Haha I like your opening, and I want to support your product! The animal carcass on the road really needs to be handled well. Some animals’ bodies will stink, and some animal's bodies even with disease. Proper handling is not only a good impact on the environment but also a respect for those animals. I like your idea!
Awesome job! I love that you get straight to the point and your tone throughout the video is comical and fun. Not all pitches need to be so serious and I like that you showed that in your assignment. I also enjoyed the fact that we can get a free t-shirt out of this, but on a serious note, I liked that you pointed out the diseases that can arise from the dead animals, it creates a sense of urgency and need in the consumers and those that want to support your service. Great job, I want my t-shirt.
As it is now, most cities have departments (usually small ones) dedicated to collecting and disposing of roadkill. Or these duties are delegated to other city employees (like animal control and even law enforcement sometimes) depending upon funding and availability. In addition to that, how often is roadkill enough of a problem to warrant privatizing your service? As someone that lived up north for most of my childhood, and also spends plenty of time on country roads nearby, I see roadkill maybe once every three or so weeks (usually a squirrel or cat), and it's usually gone within 3-4 days.
Haha I like your opening, and I want to support your product! The animal carcass on the road really needs to be handled well. Some animals’ bodies will stink, and some animal's bodies even with disease. Proper handling is not only a good impact on the environment but also a respect for those animals. I like your idea!
ReplyDeleteAwesome job! I love that you get straight to the point and your tone throughout the video is comical and fun. Not all pitches need to be so serious and I like that you showed that in your assignment. I also enjoyed the fact that we can get a free t-shirt out of this, but on a serious note, I liked that you pointed out the diseases that can arise from the dead animals, it creates a sense of urgency and need in the consumers and those that want to support your service. Great job, I want my t-shirt.
ReplyDeleteGreat Job! I love your energy, the way you talk and the way you develop these ideas. Keep perusing it because it will pay off.
ReplyDeleteAs it is now, most cities have departments (usually small ones) dedicated to collecting and disposing of roadkill. Or these duties are delegated to other city employees (like animal control and even law enforcement sometimes) depending upon funding and availability. In addition to that, how often is roadkill enough of a problem to warrant privatizing your service? As someone that lived up north for most of my childhood, and also spends plenty of time on country roads nearby, I see roadkill maybe once every three or so weeks (usually a squirrel or cat), and it's usually gone within 3-4 days.
ReplyDelete