Sentences with phrase «in consumer habits»

Awareness, education and simple tools will encourage change in consumer habits.
While the exact meaning of the word «dominant» can be debated, it nevertheless suggests a radical shift in consumer habits away from print to digital.
This presents businesses with enormous opportunities for global growth if they can spot the lucrative parallels in consumer habits that arise in different markets.
The home represents a major opportunity for foodservice, since it plays a pivotal role in consumer habits.
She attributes the decline to a shift in consumer habits and new beverage options — sports drinks and bottled teas and water among them.
We recently discovered similarities in consumer habits between Brazil and China in the way people choose which children's products to buy, like push - chairs and car seats, and what marketing they respond to the most.
In advocating for a change in consumer habits while calling Buy Nothing Day «cartoonish and silly,» Revkin shows himself to be the kind of middle - of - the - road scale - worker who keeps this debate from moving forward.
The priest went on to assert the need to «influence people to see a spiritual connection in their consumer habits (so) that they can see the consequences of their buying, the consequences have on people in Appalachia and also in other parts of God's kingdom.»
Wearables that attach to the skin, such as MC10's Biostamp, are also part of this category — though they're in a «more embryonic state» and require a much larger shift in consumer habits than a smart watch, Juniper says.
Labor rights issues are broad and complex, and we can't always be certain that a small change in our consumer habits will improve the industry.
And these financial woes have not been unexpected: Years of debt, changes in consumer habits and the inability to steer traditional retail funds toward ecommerce platforms are the factors to blame, according to analysts and court filings.
Guillaume Dervieux, CEO of the family - owned French publishing company Albin Michel wondered if perhaps the industry expected «too much, too soon,» from the e-book format, and remarked that even by the «grace of Jeff Bezos and huge discounts,» such a large shift in consumer habits could not happen in such a hurry.
Battered by critics, nibbled at by new competitors (Subway, Sonic, Quiznos), undermined by overbuilding and a failure to adapt to changes in consumer habits and tastes, the giant was out of breath and sagging over its belt.
But to spark that kind of change in consumer habits — and indeed to counter the corporate messages that suggest disposability is good — we need to draw the long connection — from the turtle to the consumer.
Change is urgently being demanded by market forces — shifts in consumer habits, intolerable rising costs to advertisers and through a nearly universal dissatisfaction with the advertising models that have dominated (plagued) the U.S. digital economy.
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