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AVG
Why Avast still keeps AVG software?
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<blockquote data-quote="RoboMan" data-source="post: 925868" data-attributes="member: 53544"><p>It's a common sales tactics. When company X gets bought for being either too good or having too many customers, such users are usually loyal to the company. You want to make sure they feel nothing has changed. That's why many times competition is bought, the same name remains, and the only thing that usually changes is now they're part of "X group", but the product name remains. For example, when Facebook bought WhatsApp, theye could have either deleted it from existence so Facebook Messenger could gain power, or they even could have rebranded it to "Facebook Messenger" or "Messenger by Facebook". But that's a terrible idea, because most WhatsApp users would have uninstalled and switched to another application, since WhatsApp wasn't WhatsApp anymore. Customers use to think their favourite product is dead if it's bought and rebranded.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RoboMan, post: 925868, member: 53544"] It's a common sales tactics. When company X gets bought for being either too good or having too many customers, such users are usually loyal to the company. You want to make sure they feel nothing has changed. That's why many times competition is bought, the same name remains, and the only thing that usually changes is now they're part of "X group", but the product name remains. For example, when Facebook bought WhatsApp, theye could have either deleted it from existence so Facebook Messenger could gain power, or they even could have rebranded it to "Facebook Messenger" or "Messenger by Facebook". But that's a terrible idea, because most WhatsApp users would have uninstalled and switched to another application, since WhatsApp wasn't WhatsApp anymore. Customers use to think their favourite product is dead if it's bought and rebranded. [/QUOTE]
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