This movie is a movie that can give you a good load of stitches and guidance at the same time. For me, I think I got the reason why Zuckberg, the CEO of the Facebook, could do so damn well on running his business, being the only CEO to run such a gigantic business for several generations. One of the secret is that he could be a regular user of his own product in which way he can adjust his services for those Facebook followers. Sounds too simple to be true, right? Actually it's not simple at all. And it's not only Zuckberg who benefits form this, I also put my money on that Chen Ou, the President of online shopping website, JuMei Youpin, must do the same thing as well. This is because that the best way to get to know if a product or a service could bring the satisfaction to a customer or a client is to do a whole test run of it by yourself.
Take the online shopping for example, you need to live the whole shopping experience from the very start of searching for a shopping website online to the very end part of it, hammering out the purchase and get the delivery from the delivery guy in which way you can get the first- and fresh-hand feedback and spot the chain where something goes wrong or be in need of improvement. Just as a saying that is well-known in the realm of real estate: "The key to the success in the real estate business is to remember a three-word tip - location, location and location." By the same token, when it comes to the business that contain a lot of interaction, the three-word tip should be experience, experience and experience. The company has no choice but to provide the most smooth and congenial service to their users and customers no matter they want to share the cake with a third business party or not if they really aim to become a larger and finer enterprise.
The devil, or correspondingly speaking, the purchase is in the details. It's not a stretch at all. If a potential buyer can't zoom in when he or she is surfing the shopping website, chances are that he or she probably won't buy it anyway. So, you seeeeeeeee? How this little part of the whole machinery works here? it's all about stepping into the user's shoes, getting a good look of the user's world and take a step ahead to settle down all the services the users need, making sure they know that they are in good hands.
Besides all those business things in this movie, it's also a very great movie for the feminist for all the good lines inside that speak up for women and their prowess of changing the tides. For instance, when Ben took Jules's daughter the the park party and met with those mothers of other kids. The mothers got the wrong impression and thought of him as Matt's (Jules's full-time husband and daddy) father and got stupefied from head to toe after knowing that Ben's the senior intern of Jules. Then, they started to criticize Jules as being a person who's kind of tough. Ben's retort was really a bad ass. He replied: "Tough? Jules? Sure. She's a total bad ass. I guess that's how she became an Internet sensation. Must make you guys proud, huh? One of your own out there every day, crashing the glass ceiling of the tech world. So, bravo, good for her. Right?" Apparently, the winning move tied the ladies' hands and mouth. They could only said that Y-yeah, No, for sure. Tons of thousands of Likings and thumb ups for Ben, good for you grandpa!
There's also other treasures buried in this movie, waiting for you to discover. I had no intention to alarm the spoil alert here, but I just couldn't help to spit out the last one. It's something that I'd like to draw your attention on - grey is the new green. Something just never gets old, and on the contrary, the older, the better.