Duracell, the battery-maker, built parts of its new international headquarters using materials from its own waste.
89
As part of an advertising campaign, Molson, a Canadian beer company, strategically placed 'beer fridges' around Europe that only Canadian passports could unlock.
11
If you pronounce the names of products wrong in an Apple Store, employees are not allowed to correct you.
5
McDonald's serves 75 hamburgers every second, according to the company’s Operations and Training Manual.
5
Blockbuster laughed at a Netflix partnership proposal in 2000.
20
The CEO of Japan Airlines makes $90,000 a year, less than the pilots. During an interview, he said "We in Japan learned during the bubble economy that businesses who pursue money first fail. The business world has lost sight of this basic tenet of business ethics."
9
There's a café in France which charges €7 for a coffee to rude customers and €1.40 to people who talk politely to staff.
17
It has been scientifically proven that praise rather than criticism is the best way to help employees improve.
10