Sentences with phrase «larger slice of the pie»

With the shift on to smaller, more independent production, Canada is poised to take an even larger slice of the pie.
The latest proposal, penned by charter school advocate Sen. Jerry Tillman (R - Randolph), would disrupt that funding relationship and would actually give charter schools an unfairly larger slice of the pie, said Hollamon.
I left at the end of a seven ‑ year stint, realizing that no matter what type of progressive commission split I put in place, there were still salespeople who thought the office took too large a slice of the pie.
Woolworths still maintains the largest slice of the pie, while Coles continued to improve.
The middle quintile gets the largest slice of the pie, 40 percent.
And, because I was rightly chastised by someone for not pointing this out, authors get a larger slice of the pie if you buy your copies from the NRP store.
It seems that a number of investors want a larger slice of the pie now that the company is attracting more attention and shares on the public market are going up.
The industry e-book sales figures don't include sales from independent authors (like yours truly), who are probably earning a larger slice of the pie.
The U.S. takes the largest slice of the pie with nearly 52 percent of travelers departing locally.
Departing (selling) shareholders are selling out at a poor price, whether they realize it or not, while remaining shareholders get to enjoy a larger slice of the pie each.
Taking all the sales data into account again, PlayStation products took a larger slice of the pie on Black Friday, taking a 48 % share when they'd normally have 40 %, while Microsoft and Nintendo had somewhat smaller shares, down to 32 % from a standard 39 % for Microsoft and down to 19 % from a standard 20 % for Nintendo.
Unfortunately, art fairs have also taken a larger slice of the pie.
Countries remained deadlocked on the critical issue of finance, especially with the United States taking its large slice of the pie off the table.
Chief among these were hiring more associates (to increase leverage) and decreasing the percentage of associates who moved on to become partners (therefore ensuring a large slice of the pie for each partner).
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