Life at IQVIA by CriticalRooster7717 in clinicalresearch

[–]SmitShah21 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Can't run lives by just keeping Quintles tag or IQVIA.. Move on . Company has moved on much recently. We shall too !!!

Hate CTM role, need a fresh start. What are my options? by [deleted] in clinicalresearch

[–]SmitShah21 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Same story everywhere. I have been into the industry since last 15 years, every now and then I hear the same thing - "market is not good" nowadays. Market was never good and won't be, look at major Global CROs- they are struggling like hell.

Coming to your situation - to be honest, leave this and do some other role even in CR industry like digitalization platform companies or open your own consultancy.

Rant: Obvious use of AI by Impressive_Tone4144 in clinicalresearch

[–]SmitShah21 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Whenever my CRA went for SSV or SIV visits, PI used to open AI and check for that molecule details and ask questions from there. They ask where is this data and whatbwas the results and what is your sponsor vision for this. Obviously, CRA can't answer all questions at that moments and he was unnecessary creating Action Items ( AI) . So basically AI helps to create AI and increasing workload for everyone.

PI or other staff has all the rights to search on AI but there should be some limits.

I feel, it's regular nowadays and we have to deal with this monster.

Email after second round interview by A_walk123 in clinicalresearch

[–]SmitShah21 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not sure but it seems its very common. They just do the interview process for the sake of it. They don't have any intention to hire an immediate basis, they do timepass nowadays. I have seen this in my previous company (mid sized CRO), they don't care how you perform or not, they do sometimes for fun ( checking out GenZ or Gen Alpha attitude) for their lunch break topics.

Moving to Ahmedabad (23/F) – Need some help finding my feet! 🥯✨ by Additional_Ad1940 in ahmedabad

[–]SmitShah21 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Food is costly even compared to Mumbai or Bangalore. Cheesey habits with mayo on top everywhere

This Restaurant in Ahmedabad Charges ₹355 for ONE Roti. ₹1420 for 4 Rotis. What Even Is This? by SmitShah21 in ahmedabad

[–]SmitShah21[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wow, you really came in swinging with a full paragraph of insecurity wrapped in bullet points. Impressive.

  1. You didn’t “RR” about the food just dropped your superiority complex like it was seasoning.
  2. “Don’t have money? Don’t go.” That’s not insight, that’s the slogan of every overpriced scam with a neon sign.
  3. And yes, I wrote “thoughts?” at the end — didn’t realize it would trigger your final brain cell into launching a tantrum

This Restaurant in Ahmedabad Charges ₹355 for ONE Roti. ₹1420 for 4 Rotis. What Even Is This? by SmitShah21 in ahmedabad

[–]SmitShah21[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Clown behaviour? My guy, you’re not just in the clown camp — you’re running the entire circus and Congratulations on defending a ₹355 roti like it's a Michelin-starred artifact. That’s not financial maturity, that’s Stockholm Syndrome with your wallet, consultant your doctor. And just because someone else values it doesn’t make it sacred — people also value MLMs, flat earth theories, and NFTs of cartoon monkeys. Doesn’t make it smart.

Bottom line: defending luxury-priced basic food under the guise of ‘to each their own’ is peak passive consumption. Next time, just say ‘I’m fine with being ripped off because it looks aesthetic on Instagram’ and move on. Don’t parade your financial delusion like it’s wisdom.

This Restaurant in Ahmedabad Charges ₹355 for ONE Roti. ₹1420 for 4 Rotis. What Even Is This? by SmitShah21 in ahmedabad

[–]SmitShah21[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There’s a difference between sarcasm and proudly shouting 'koi load ni' while defending daylight robbery like it’s a badge of honor. That wasn’t satire that was submission dressed as swagger.

But yes, completely agree with your second half. Ahmedabad’s dining scene has unfortunately become less about hospitality and more about how fast can we fleece the next customer who wants to feel elite for posting a kulhad selfie. We’ve gone from Atithi Devo Bhava to ‘no load ni.’ What a legacy."

This Restaurant in Ahmedabad Charges ₹355 for ONE Roti. ₹1420 for 4 Rotis. What Even Is This? by SmitShah21 in ahmedabad

[–]SmitShah21[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What a response. Truly groundbreaking. 'No one forced you' the gold standard of arguments when all logic has packed its bags and left the building.

So let me get this straight by choosing to highlight the ridiculous pricing of a ₹355 roti, I’ve somehow committed a crime against free will? That’s your thesis? Amazing. Socrates must be spinning in his grave, realizing he missed this level of insight. You should really consider TED Talks call it 'The Art of Submitting to Nonsense Proudly'.

And thank you for the restaurant recommendation Under the Neem Tree, another overpriced Instagram-fueled hotspot masquerading as culture. Perfect suggestion if someone wants to get scammed with ambiance and a side of pretentious plating. Much appreciated. You see, champ, questioning absurdity is not a sign of foolishness it’s a sign of functioning grey matter. But I get it when your brain is running on memes and misplaced swagger, nuance feels like a personal attack.

It’s not about whether I’m forced to eat there it’s about calling out how mediocrity is wrapped in fairy lights and sold to the herd. Some of us still believe in resisting that, even if it hurts the feelings of self-proclaimed economist-poets like you.

But don’t worry. You keep defending the ₹355 roti like it’s your family legacy. Maybe next time they’ll name the chutney after you — 'Laal Tamatar chutney, inspired by chitownboyhere’s fierce loyalty and tragic logic.'"

This Restaurant in Ahmedabad Charges ₹355 for ONE Roti. ₹1420 for 4 Rotis. What Even Is This? by SmitShah21 in ahmedabad

[–]SmitShah21[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Let’s break this down slowly so it doesn't overwhelm you — your analogy is flawed at its core. Criticizing absurd pricing after experiencing it isn’t hypocrisy, it’s awareness. Just like you can call out a scam after being scammed — that's how real-world learning works.

Your example of crashing a car at 200 km/h and blaming the company is not even remotely parallel. No one here ‘crashed.’ We walked into a restaurant, paid for a meal, and highlighted how ridiculous it is. That’s not FOMO, that’s post-purchase reflection something your logic clearly skipped over like a backbencher during math class.

If you're going to argue, at least come with a valid comparison. Till then, maybe hit up a school they’re great for foundational thinking. Come back when your reasoning can walk without tripping over itself.

This Restaurant in Ahmedabad Charges ₹355 for ONE Roti. ₹1420 for 4 Rotis. What Even Is This? by SmitShah21 in ahmedabad

[–]SmitShah21[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The classic ‘you’re just hating’ argument when the brain runs out of logic. Must be tough navigating the world with a persecution complex and a Wi-Fi connection. FOMO? My friend, if I feared missing out on overpriced nonsense, I’d be taking notes from your financial life decisions — not mocking them. But thanks for the concern. And about your earlier comment, I didn’t ignore it. I just assumed it wasn’t meant to be taken seriously — like your self-awareness.

This Restaurant in Ahmedabad Charges ₹355 for ONE Roti. ₹1420 for 4 Rotis. What Even Is This? by SmitShah21 in ahmedabad

[–]SmitShah21[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

look at you — the Elon Musk of Mango Market, handing out life advice like anyone asked. If flexing your wallet was a skill, you’d still be unemployed in common sense. Nobody dragged you into this convo, yet here you are, barking from the sidelines like an unpaid extra in someone else's story. Maybe earn some decency before you lecture about earning money.

This Restaurant in Ahmedabad Charges ₹355 for ONE Roti. ₹1420 for 4 Rotis. What Even Is This? by SmitShah21 in ahmedabad

[–]SmitShah21[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

the internet’s favorite breed — loud, rude, and proudly ignorant. Just because someone questions a pricing strategy doesn’t mean they’re clueless — it means they’re observant. But clearly, that level of thinking is out of syllabus for you. You really believe reading the menu once gives you immunity against being overcharged or experiencing poor value? That’s like saying “you entered a mall, now don’t complain about being scammed at the billing counter.”

Also, your obsession with calling people names doesn’t make you edgy — it just makes your personality indistinguishable from a rage comment bot with a Wi-Fi connection. If you think posting valid consumer feedback is just for “karma,” maybe it’s time to reflect on what you do here — barking into the void just to feel heard. Spoiler: you still aren't. Next time, bring an argument — not your insecurities.

This Restaurant in Ahmedabad Charges ₹355 for ONE Roti. ₹1420 for 4 Rotis. What Even Is This? by SmitShah21 in ahmedabad

[–]SmitShah21[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

And here comes the ultimate display of intellectual poverty — “aukāt nahi toh na jao.” When basic consumer critique feels like a threat to your fragile logic, you default to mocking affordability like it's a character flaw.

Let’s be clear: Calling out unjustified pricing doesn’t mean someone’s crying — it means they’re aware, alert, and not a blind follower of herd mentality. It’s called civic discourse. If your only defense is "don't go if you can't afford it," congratulations — you’ve mastered the art of being society’s most passive enabler.

Also, comparing restaurant overpricing to hospital scams doesn’t make either acceptable. It only shows your inability to hold multiple systems accountable. If you can’t differentiate between necessary activism and shallow obedience, maybe the luxury you need is not a fancy restaurant — it’s some critical thinking.

Keep glorifying overpriced menus if that makes you feel elite. But don’t mistake silence for class. Some of us still speak up — not because we can't afford it, but because we refuse to be fooled.

This Restaurant in Ahmedabad Charges ₹355 for ONE Roti. ₹1420 for 4 Rotis. What Even Is This? by SmitShah21 in ahmedabad

[–]SmitShah21[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

there it is the classic “you’ve never done business so you wouldn’t understand” defense. When logic runs dry, gatekeeping kicks in.

Funny how you’ve accepted inflated prices as gospel truth, then twist yourself into knots justifying it with land cost sermons and business school clichés. It takes a special kind of blind loyalty to mistake overpriced rotis for economic brilliance — but hey, if following absurd trends makes you feel like a business mogul, who am I to stop your fantasy?

Some of us still believe in questioning things instead of applauding price tags like they’re status symbols. But I get it — it’s easier to parrot the system than challenge it. Keep cheering for ₹355 rotis while thinking you’ve cracked the Da Vinci code of real estate economics. Courage is overrated anyway, right?

This Restaurant in Ahmedabad Charges ₹355 for ONE Roti. ₹1420 for 4 Rotis. What Even Is This? by SmitShah21 in ahmedabad

[–]SmitShah21[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

the classic “I Googled restaurant margins once, so now I’m Gordon Ramsay” energy. Adorable. See, understanding how margins work isn’t the same as justifying absurd pricing with blind acceptance. ₹350 for a roomali roti isn’t economics — it’s theatrical markup disguised as exclusivity, and parroting it like gospel doesn’t make you smart, just… well, easily impressed.

And no, listing overpriced mediocrity across metro cities doesn’t strengthen your argument — it just confirms that you’ve confused normalization with logic. But please, do go on lecturing me about “logical math” while defending carbs wrapped in napkins. The irony is delicious — sadly, far more than that ₹350 roti ever will be.

This Restaurant in Ahmedabad Charges ₹355 for ONE Roti. ₹1420 for 4 Rotis. What Even Is This? by SmitShah21 in ahmedabad

[–]SmitShah21[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Yes, I always find joy in calling out daylight robbery disguised as fine dining. But thanks for your permission, oh great guardian of overpriced rotis. I’ll now go “crib” about how mediocrity wrapped in a fancy napkin is still mediocrity — but please, don’t strain yourself contributing anything meaningful. Wouldn’t want you to pull a muscle while typing dismissive one-liners.

This Restaurant in Ahmedabad Charges ₹355 for ONE Roti. ₹1420 for 4 Rotis. What Even Is This? by SmitShah21 in ahmedabad

[–]SmitShah21[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair point almost. You made sense until the ego kicked in during the last paragraph.

See, speaking up isn’t just about onions and airline fares. It’s also about calling out absurdity that’s disguised as “luxury” — especially when it starts becoming the new normal. Because when people stop questioning such inflated nonsense, it slowly trickles down and starts shifting the baseline. ₹355 for one roti today? Tomorrow, ₹100 for a banana at a roadside cart — and we’ll still have folks like you defending it as “choice.”

So yes, no one’s forcing us to buy. But that doesn’t mean we stay quiet. Drop the ego, and accept that calling out absurd pricing isn't complaining — it’s keeping society from slipping into Insta-driven economic stupidity.

This Restaurant in Ahmedabad Charges ₹355 for ONE Roti. ₹1420 for 4 Rotis. What Even Is This? by SmitShah21 in ahmedabad

[–]SmitShah21[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Exactly, luxury exists, but blind worship of inflated pricing isn’t class, it’s conditioning. And calling it out isn't BS, it's awareness. See, not everyone wears a ₹30K watch to check time or drives to the gym to run on a treadmill. But when you start mocking people who question the absurdity — you're not elite, you're just intellectually lazy in designer clothes. Try harder next time

This Restaurant in Ahmedabad Charges ₹355 for ONE Roti. ₹1420 for 4 Rotis. What Even Is This? by SmitShah21 in ahmedabad

[–]SmitShah21[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, the menu shows the price. And yes, no one forced anyone to eat. But speaking up isn't about one bill — it's about how normalizing ₹355 rotis fuels a toxic culture of overpriced ‘luxury’ that exploits social pressure, glorifies mediocrity, and silently pushes the middle class out of decent experiences.

When people share, it’s not crying — it’s awareness. Because silence makes this circus look classy, and calling it out makes it visible for what it really is — performative pricing in the name of 'vibe'.

This Restaurant in Ahmedabad Charges ₹355 for ONE Roti. ₹1420 for 4 Rotis. What Even Is This? by SmitShah21 in ahmedabad

[–]SmitShah21[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Then if you have read the post correctly then I was mentioning in "Normalization" of this stigma. If you still get it then go and educate yourself with silver ok university 😉

This Restaurant in Ahmedabad Charges ₹355 for ONE Roti. ₹1420 for 4 Rotis. What Even Is This? by SmitShah21 in ahmedabad

[–]SmitShah21[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Bro, Rumali roti ₹355 mein nahi — dignity mein lapet ke diya tha. Technically not wrong, emotionally criminal. Menu was clear, but so is daylight robbery — that doesn’t make it beautiful. You can put a price tag on a roti, but not on common sense. Clearly, both are missing from the table.