CAT | Restaurants
Do you want to know where the best place to find red lobster coupons is? You can find the coupons in many different places but the best would be the internet. Why? It’s because you can go to many different sources and even get it directly from the website. It’s a lot more convenient than checking their restaurant site every now and then. You can save a lot of money and times by using the internet for searching new coupons codes.
When you find the coupons, you can print the ones that you would like to use at the restaurant. If you don’t need all of them then give them to your friends and families so they will also enjoy dining with great seafood dishes and paying less. The coupons will also make a good gift to those who love seafood cuisine. Red Lobster makes your meal more adventurous and affordable..
Indian Culture: On Moving Up in Society
It is not all about pricing. An article in Time’s 24 October 2011 edition entitled The Little Car that Couldn’t talked about Tata’s Nano, Indian culture and retail market.
In an effort to capture the low-priced, mass market Indian car-buying public, Tata sold the Nano for one-lakh or 100,000 rupee ($2k). Including taxes, transportation costs and basic add-ons however, the total price of the car reached $3,700. At this level, it is only a few hundred dollars cheaper than the well-established Maruti 800. This made many in India’s buying public choose to purchase the slightly more expensive brand which communicates a higher status symbol and perception of a life that is richer and more desirable. India is willing to move up and is moving up. It wants to let it be known to the world, such as what car brands are patronised, that emotion rules over austerity. Noted in the article is that people in India and in the neighbourhood such as Sri Lanka still “want a vehicle to be a status symbol, and that sometimes overrides convenience and economics” (Time, 24 October 2011).
This is the new look of Indian culture and retail market. Indian Culture: Tiffin Wallahs
Personal fast food delivery, straight from the home to the office, Indian style: the Tiffin Wallah. Tiffin means light lunch or lunch container in old English. This is the reason why carriers of these lunch boxes in Mumbai are called Tiffin Wallahs. Below is a background of the Tiffin Wallahs of Mumbai, a unique aspect of Indian culture.
Sometimes called a Dabbawallah, the Tiffin Wallah is a runner, in Mumbai, tasked to collect freshly cooked lunch food from homes of the office workers to the respective offices. The Tiffin Wallahs go to each home which has designated dabbas or lunch food for pick-up. These dabbas have unique marks (colours, symbols) on them. These are then brought to a designated arranging-categorising area. The dabbas are sorted, grouped, sometimes bundled up, marked (includes rail station and building address) to show the box’s destination and placed in a vehicle assigned to particular route. Upon reaching a station, the local Tiffin Wallah will distribute the lunch boxes in his designated location. After the meal, the empty tiffins are again accumulated and returned to respective originating homes.
The Tiffin Wallahs and their food delivery system is the distinctive fast food distribution network in Indian culture.
This article has been brought to you by Koolba Glasgow.
