Chinese product culture places significant weight on collective consumer experience as a quality indicator. The accumulated judgments of many users—visible through reviews, ratings, sales volumes, and market reputation—reveal quality more reliably than any individual’s assessment. When evaluating products, attend carefully to this collective wisdom: what have other users experienced? Are there consistent patterns in feedback?
When presenting products, recognize that track record with real users matters enormously. New products without user history face higher skepticism and require other forms of evidence. Customer feedback should be taken seriously and addressed; responsiveness to user experience signals commitment to quality. This is not about following crowds blindly but about recognizing that distributed experience corrects for individual bias and reveals patterns that single users cannot see.
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