are in direct tension with each other, and there’s not great language for speaking publicly about the tradeoffs you’re making.
Couple of reasons spring to mind:
Marketing leverages the Halo Effect
Not emphasizing being above average on a particular dimension is a chink in the armor against competitors (who can establish beach head by claiming to be superior in that dimension)
Couple of reasons spring to mind:
Marketing leverages the Halo Effect
Not emphasizing being above average on a particular dimension is a chink in the armor against competitors (who can establish beach head by claiming to be superior in that dimension)