Supplier's note
...
Ah, so the Technical Specifications table has Feature, Specification, Benefit. The earlier mention of Technical Parameters Table with Feature, Specification, Application Scenario might be part of the initial instruction but in the format example, it's structured as Technical Specifications with Benefit. Maybe the user wants the Technical Specifications table to include the benefit, and the Application Scenario is part of the Scenario Solution paragraph.
Therefore, I'll proceed with the Technical Specifications table as per the format example, with Benefit. The Scenario Solution paragraph should then explain application scenarios.
So, for the Technical Specifications table:
- Feature: Material, Capacity, Sealing Type, Brush Type, etc.
- Specification: Glass, 5/10/15/20ml, Cap with brush, Synthetic medium, etc.
- Benefit: Durability, Versatility, Secure sealing, even application, etc.
The Scenario Solution paragraph should use examples like "Medium thickness glass ensures durability for professional use" or something based on the vision details. The vision mentions clear glass for visibility, so maybe "Clear glass allows users to easily identify nail polish colors without labels, ideal for DIY projects."
Customization Guide: Adjustable parameters like cap color, bottle shape, surface treatments (engraving, frosting), and printing methods. So the hint could be "Adjust cap colors and surface treatments to match brand aesthetics or personal preferences."
Choose Your Model table: The parameters could be Capacity Range, Surface Treatment Options, Customization Level.
Base Model might have 5-10ml, basic surface treatments (labels, spraying), basic customization.
Advanced: 10-20ml, more treatments like offset printing, engraving, moderate customization.
Pro: All capacities, all surface treatments, full customization.
Comparing against industry benchmarks, maybe the base is standard, advanced is +15% in options, pro is +30%.
Managers Note: First paragraph highlights three breakthroughs. Maybe customizable caps, clear glass visibility, synthetic brushes.
Second paragraph guides selection: Base for personal use, Advanced for small businesses, Pro for high-end brands needing full customization.
I need to ensure all these points are covered in the markdown structure as per the example. Also, use the "With X, you can Y" structure where possible. For example, "With customizable cap colors, you can create a cohesive brand image or personalize for individual clients."
Check if all attributes are included. The product attributes mention printing handling: heat transfer, labels, spraying. Surface handling includes offset printing, engraving, etc. So in the Technical Specifications, under surface handling, list those options as specifications.
Thickness is 2cm. Maybe as a feature, specification 2cm, benefit structural integrity.
Application is personal care, so in the scenario solution, mention personal care applications like DIY nail art, professional salons, etc.
Alright, putting it all together now in the required markdown format.
</think>