It takes much more than water to clean up a dirty car, just like it takes a lot more than a thesaurus to clean up a dirty limerick. Take a more in-depth approach to dirt with today's Groupon to True Fix Auto Repair in Westmont. Choose from the following options:
- For $69, you get the professional detail (a $149.99 value).
- For $119, you get the showroom detail (a $245 value).
- For $159, you get the ultimate detail (a $329.99 value).
The technicians at True Fix Auto Repair tirelessly reinvent roadsters' appearances during two- to four-hour details. After a car wash, each professional detailing package dispatches techs down to the ground to groom rims and wheels. Cleaners probe doorjambs until they forfeit their mucky buildup, and then carefully flush out paw prints with a seat, carpet, and floor-mat shampoo. The showroom detail package builds on the professional detail's grooming by replenishing fading finishes with hand wax and paint protectant, and the ultimate detail package summons technicians to also excavate vents and crevices with a high-pressure air blower, lubricate door hinges, clean the trunk, and remove locusts from the engine. As the ultimate detail concludes, a two-step wax on the exterior leaves the car's complexion glowing like a 100-year-old's birthday cake.
Though True Fix Auto Repair sometimes features a discounted price online, this Groupon still offers the best deal available.
Groupon Says
The Groupon Guide to: Advertising Soup
In this economy, soup isn’t going to sell itself. Only the perfect commercial is going to get those cans flying off the shelves. But what are the elements of a good soup ad?
The setting can make someone immediately yearn for a bowl of the hot stuff. Good settings include:
• A wealthy person’s farmhouse glowing warmly in a snowy wooded area (farmhouse should show no signs of actual farming)
• A small but cozy shack standing on a craggy cliff over a violent sea
• A bread factory
The main character is the viewer’s connection to the soup. It should be:
• A loving yet endearingly inept dad. He is in decent shape, not too handsome, and wearing a sweater and/or tucked-in collared shirt.
• A Victorian sailor’s wife. She is pale and beautiful, yet jagged. It has been a hard life.
• A bunch of working-class bread-factory guys who are hungry but tired of all this dry bread.
The story of the ad then whips the potential customers into a soup-eating frenzy by depicting:
• The dad’s son playing in the snow. The dad wants his son to love him but he cannot prepare a meal on his own. He makes the son soup, and the two bond over a game of checkers in front of a fireplace. Mom does not interfere.
• The wife gazes longingly at the sea during a windy, daytime rainstorm. She misses her husband’s warm, hearty arms but finds solace in a thick chowder that possesses those same qualities. Just as she finishes her bowl the husband kicks down the door. He has returned from his voyage and he has brought her many exotic hats.
• The bread-factory guys make some soup and have a crazy party wherein they dip the dry crusty breads into the steaming bowls with much joviality and merrymaking. What a day they’ve had.
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