Sentences with phrase «dollar company so»

It is a multi-billion dollar company so I assume there will be multiple recruiters.

Not exact matches

If major companies aren't so quick to throw away and waste dollars (which likely won't happen soon), its better for all companies as a whole to set factual rates.
So if the value of the dollar rose, Mexican companies could raise their prices in pesos to pay for the tariff, and those higher prices wouldn't be felt by American consumers because higher value dollars would compensate for the difference.
We want to be a catalyst investor, so our $ 150 million ends up being over a billion dollars as it gets invested in these companies.
So why would a company that has colonized most of the known world over the last two decades slough off its billion - dollar brand?
The search company was one of the most vocal supporters of net neutrality and openness in wireless, going so far as to bid billions of dollars to ensure that people could use whatever devices and apps they wanted on whatever networks they wanted.
During the Q&A for Malcolm Gladwell, who gave an opening keynote speech on differing innovation styles, addressed this point while fielding a question about why so few women - owned companies break the million dollar mark.
But doing business with that company still makes sense because Peachtree shows its inventory turning far faster than others, explains Garrett, so Triad gets a return on the same dollar invested more times a year than with other lines.
So private equity firms need to use their balance sheet skills and they have to be more ruthless in wringing every last dollar of synergy out of the purchase for a company that they possibly can.
Within the first two years of starting FedEx, founder Frederick Smith found his company so many millions of dollars in debt, because of sharply rising fuel costs, that he was nearly ready to declare bankruptcy.
We might be losing $ 50 million per day today because our pipelines feed the middle of North America as opposed to the coasts, but when companies were selling the idea of more pipelines right into the heart of the now - discounted mid-continent market, they did so on the basis that we'd make millions of dollars per day taking advantage of a growing market premium.
Or so bets Venrock's Bryan Roberts, whose 20 - year record as a healthcare venture capitalist has involved hearing some 25,000 pitches and shepherding nine portfolio companies with billion - plus dollar valuations.
I think that with the strong dollar, certain companies will look to make acquisitions, mainly in the United States, because it is now less costly to do so.
Like Elon Musk's company, Blue Origin is engineering its rockets to safely land back on earth so they can be reused, thus shaving tens of millions of dollars off the cost of each launch.
So, with only a few dollars left to his name, he started Phillips Painting, a painting and home repair company.
«There are billions of dollars running through the marketplace, so there are plenty of ways that company could make money, whether that be a listing fee or ads,» he says.
The invoices from the lumber company are all sizes, from just a few dollars to up to $ 20,000 or so, depending on what they bring to the job site and when.
FORTUNE — One of America's most far - seeing companies, Vertex Pharmaceuticals, the biopharmaceutical startup so memorably chronicled in journalist Barry Werth's classic book, The Billion Dollar Molecule: The Quest for the Perfect Drug, is back.
The 128 - year - old beauty company, known for products such as Skin - So - Soft and ANEW skincare, has been hit by a triple whammy: the rise in sales of low - priced beauty products at mass - market chains such as Walgreen (WAG) and Dollar General (DG), the apparent obsolescence of its direct - selling model for beauty items, and ill - advised forays into fashion, jewelry and pricier skincare products that alienated many customers.
If a bunch of untrained amateurs can identify fake news being promoted on Facebook or YouTube, then so can a bunch of super-geniuses working at companies approaching trillion - dollar valuations.
So with Rakuten at our side and at our back, I see Kobo becoming a multi-billion dollar company.
ICOs have now raised nearly four times as much money as bitcoin companies raised in venture capital dollars so far this year.
But as Zach Ware, who started the (now - defunct) transportation startup Shift, so poignantly put it: «It is often difficult for founders to remember that the world is not a better place if you build a billion - dollar company that kills you.»
It's become very clear we can't assume a billion - dollar company is legit just because some venture investors said so.
The company hopes its «Squarescription» will tap into the same market for having personal care products delivered to the door that has proved so profitable for the likes of Dollar Shave Club.
He wouldn't comment on the latest valuation of his company, but it could be worth hundreds of millions of dollars given that it has raised over $ 100 million so far.
So many companies have lost thousands of dollars because they used content without permission.
In one of the biggest changes in digital media, companies are racing to reinvent television so they can get access to the billions of dollars in TV advertising.
Many on this list represent mistakes so large, and sometimes so systemic, they shook companies, startups, and nonprofits to their core, derailed (or nearly derailed) billion - dollar political campaigns, and destroyed the legacy of an icon.
So while it's true that weaker global demand and the stronger dollar is a headwind for big American manufacturing companies, hiring data suggest domestic consumption will continue to expand.
Furthermore, oil companies are conservative, so convincing them to make a radical split, even if it could potentially unlock billions of dollars in value, won't be easy.
Both the companies I consulted with added all these services plus various «pre-need» insurance plans so the funeral of the future can be paid for in today's dollars.
Some of the biggest companies in the world are using our data and making billions of dollars on it, and we need to find a way how we tap into that so that our journalism remains stronger than ever.»
Then, on top of that, you increasingly have brand advertising dollars — also an order of magnitude more than direct response dollars — looking for somewhere to go other than TV, and it just so happens that Facebook is the perfect brand advertising platform.2 The company has the right set of products in the right market at the right time.
So I think a litmus test is always just to say if we took the dollars out of it, is there a deal that we would want to do with this company?
State owned Chinese energy companies are not pouring billions of dollars into developing Alberta's oil sands so more synthetic crude or bitumen can be sent to refineries in Cushing Oklahoma.
So Europeans and Asians see U.S. companies pumping more and more dollars into their economies, not only to buy their exports in excess of providing them with goods and services in return, and not only to buy their companies and commanding heights of privatized public enterprises without giving them reciprocal rights to buy important U.S. companies (remember the U.S. turn - down of Chinas attempt to buy into the U.S. oil distribution business), and not only to buy foreign stocks, bonds and real estate.
The attack has likely sharply lowered the price Avid Life could muster in any sale of assets, assuming it could find a buyer willing to take on a company facing several multi-million dollars lawsuits and the challenge of rebuilding a computer network that has been so badly infiltrated.
So the company is now emphasizing its value marketing including on certain breakfast sandwiches as competition heats up in the morning, and on specific items on its Dollar Menu.
Still, we might reasonably look askance at a company that works so assiduously to squeeze every last dollar out of the tax system.
First, why do tech companies charge so much for just a few dollars of extra stuff?
So Prevezon is a holding company with links to Russian elites that has been accused of laundering hundreds of millions of dollars through New York City real estate.
AT&T and Time Warner have said there won't be any incentive for a combined company to threaten to withhold content or increase prices, because by doing so, it would risk distributors walking away, leaving the company out tens of millions of dollars in ad revenue and subscription fees — far greater than any revenue AT&T might pick up from customers who would switch to its own pay - TV services in order to get Time Warner content back.
It turns our that one reason for the low percentage of dollars going to companies with women CEO's and executives is that there are so few women VCs.
LVLT fascinates most people because of the Walter Scott connection, technology relationship, the apparent contradiction to Warren's investment principles and the fact that so many Omaha and Berkshire shareholders have lost 90 cents of every dollar invested in this company.
It doesn't matter whether they are grannies buying ten shares of Google, or hotshot CEO's acquiring billion dollar companies, none of us are so perfect that we are not susceptible to a great sales pitch.
Logistically speaking, management only gets to use $ 0.23 on the dollar to buy back stock, pay down debt, and grow the company so that it can make even larger dividend payments in the future.
 Almost a quarter of that was the auto aid. It was important for preserving jobs, for sure. But does it count as «stimulus,» in the sense of stimulating expenditure? I don't think so. It was more in the realm of a balance sheet transfer that kept an important company going. If the auto aid was «stimulus,» then so too was the much larger line of credit which Ottawa advanced to the banks (they could have tapped $ 200 billion under Mr. Flaherty's EFF mechanism)-- all of which was also repaid. In that case, Ottawa's «stimulus» was more like a quarter - trillion dollars... far outpacing everyone else in the OECD as a share of GDP! Of course that's nonsense. This was just one of many ways that Ottawa inflated the true value of its stimulus effort last year (including counting as «stimulus» the increase in EI payouts that automatically accompanied last year's mass layoffs).
1) Charities spend their income on necessities, such as food and utilities, which ever - so - slightly re-orients our economy toward recession - resistant products, rather than luxuries 2) Charities spend their money quickly, but on independent schedules, making for a smoother stimulus effect on the economy 3) Charities make purchases tax - free, meaning that $ 1 spent by a charity generates a full $ 1 of private economic activity; furthermore, much of those tax revenues are recovered as income tax on the grocery stores, utility companies, etc. that might not have received that income otherwise 4) Charitable giving is by far the most democratic way to improve society; from birth control to bombers, government assuredly spends money on something you don't like, and charitable giving restores your say - so 5) Charitable donations are tax deductible, meaning you keep those tax dollars in your local community 6) Charitable donations provide the funds necessary for volunteers to serve the needy, thus giving «the average citizen» a chance to meet and interact with the needy, breaking down stereotypes
Of course nobody with a brain goes to Wal - Mart anyway, and isn't it funny that these so - called «religious» companies seem to include the oh - co-Christian practices of animal torture and sweat - shop promotion in their whoring after the almighty dollar.
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