If your cover fails to accomplish the first two, you've
lost a sale right off.
surely the company would have
lost sales right?
Not exact matches
Google came off as a bit of a cry - baby when it complained about
losing out on a
sale of Nortel patents to a group of its rivals, including Apple and Microsoft, but the company was
right in a way.
If you waste five minutes of your prospect's time droning on about a product feature or service offering that isn't going to positively affect the company's primary business need
right now, chances are high that you'll
lose the
sale.
And when a fast - food restaurant can't do the «fast» part
right, it starts to
lose sales, which explains McDonald's prolonged financial doldrums.
Last year,
Right to Buy
sales accounted for 88 % of the total number of social homes
lost in the capital.
With holiday decor and Santa in the mall
right after Halloween, Gray Thursday, Cyber Monday, and all of the pre-Black Friday
sales, this year's holiday shopping season for me has
lost its magic.
But the price was
right and they were final
sale so I did what I had to do: set up shop in our garage this past weekend, spray painted them a glossy white,
lost ten million brain cells in the process, and tied a navy tassel around the drawer pull as a little finishing touch.
(Indeed, Amazon stands to make more money from the agency model;
right now, it
loses money on e-book
sales, which it makes up for in Kindle
sales.)
Without the
right pages on your website, you're
losing sales.
The Nook line could be the key to Barnes & Noble's future, but
right now it's also a weight hanging around its neck, as slow
sales of the Simple Touch e-reader prompted a fire
sale to help move more HD + inventory, and the Nook division
lost cash in the most recent fiscal quarter.
Now what would possibly work is selling people the physical book AND including
rights to download the ebook as well, contrary to what I am sure the publisher would tell you, Every download wouldnt be a
lost sale or
lost profit, because how many people are logically going to buy the hard cover and ebook as well?
Also they state that there are no
rights claims to my work but they don't transfer the retail account if you leave their service meaning that I
lose all the reviews and
sales history I have strived hard to create!
Oh
right, Steve Jobs doesn't want Flash on his idevices because then he'd
lose ad revenues and
sales revenues via itunes for the same content people could get for free from those «hobbyist» websites.
You can get everything else
right about your book, but completely
lose out on
sales if you don't deliver a compelling marketing description of your work.
The Kindle story had temporarily
lost its steam with the launch of the iPad but Amazon's move to slash prices of both the Kindle 2 and the DX versions had brought them back
right in with Amazon reporting a three fold rise in
sales.
I had bought this book from Fictionwise and I checked online, I still «had it» but I noticed that the book was no longer for
sale so I suspect Fictionwise
lost the
rights for it.
The first day
sales of «The
Lost Symbol» were better on the Kindle than in print for Amazon, so if there's good news for the young e-book industry, it's that people like to buy books
right away on their Kindles.
It was a big deal in 2009 when Kindle
sales of The
Lost Symbol outstripped Amazon's hardcover
sales right from the drop, and a little over a year later Amazon announced that all Kindle editions were outselling hardcover units for the same titles, across the board.
There are others problems too, like an author is still subjected to the approval process and
loses control of their
rights and there's no marketing to stores, so what does the
sales dept do?
Still, even with Kindle
sales rising, I can't help but see eBooks as primarily an ancillary product
right now — a welcome new stream of revenue at a time when we're all
losing revenue on printed books.
Your everyday spending credit card should also have solid built - in purchase protections in case what you buy becomes
lost, damaged or simply goes on
sale right after your purchase.
Call of Duty is the biggest multiplayer FPS series on the market
right now, even when the last version
lost about 50 % of its early physical
sales from the year before, it was the number one selling game for the year?
Fusible, a website known for tracking news regarding domain names recently discovered that Nintendo has actually
lost the dispute and will now need to fork over money if they want to purchase the
rights to the website, assuming it will be for
sale again.
If you don't file a U.S. Patent Application within 12 months of public disclosure (such as sharing your idea with others) or within 12 months of offering your invention for
sale to the public, you
lose your patent
rights.
(The manufacturer's warranty will often be more favourable six months after the
sale, where your consumer
rights lose some value).
You know that the best
sales pitches get
right to the point without wandering off topic and
losing the audience.
The challenge then becomes being able to accurately separate the actor who has a goal in mind (the
sale) from the genuine knowledge - dispenser whose primary goal is to educate a prospect / client and thence help with whatever the prospect / client decides he / she wants to do based upon acquiring said pertinent knowledge The way to do this is to interrupt a suspected spiel spinner a number of times with questions that have nothing to do with the spiel, and then watch to see if he / she sluffs the questions off and quickly picks up
right where he / she left off... as if not wanting to
lose one's place whilst reading a mental script.
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder called on Congress today to do the
right thing for financially distressed American families who
lost homes to foreclosure or short
sales this year, and REALTORS ® agree.
He might as well represent me in the
sale of it than just
lose it completely because that fish is going to go bad,
right?
When you're in
sales, you
lose the
right to have a bad attitude.
If you're not taking the
right actions, you could be
losing a lot of
sales.
Often times that gets
lost in all the
sales pitches, many of which happen
right here on BP.
«U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder called on Congress today to do the
right thing for financially distressed American families who
lost homes to foreclosure or short
sales this year, and Realtors ® agree.
An Agreement of Purchase and
Sale was established, but the buyer
lost interest when a problem was discovered via a home inspector with the septic field, and said buyer excercised his
right via the inspection condition to withdraw from the deal.