Selling me a product is really easy.
That’s not to say I’m a sucker consumer, it’s just that one feature is guaranteed to make me choose your item over a competitor’s. The answer? Insane legroom.
Last weekend I decided it was time to replace the desk chair I had been using since my sophomore year of college. It served admirably — except the few…or many times I leaned back to far and fell over — but sometimes even good relationships must come to an end.
I went to Staples, which in addition to having 74,000 kinds of pens also has quite an array of chairs. Fortunately, I quickly narrowed down the field to two candidates. Unfortunately, they happened to be almost back-to-back, meaning I had quite a walk to shuttle between them during the all-important sit testing.
I really could have gone with either of them, but when I raised one to its highest level and sat down, I felt uncomfortably high. As a six-foot-three-inch person, that’s quite a rare experience. I bought the chair.
Buying my car in 2004 was a similar experience. I climbed in for the test drive and reflexively slid the seat all the way back. That’s what I had done in every car I had driven before that day, usually leaving me to just deal with getting as close to comfortable as I could get.
But in this case, it was too far. It was the first time I felt like I couldn’t reach the pedals.
Perhaps this advice to manufacturers is limited to certain products, but if someone* makes a soda with amazing leg room, I’ll definitely buy it.
*These people would be Pepsi, since Pepsi is amazing.
Isn't the height of the desk you're at more important than the chair height? I cross my legs at work, and I can't stand when someone has a keyboard holder under their desk that I can't help but hit with my knees.
There are definitely multiple factors to consider. No chair works with those keyboard holders, but with them out of the way I could definitely boost these chairs a few inches and still have some room.