Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The following terms are in everyday use in financial regions, such as commercial business and the management of large organisations such as corporations. Noun phrases [ edit ]
The following partial list contains marks which were originally legally protected trademarks, but which have subsequently lost legal protection as trademarks by becoming the common name of the relevant product or service, as used both by the consuming public and commercial competitors. These marks were determined in court to have become generic.
A single-serving site (SSS) is a website composed of a single page with a dedicated domain name and which serves only one purpose. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The term was originally coined by Jason Kottke in February 2008, [ 3 ] although single-serving sites have existed since the dawn of the web.
The business strategy defines what business the firm is in, for example, the Walt Disney Company defines its business strategy "as making people happy." A business strategy also defines the target market, competitors, financial goals, new products, how the company competes, and perhaps some aspects of operations. Following from the business ...
Most modern business theorists see a continuum with pure service on one terminal point and pure commodity good on the other terminal point. [2] Most products fall between these two extremes. For example, a restaurant provides a physical good (the food), but also provides services in the form of ambience, the setting and clearing of the table ...
The primacy of the metaphoric process in the literary schools of Romanticism and symbolism has been repeatedly acknowledged, but it is still insufficiently realized that it is the predominance of metonymy which underlies and actually predetermines the so-called 'realistic' trend, which belongs to an intermediary stage between the decline of ...
Service Integration and Management (SIAM) is an approach to managing multiple suppliers of services (business services as well as information technology services) and integrating them to provide a single business-facing IT organization. It aims at seamlessly integrating interdependent services from various internal and external service ...
The service reusability principle is a design principle, applied within the service-orientation design paradigm, to create services [1] that can be reused across a business. [2] These reusable services are designed so that their solution logic is independent of any particular business process or technology.