Sentences with phrase «most companies seem»

Ahead, there's only three more steps to the top but most companies seem to settle within the «A» range for some time and this means they're more than financially secure.
That said most companies seem unable to use them in non destructive ways.
I could suggest it to the SEC / NAIC, but they aren't that concerned about reserving at present because most companies seem to play fair.
In fact, Viliv is the first company to come up with a tablet that has a resolution of 1366 x 768 pixels when most companies seem to be all too happy to stick to the 1024 x 600 pixel domain and is far better than the iPad's 1024 x 768 resolution.
The CX - 9 has aged well, though it probably helps that most companies seem to be devoting their attention to smaller segments at this point.

Not exact matches

Like most cable companies, Comcast also seems to be doing not a bad job of shifting customers to lower - priced «skinny bundles» so that it doesn't lose them completely.
Those companies that need the most control over the actual work, either via training or branding, seem to be most at risk.
It seems an absurd question to be asking about a company like Research In Motion, Canada's most successful and influential tech firm.
But based on the two companies» most recent updates on subscriber growth, Spotify seems to be growing faster.
Large though that figure may seem, analysts say it's within investor expectations: Delivery Hero, which brokers deliveries from a network of restaurants or brings the food to customers» homes via courier, was most recently valued at between 3.5 billion euros ($ 3.9 billion) and 4 billion euros ($ 4.1 billion), when it raised funding from Naspers, a South African e-commerce company.
The problem here is that, for most observers, what Virtustream does seems a lot like what VMware, another Dell company, proposed to do with its own cloud offerings.
By integrating Zappos into a city, Hsieh wondered, could he cheat the slow decline that seems to befall most large companies?
That might seem unfair to judge the company and its flagship conference on a single flopped product, but the fate of Glass is just the most high - profile in a long list of disappeared or disappointing products ranging from Google Reader to Google Wave to the Nexus Q and Android Wear — a platform that still exists, but I usually forget to wear my devices that run it.
But at an age when most Canadians are thinking about retirement, you seem to be getting even more active in the business community, as a mentor and private investor to at least six up - and - coming companies.
The latest sale is similar, though there seem to be a few differences compared to the company's most - recent offerings.
When customers are paying for goods at the cash register, ask how they heard about your business and keep track of what seems to be the most effective method for promoting the company.
There are three ways that seem to be the most popular for companies who are just getting started with a program
In a situation which seems alien to the world of business, SAAS companies are effectively competing to see who can provide the most high - quality and relevant material to their users for free, and with very little chance of direct ROI in the immediate future.
The Boring Company will also use novel engineering to tunnel faster, cheaper, and better than anyone else; a feat which seems reasonable to achieve when you have billions of dollars and excellent engineers at your disposal — which, realistically, solves most engineering problems.
Lots of third - party delivery companies have rushed in to meet this need, and they may seem interchangeable to most consumers: After all, if Delivery.com, Seamless, Orderup and others all deliver the same food from the same restaurants, what's to differentiate them?
It seems most of the government's $ 787 billion went to states and big companies.
So how does a company become infected with bro culture, and why does it seem to plague startups the most?
The bottom line is that Apple's ambitions in the content industries seem to be hampered in part by a lack of a consistent vision about what the company wants to do and why, combined with a culture clash between existing movie studios and TV networks about who is the most important player in the relationship, and who gets to control the terms.
I think much of what the Jacobs brothers have done is smart, most of it is interesting, and some of it is even (hold on... this is hard for me...) inspirational to brand marketers, wholesalers, nascent philanthropists, and entrepreneurs who worry that their company's proposition seems too simple to work.
Regional companies seemed a good point of comparison, since most of the rubber companies in Bowers's market are large public companies.
The most important part of the story, though, seems to be the company's early years spent prototyping with lithium - ion manufacturing equipment inherited from failed battery startup A123 Systems.
Still, most consumers in the U.S. seem to prefer spending time in mobile apps, especially those from just a few companies, Google included.
One has to think that this must all seem rather daunting for small businesses; for the most part they understand the importance of valuing their company, but lack the necessary resources to do so.
Now, they are suddenly getting calls from companies that seem to have access to capital through the stock market, even if most of them do not really have available capital; all they want is to add the word «cannabis» to their name in order to give their share prices a boost.
Kogan seemed most comfortable during the session when he was laying into Facebook's platform policies — perhaps unsurprisingly, given how the company has sought to paint him as a rogue actor who abused its systems by creating an app that harvested data on up to 87 million Facebook users and then handing information on its users off to third parties.
The suggestion of changing Facebook's default privacy settings from opt - out to opt - in, meaning the company would need to ask for permission to collect data right away instead of collecting it by default, seems like it would be the most dangerous to Facebook.
Most big finance firms are public companies these days and have shareholders to answer to, but seem to share much greater portion of its profits with their employees.
The largest UK companies that seems to get the most play is BP and UL I'd say.
In part, that's likely because Parker finally took their concerns to heart and is taking action to change Nike's culture by dismissing what he seems to believe were the most problematic executives at the company.
For most of the public, all of this may seem to offer lots of comedy, but will likely become an obscure footnote, both internally and externally, in a corporate history... of the Gannett Company.
In most companies, there seems to be a perpetual debate between marketing and sales over lead quality and lead volume.
But today, investors seem to be looking at any media company that makes most of its money — or at least a lot of money, in Comcast's case — selling TV shows and TV advertising and saying Screw it!
It's remarkable how negative hype mounts when you're running the world's hottest car company, and can't seem to hit production targets for your best - selling — actually, that is the most - ordered, since Tesla can't sell them until it builds them — model, the $ 35,000 - and - up Model 3 sedan.
It seems Alexa might be suffering a software glitch, because when Muriel Bowser, the mayor of Washington, posted a video on Sept. 15 asking, «Alexa, where is the most interesting company in the world going to locate?»
Most bitcoin exchange and trading companies operate a general bitcoin exchange and trading business that involves every business activity or services that a standard bitcoin exchange and trading platform / company is expected to offer, that is why it seems like there are no niche areas in the industry.
Most of the blockchain companies do develop their own currency since this is a decentralized process, fiat currency seems to be not working within the ecosystem.
Ironically, the thing many companies seem to care about the most (its stock price) would likely do much better over the long run if the distraction of worrying about analysts» ratings was eliminated.
Most companies don't seem to like to keep much around.
The initial applications for Toyota's shuttle, called e-Palette, will vary company to company but for the most part seem to focus on creating an on - demand retail experience — with the exception of Uber.
The reality on the ground seems to be that most small company CEOs want to have a hand in developing their analytical capabilities gradually, not in a single big - bang moment.
What I've noticed about Chickfila that I respect: always clean, give back to the community by providing many people an entry level job (they always seem like they have an extra 3 - 4 workers that most companies that don't care about keeping tables clean and ketchup full would eliminate), and if you order correctly you can get a fairly nutritious meal while on the road.
Most started playing professionally on one of the thousands of semi-pro clubs and company teams scattered across the country: steel mills and ice creameries offered $ 40 a month plus a job for good arms and hot bats, and every small town in the Midwest seemed to have its own amateur squad.
Seems to me that companies advertising their Christian principles deserve to be called on it when those principles are short on the tolerance and brotherly love that Jesus identified as most important, and instead focus on the «below the belt» issues so favored by the politically ambitious.
Nobody seems to know precisely when Mount Gay started producing rum, but the date of 1703 was given most often, with 1663 also appearing in the company's brochure.
Barry Callebaut's arrangements within the past year with confectionery giants such as Hershey, Nestle and, most recently, Cadbury, seem to have helped the company strengthen its position within the market.
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