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Page "Marketing management" ¶ 37
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Some Related Sentences

More and broadly
More broadly, scholars in the field define aesthetics as " critical reflection on art, culture and nature.
More broadly, philosophers who do not accept the possibility of zombies generally believe that consciousness is reflected in behavior ( including verbal behavior ), and that we attribute consciousness on the basis of behavior.
More broadly speaking, Chinese classic texts may refer to texts, be they written in vernacular Chinese or in classical Chinese, that existed before 1912, when the last imperial Chinese dynasty, the Qing Dynasty, fell.
More broadly, eschatology may encompass related concepts such as the Messiah or Messianic Age, the end time, and the end of days.
More broadly the term is used in a wide number of contexts for an image, picture, or representation ; it is a sign or likeness that stands for an object by signifying or representing it either concretely or by analogy, as in semiotics ; by extension, icon is also used, particularly in modern culture, in the general sense of symbol — i. e. a name, face, picture, edifice or even a person readily recognized as having some well-known significance or embodying certain qualities: one thing, an image or depiction, that represents something else of greater significance through literal or figurative meaning, usually associated with religious, cultural, political, or economic standing.
More broadly, there is a strong presumption against the legality of using, or threatening, military force against another country.
More broadly, some consider the effect to include the tendency of any fluid boundary layer to adhere to a curved surface, not just the boundary layer accompanying a fluid jet.
More broadly, it is the general analysis of nature, conducted in order to understand how the universe behaves.
More recently, Lass ( 1998 ) writes that phonology refers broadly to the subdiscipline of linguistics concerned with the sounds of language, while in more narrow terms, " phonology proper is concerned with the function, behaviour and organization of sounds as linguistic items ".
More broadly, it is the general analysis of nature, conducted in order to understand how the universe behaves.
More broadly, physicists refer to light as electromagnetic radiation of all wavelengths, whether visible or not.
More broadly, since the 1950s Richard's sexuality has become an issue of wider interest and controversy.
More broadly, the term cohabitation can mean any number of people living together.
More broadly, a society may be described as an economic, social, or industrial infrastructure, made up of a varied collection of individuals.
More broadly speaking, it is also an issue of being a worthy successor to a sacred legacy.
More broadly, higher education overall was significantly expanded, with a distinct bias towards the non-university sector.
More broadly, the term " resin " also encompasses a great many synthetic substances of similar mechanical properties ( thick liquids that harden into transparent solids ), as well as shellacs of insects of the superfamily Coccoidea.
More broadly, metalloids have also been referred to as:
More broadly, the effect of any orthogonal matrix separates into independent actions on orthogonal two-dimensional subspaces.
More broadly, a transmembrane domain is any three-dimensional protein structure which is thermodynamically stable in a membrane.
More broadly, it can also refer to the killing of an emperor.
More broadly, eschatology may encompass related concepts such as the Messiah or Messianic Age, the end time, and the end of days.
More broadly, " Sinicization " may refer to policies of acculturation, assimilation, or cultural imperialism of neighbouring cultures to China, depending on historical political relations.
More broadly, Arthur Wilmarth questioned whether those scandals and the “ stock market bubble ” of the late-1990s were linked to the growing role of commercial banks in the securities markets during the 1990s.
More broadly books using similar techniques are known as movable books.

More and marketing
More recently, the development and adoption of these tools and services have fostered greater fluidity and cooperation among sales, service, and marketing.
More recently, through its acquisition of various digital entertainment technology companies and assets, Rovi began developing and marketing software components for enabling video playback in consumer devices.
More often, however, viruses created by other people or spyware installed by marketing agencies can be used to gain access through the security breaches that they create.
Brands still manufactured but no longer receiving significant marketing support include Barclay, Belair, Capri, Carlton, GPC, Lucky Strike, Misty, Monarch, More, Now, Tareyton, Vantage, and Viceroy.
More recent research in 2011 by Qa Research, an independent marketing research agency in the UK, found that 80 % of organisations surveyed had used or are now using coaching, but also found that while 90 % of organisations with over 2, 000 employees had used coaching in the past five years, only 68 % of companies with 230 – 500 employees had done the same.
More innovative approaches to Guerrilla marketing now utilize mobile digital technologies to engage the consumer and create a memorable brand experience.
More recently, it has become fashionable in some marketing circles to divide these further into certain five " Cs ": customer analysis, company analysis, collaborator analysis, competitor analysis, and analysis of the industry context.
More recently, personalized marketing has become practical with bricks and mortar retailers.
' (' Together Everyone Achieves More '), whilst the strapline ' Ordinary boys achieving extraordinary things ' has been adopted for marketing purposes.
More recently, businesses have utilized guided voicemail ( an application where pre-recorded voicemails are guided by live callers ) to accomplish personalized business-to-business marketing formerly reserved for telemarketing.
More recently, GEICO launched a series of television commercials and attempts at viral marketing, collectively known as the GEICO Cavemen advertising campaign, where GEICO announcers are repeatedly denounced by modern cavemen for perpetuating a stereotype of unintelligent, backward cavemen.
More recently, Condé Nast has expanded its offerings to include marketing services and consumer-focused products such as apps and licensed merchandise.
More often than not, people who think about business issues are considering it from an applied perspective, which is to say, what is the best or most effective means of transacting commerce or managing the enterprise, with some goal in mind, usually profitability, improving employee relations, or marketing.
In an attempt to counteract this, the manufacturers responded in the new millennium by introducing bevelled corners to redesigned regular gauge packaging, and marketing their first ' slim ' cigarette in the UK, even though this wasn't the first ' slim ' cigarette available in the UK as More, Karelia and Vogue are available in most tobacconists.

More and managers
More than 80, 000 restaurant managers, mid-managers and owner / operators have graduated from this facility.
On 10 August, More wrote to the St. James Chronicle to protest that she “ never saw, heard, or read, a single line of Mrs. Cowley ’ s Tragedy .” In her preface to Albina, Cowley allows that the theatre managers, who in those days also acted as script editors, may have inadvertently given More her ideas: “ Amidst the croud of Plots, and Stage Contrivances, in which a Manager is involv ’ d, recollection is too frequently mistaken for the suggestions of imagination ” in original.
More recently, one can find accountants, electricians, business managers, engineers, real estate agents and brokers, architects, and police officers among Rose Park residents.
More recently, our graduates have been successful in newly established software firms, both as managers and programmers.
More generally, the label includes such disparate lay, professional, and academic groups as visionaries, foresight consultants, corporate strategists, policy analysts, cultural critics, planners, marketers, forecasters, prediction market developers, roadmappers, operations researchers, investment managers, actuaries and other risk analyzers, and future-oriented individuals educated in every academic discipline, including anthropology, complexity studies, computer science, economics, engineering, evolutionary biology, history, management, mathematics, philosophy, physical sciences, political science, psychology, sociology, systems theory, technology studies, and other disciplines.
More and more purchasing managers were becoming Supply Chain Managers handling additional functions of their organizations operation.
More than its principal rival Electronic News, it balanced its appeal to managerial and technical interests ( at the time of its 1992 makeover, it described itself as a magazine for managers ).
More than one hundred thousand people crowded around the guesthouse, some people were managers, scientists, sheikhs and the other members of the public.

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