Tuesday, April 7, 2026

DBC 2397 - False Urgency

 

The Banking Tutor 

Daily Banking Concept -  2397 

False Urgency

 

False Urgency is the artificial, manufactured, or exaggerated sense of pressure to act immediately on tasks or purchases that are not truly time-sensitive, often driven by fear, anxiety, or marketing manipulation. It leads to rushed, poor decisions, burnout, and reduced productivity by prioritizing speed over actual importance.

Monday, April 6, 2026

BTL 886 - Amazon Effect

 

The Banking Tutor’s Lessons

BTL 886                                                                                06-04-2026

Amazon Effect  

The "Amazon Effect" refers to the disruption of traditional retail and supply chain models driven by Amazon's focus on consumer convenience, fast shipping, and competitive pricing. It has elevated consumer expectations for instant gratification, forced brick-and-mortar stores to adopt digital strategies, and accelerated the adoption of automated logistics.

Key Components and Impacts:

Consumer Expectations: Shoppers now demand, and expect, free, fast shipping (one-day or same-day) and easy returns.

Retail Disruption: Physical, "brick-and-mortar" stores face immense pressure to pivot toward omni-channel models (combining online and offline), with many downsizing or closing.

Pricing Pressure: The "Amazon Effect" has led to increased price transparency, reducing the ability of retailers to maintain, varied pricing across locations. It has forced competitors to adopt dynamic pricing to stay competitive.

Logistics and Supply Chain: The demand for rapid delivery has transformed logistics, with increased investment in warehouse automation, last-mile delivery, and increased trucking tonnage.

Small Business Opportunities and Threats: While Amazon offers a massive marketplace for third-party sellers, it also introduces intense competition that can threaten small businesses that cannot match their, price, or speed.

The phenomenon, which is a result of the internet's transparency, continues to reshape, not just retail but, the broader economy by, changing, how companies operate and how people shop.

Sekhar Pariti

+91 9440641014

DBC 2396 - Basket sneaking

 

The Banking Tutor 

Daily Banking Concept -  2396 

Basket sneaking

 

Basket sneaking is an unethical e-commerce "dark pattern" where extra products, services, or fees are added to a user’s shopping cart without their explicit consent.

Sunday, April 5, 2026

DBC 2395 - Confirm Shaming

 

The Banking Tutor 

Daily Banking Concept -  2395 

Confirm Shaming 

Confirm Shaming is a deceptive UI/UX pattern that manipulates users into performing an action (like subscribing) by making the alternative option emotionally shameful, embarrassing, or guilt-inducing. It is a form of emotional manipulation used in digital marketing to discourage canceling services or declining offers, often creating guilt or hesitation.

Saturday, April 4, 2026

DBC 2394 - Bait and Switch

 

The Banking Tutor 

Daily Banking Concept -  2394 

Bait and Switch

 

Bait and switch is a deceptive marketing tactic where a seller advertises a bargain-priced item (the "bait") to lure customers, only to disparage it and push a higher-priced, more profitable item (the "switch") once the customer is engaged. This unethical practice is often found in retail, real estate, and online.

Friday, April 3, 2026

Release of Book 182 - FRM - Quantitative Analysis

  Happy to inform that today

 I have shared my 

Book 182 - FRM - Quantitative Analysis.


Those who need may send a message in WhatsApp to me. 

Sekhar Pariti

+91 9440641014

BTL 885 - Information Economy

 

The Banking Tutor’s Lessons

BTL 885                                                                                03-04-2026

Information Economy

An information economy is a modern economic system where the production, distribution, and use of knowledge, data, and digital services drive value creation more than traditional manufacturing.

Key characteristics include high-tech reliance, intellectual property, and networked services, often shifting from industrial to service-based models. 

Key Aspects of the Information Economy:

Knowledge as Asset: Information, software, and intellectual property are treated as primary capital goods.

Digital Transformation: Technologies like AI, big data, cloud computing, and the internet are integral to industry and daily commerce.

Key Sectors: Digital advertising, software development, consulting, financial services, and media are dominant.

Network Effects: Platforms (e.g., Amazon, eBay) gain value from widespread user participation, connecting consumers with data.

Information Asymmetry: A core concept in information economics, exploring how disparities in knowledge between parties (e.g., in healthcare or finance) affect market outcomes. 

Key Trends & Impacts:

Growth: Industrialized nations are heavily driven by information sectors.

Global Access: While it brings economic growth, it also risks widening the "digital divide" between connected and disconnected regions.

Value Shift: The economic focus has moved from producing physical goods to creating the knowledge needed to create or improve them.

Sekhar Pariti

+91 9440641014