it's starting to look more like a cattle market auction - P.O.P
Mike...
http://www.flirt4free.com/ Quote
Go ahead VS, drive away the rest of your most talented performers by letting the noobs price-gouge them right out of existence. Great idea.
Bad enough that your latest "improvement" allows them to accept whatever bottom of the barrel pledges for a quick 50 credit group cum show, now you have to degrade your best and brightest performers even more by turning their rooms into a swap meet? Niceeeeee.
*one foot out the door*
Performers are not required to field show offers from customers. If a performer is happy with the number of shows they participate in on a daily basis then nothing needs to change for them.
Show offers are intended for use by performers when they think it is advantageous. For instance, when a performer is getting ready to go offline its common for them to announce it to the room with a "last chance to take me private!" message to their room. Accepting show offers is a potential way for them to end the day and 'finish strong', so to speak.
No one will be forcing performers to use the show offer feature. Show offers are just another tool in the arsenal for a performer to get *more* paid shows. Quote
This , needs to be an option to turn it off if performers want to not have it on
Already done. Show offers are disabled by default for performers. If the performer want's to accept offers they have to turn it on.
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That is assuming the "Performer" is "in control" Jeffie.
The button that turns on show offers is tied to the interface that the performer uses to interact with customers. There is currently no way for VS to force them to use offers, nor would we want a way to do so.
it's starting to look more like a cattle market auction
I really dislike this similie when speaking of our performers, but to illustrate a point I will say this: Cattle don't have the final say of when they go to the slaughterhouse. Quote
7/23/13 @ 12:58pm
(EST) |UTC - 5:00
Location: near the edge of reality
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it's starting to look more like a cattle market auction
I really dislike this similie when speaking of our performers, but to illustrate a point I will say this: Cattle don't have the final say of when they go to the slaughterhouse.
Scott - you are a Spin Doctor! You a fully aware I am illustrating the actions of VS and not referring to "PERFORMERS" Who I have a great respect for, and many will be "instructed" to use the tools. It is as VS said "Not something asked for" -
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Scott - you are a Spin Doctor! You a fully aware I am illustrating the actions of VS
I *am* VS.
and many will be "instructed" to use the tools.
As I said we have no intention of forcing or coercing anyone to accept offers from customers. We left that choice to the performers where it belongs.
Forcing all performers to lower their show rates wouldn't make any sense for us.
"Not something asked for" -
I said that no one "specifically requested this type of experience", but also stated that demand exists for the feature.
Performers get guaranteed time spent in a show.
Customers get an option to have some fun with their existing credits while waiting on that next paycheck. Quote
7/23/13 @ 1:29pm
(EST) |UTC - 5:00
Location: Driving Down Thunder Road
Posts: 4,747
...Scott, thank you for clearing up some of the questions and concerns that were posted.
...I for one think that used properly, this can be a good thing for the performers as well as the members. After all it does guarantee that a performer will get at least the agreed upon number of credits. As it is now a perfomer is not guaranteed how many credits he wiil get, as the member has the option of leaving a show at any time.
...Lets see how it goes before being to critcal about it! Quote
Let's see how it goes, vs_scottl can I email you and ask for you to enable this feature on a certain room to see how it goes ? I wouldn't mind testing this and the performer in question won't mind too. Let's give it a real world test and see if under the control of a good model if it can be used to her advantage.
Mind emailing me your email address to my personal email address which is part of my account information here then I will let you know the room to enable it on. Thanks.
Regards
Nabil Quote
Can I email you and ask for you to enable this feature on a certain room to see how it goes ?
Starting tomorrow morning (PST) every performer should have the option of turning on show offers. Once they're given the option they'll have to enable it; I can't personally turn it on for any particular performer.
Mind emailing me your email address to my personal email address
I think its best to keep customer-based emails flowing through customer service. I'd be surprised if you didn't already have contact info for several people in the department.
That said, I will continue to monitor this thread for the remainder of the week if you have feedback. Quote
Starting tomorrow morning (PST) every performer should have the option of turning on show offers. Once they're given the option they'll have to enable it; I can't personally turn it on for any particular performer.
Sounds good, will the performers need to update their performer applications for it to work ? Quote
Sounds good, will the performers need to update their performer applications for it to work ?
They need to be running the latest version of their applications, yes. A majority of performers have already updated.
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7/23/13 @ 4:08pm
(EST) |UTC - 5:00
Location: floating just beneath the surfaces
Posts: 5,122
The button that turns on show offers is tied to the interface that the performer uses to interact with customers. There is currently no way for VS to force them to use offers, nor would we want a way to do so.
it's starting to look more like a cattle market auction
I really dislike this similie when speaking of our performers, but to illustrate a point I will say this: Cattle don't have the final say of when they go to the slaughterhouse.
yup yup ... the hamburger doesn't pick when it's eaten ...
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7/23/13 @ 5:42pm
(EST) |UTC - 5:00
Location: near the edge of reality
Posts: 1,281
I really dislike this similie when speaking of our performers, but to illustrate a point I will say this: Cattle don't have the final say of when they go to the slaughterhouse.
yup yup ... the hamburger doesn't pick when it's eaten ...
Nope - it goes to the highest bidder -
Forget about the price tag - la la la la la lala la Quote
many will be "instructed" to use the tools
As I said we have no intention of forcing or coercing anyone to accept offers from customers. We left that choice to the performers where it belongs
Unfortunately many performers have no say in matters like this and they can be required by their studio administrators to use certain features or adopt certain practises
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7/24/13 @ 12:11am
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7/24/13 @ 9:51am
(EST) |UTC - 5:00
Location: London, UK
Posts: 2,381
...Scott, thank you for clearing up some of the questions and concerns that were posted.
...I for one think that used properly, this can be a good thing for the performers as well as the members. After all it does guarantee that a performer will get at least the agreed upon number of credits. As it is now a performer is not guaranteed how many credits he wiil get, as the member has the option of leaving a show at any time.
...Lets see how it goes before being too critical about it!
That is pretty much my reaction, Phil
There is already a certain amount of friendly negotiation over total credits for private shows, including time and cpm rates. I can see why others have concerns if this turns into unfriendly price-haggling.
I agree that the fixed length private show idea has possibilities, particularly if it works both ways: members won't give the performer less time than agreed, and the performer won't ask for more time than agreed.
Yes - lets see how it goes Quote
There's a part of me that agrees with likening Show Offers to the priceline.com business model; it would be dense of me to deny the similarity. That said, the availability and end-result of an offered show is up to the performer. What the performer is willing to do at a 'discounted' rate is their choice.
Performers frequently find creative ways to use tools we give them and I don't expect show offers to be any different. A performer who frequently has paid shows with a customer that involve little more than chit-chat might allow that customer to lower the show rate and thus get more time to hang out.
There's also nothing stopping anyone from offering a higher rate for something out of the ordinary. If someone wants a performer to smoke cigars and sip on cherry kool-aid while wearing roller skates and a sombrero the performer could potentially require a higher rate or at least 10 minutes in-show to guarantee that the customer doesn't dip as soon as he/she laces up the skates.
In reality, there was nothing stopping negotiation between customers and performers in the past. Performers have always had the option of changing their rate per minute cost to accommodate a customer. Show offers makes it easier, and provides both customers and performers a guarantee. Quote
7/24/13 @ 11:46am
(EST) |UTC - 5:00
Location: near the edge of reality
Posts: 1,281
There's a part of me that agrees with likening Show Offers to the priceline.com business model; it would be dense of me to deny the similarity. That said, the availability and end-result of an offered show is up to the performer. What the performer is willing to do at a 'discounted' rate is their choice.
Performers frequently find creative ways to use tools we give them and I don't expect show offers to be any different. A performer who frequently has paid shows with a customer that involve little more than chit-chat might allow that customer to lower the show rate and thus get more time to hang out.
There's also nothing stopping anyone from offering a higher rate for something out of the ordinary. If someone wants a performer to smoke cigars and sip on cherry kool-aid while wearing roller skates and a sombrero the performer could potentially require a higher rate or at least 10 minutes in-show to guarantee that the customer doesn't dip as soon as he/she laces up the skates.
In reality, there was nothing stopping negotiation between customers and performers in the past. Performers have always had the option of changing their rate per minute cost to accommodate a customer. Show offers makes it easier, and provides both customers and performers a guarantee.
Not very keen on the standard credit rate today Scott - can I negotiate with you on this? Kind of thinking 2,000 credits for $100 USD - how about it - eh eh? Quote
7/24/13 @ 3:24pm
(EST) |UTC - 5:00
Location: near the edge of reality
Posts: 1,281
Not very keen on the standard credit rate today Scott - can I negotiate with you on this? Kind of thinking 2,000 credits for $100 USD - how about it - eh eh?
You thinking about this Scott? *VS* You are the one? Have you switched on the app? What if I go for 10 of the above? Ok for you Scott BB? What do you say - deal? Send me a promo code - we can keep it a secret if you like - come on Scott bb -
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You thinking about this Scott? *VS* You are the one? Have you switched on the app? What if I go for 10 of the above? Ok for you Scott BB? What do you say - deal? Send me a promo code - we can keep it a secret if you like - come on Scott bb -
How is behavior like this different from what performers encounter on any other day?
"c'mon bb show me your tits and i'll go prv, i promise"
"i'll pledge toward your group chat bb, just show me what i'm getting first"
"i love your party chats bb, i wish i had some credits i totally would tip"
Performer's have lots of tools at their disposal to deal with beggars.
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