BS Summary: This video contains 23 faulty reasoning types, including Burden of Proof, Overconfidence Bias, and Hasty Generalization, with Confirmation Bias as the most egregious example at 28.9% saturation with 58 hits. Analysis detected 560 faulty-reasoning hits from 201 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 71.4% and a BS Rank of 79% (3,621 of 16,813 videos). This video is worse (more manipulative) than 78.50% of the video peer group.
Isn't 7-Eleven supposed to be an American company?
So why does the Japanese 7-Eleven feel so much better than the American version?
Instead of spreading stores thinly across the country, they implemented what is now referred to as a area dominance strategy.
That means tightening the radius between stores so that one delivery truck can make multiple stops in a single trip, delivering smaller batches to several outlets more often.
This keeps shelves fresh without carrying excess stock.
But that's not all.
Japanese 7-Eleven doesn't just think in terms of products.
It thinks in terms of time.
Shelves are in stock the same way all day.
Breakfast items go out in the morning.
Lunch bento boxes peak around noon.
Light meals and snacks rotate in during the afternoon.
Hot foods and comfort items show up late at night.
That's why the food feels so fresh.
Even though space is limited, the
store isn't even trying to sell everything to everyone at once.
is trying to sell the right thing to the right customer at the right hour.
Now comes the billion-dollar question.
Could this Japanese version of 71 actually work in the US?
Analysis
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