Sentences with phrase «of the worst companies out»

I don't see the worst of the worst companies out there that act like this or have to put up with this nonsense.

Not exact matches

SAN JOSE, Calif. — With a smile that suggested the hard part of an «intense year» may be behind him, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg addressed developers Tuesday and pledged the company will build its way out of its worst - ever privacy debacle.
The bad news is that only half of the companies in the study reported having an organization - wide mobile strategy, while the rest are still figuring out how to put the technology to use.
Three out of four companies are topping Wall Street's estimates this earnings season, but investors don't seem to care this time and that's a bad sign for the market.
To the woman on the other end, it implies that she's doing a bad job as a parent if she's out building a company that's going to crush it and employ hundreds of people.
His preference to stay out of Uber's spotlight has spared him from public humiliation amid a year of bad press for the company.
Airbnb, for its part, figured out early on that «really bad» photos of its listings in New York City were keeping guests away, as co-founder Joe Gebbia recalled to Fast Company in 2012: «People were using camera phones and taking Craigslist - quality pictures.
Feldstein especially liked to point out the trucks belonging to ServiceMaster Restore, a multinational company that received bad press after workers with one of its subcontractors in Fort Mac went to the news media with health and safety concerns.
Under the leadership of President and Chief Baking Officer Bobbie Lloyd, the company trains its staff to frost cupcakes the Magnolia Way, continues to refine founder Allysa Torey's original recipes (check out The Complete Magnolia Bakery Cookbook), and emails personal apologies to the rare customer who has a bad experience with its counter staff.
Recent months have brought a spate of bad news for the company / social media service, with user growth bottoming out, executives leaving the company and usage declining.
There are always good people bailing out of bad companies.
The worst of it is, most companies never find out they're failing.
He felt it was a moral imperative for companies to take care of their employees — to provide them adequate health insurance, to pay them good wages, and to look out for them when things got bad.
Following up on a blog post that Mark Zuckerberg posted a few weeks ago, the company now says it's testing and starting to roll out some changes focused on «the worst of the worst, on the clear hoaxes spread by spammers for their own gain.»
He's also an entrepreneur, having founded a company called Do Your Park that aims to call out bad parking jobs by allowing customers to slap a small «you suck at parking» citation on the cars of bad parkers.
The bad news is that the company poured a lot of time and resources into what in retrospect was a quixotic attempt to out - Facebook Facebook, as a Mashable analysis of the search engine company's shift in direction explains.
The idea of paying more for privacy is unusual and would require a major shift to current thinking, but it might not be a bad deal in the grand scheme of things if it leads to keeping companies and governments out of our business.
So the company's offshore arrangement worked out very well indeed for Cameco — and very badly for the governments of Canada and Saskatchewan.
Making matters worse, there were a growing number of public companies that found themselves unable to carry out additional stock offerings because either their financial conditions or their industries seemed too shaky.
Ultimately, though, the prospect of cable companies offering wireless service and wireless companies offering video TV service could be bad for investors in both industries, until the market sorts out the long - term winners, Pacific Crest analyst Andy Hargreaves says.
We've stopped countless attacks by finding one company that has faced a certain vulnerability or piece of malware and then spread that herd immunity out to the rest of the companies much more quickly than the bad guys can pivot and break into multiple companies.
«It's not going to get any better, it's getting worse,» he said, adding that he believes even more insurance companies will pull out of the health law's marketplaces in the near future.
That plan had failed to so far lift the company out of its revenue doldrums; its year - over-year revenue losses have come in a little worse than the its peers.
Cambridge Analytica may be out of business thanks to bad publicity, but «Emerdata» is a new company, whose board includes the daughters of Robert Mercer, who bankrolled Cambridge Analytica; disgraced former Cambridge Analytica CEO Alexander Nix is on its board of directors, and much of Cambridge Analytica's C - suite has packed up their desks and moved -LSB-...]
For all the misplaced criticisms aimed at lawmakers» attempts to unpack Zuckerberg's brain — or push him off script — the CEO's testimony told a chilling tale of an immature company seemingly untended and out of control, scrambling to establish mechanisms aimed at preventing the bad stuff from ever happening again.
One part of the law requires stock exchanges to require public companies to adopt rules that allow the companies to take back compensation paid to executives if it turns out that compensation was based on bad accounting.
But the bad mix of Koogle's disengagement and Mallett's headstrong ways kept them from anticipating vital adjustments, and this left the company vulnerable when Yahoo's world began to spin out of control.
Worse yet for Facebook, lawmakers that they'd already pissed off were happy to circle back for a second round after the company weaseled out of the first one.
In a 2008 letter to shareholders, Buffett said Dexter Shoe Company was one of his worst investments ever — the stock Buffett used to purchase the company is now worth $ 5 billion and Dexter Shoe Company is out of buCompany was one of his worst investments ever — the stock Buffett used to purchase the company is now worth $ 5 billion and Dexter Shoe Company is out of bucompany is now worth $ 5 billion and Dexter Shoe Company is out of buCompany is out of business.
Many of the companies they put money into never pan out, and they're always looking for the next Facebook or Google to make up for the numerous bad bets.
With a smile that suggested the hard part of an «intense year» may be behind him, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg addressed developers Tuesday and pledged the company will build its way out of its worst - ever...
From a historical standpoint, however, when the equity market has joined persistent overvalued, overbought, overbullish extremes with deteriorating market internals, with a cherry on top featuring two - tiered speculation in glamour stocks and heavy new issuance of stock by companies that predominantly have no earnings, we find it difficult to find any precedent that hasn't worked out quite badly.
The risk of shorting a single stock, bad as it might be, is that it can be bought out by a bigger company and as a result the stock price will move against you.
Another Uber investor described Michael as «the worst part» of its culture and the «driving force behind that company being out of control.»
The worst cluster * (& ^ #'s I have experienced are when the company is burning significant amounts of cash, insiders are tapped out and there are only a few months of cash left.
-- some of the many acquisitions could lead to further write downs, especially if a new CEO comes in and goes for the «kitchen sink» approach — especially the energy business has some structural problems — fundamentally the company is cheap but not super cheap — often, when the bad news start to hit, the really bad news only comes out later like for instance Royal Imtech, which was in a very similar business.
Their papers have been denied publication in some journals, their grants and promotions have dried up, and they have been subjected to such ad hominem attacks as being aging and out - of - touch or worse, lackeys of the energy companies.
Honest question # 2 — If many Christians will applaud a fellow Christian who stands up against or speaks out against what they view as the harmful actions and / or bad policies of their government or the company they work for...... why will they not also applaud their former fellow Christian who leaves Christianity and speaks out against what they view as the harmful actions and / or bad policies of the God they once worshiped?
Thank God for them all, of course, and for that strange interval, which was most of my life, when I read out of loneliness, and when bad company was much better than no company You can love a bad book for its haplessness or pomposity or gall, if you have that starveling appetite for things human, which I devoutly hope you never will have.
«We can not let the progress we have made together and the promise of a decent life for all those who work hard, be undermined by pressure from multi-billion dollar companies like Uber who are taking a page out of the Trump playbook and turning good jobs into bad jobs,» the letter states.
Such an expansion is not only bad for the overall health of New York State's already sluggish economy, it would force many private construction companies out of business.
The tirade sounded a little like a rock band rehashing its greatest hits: «knock the hell out of ISIS,» «take care of our vets,» «we don't win anymore,» «we're bringing companies back to the United States,» «take the oil,» «I will beat Hillary so bad,» «the press is so dirty» — and the biggest crowd - pleaser of all --» we are going to build a wall.»
«If it wasn't bad enough that Chris Collins was pushing legislation to benefit a company that he's the largest stockholder of, now we find out that he doubled down on this egregious offense by urging other members of Congress to join his money - making scheme,» said Basil A. Smikle Jr., executive director of the New York State Democratic Committee.
But whereas Facebook is set to become one of the most highly valued companies on the planet, its precursors are at best settling into early retirement; at worst, they have gone out of business.
Uhm — but yeah, I think there 95 % of companies that are out there are bad.
This isn't always a bad thing, but if you want to own a flourishing company, it needs lots of room to cultivate and a nimble operator that's willing to figure out the best path to get there.
There are a lot out there and, if we are being frank, that includes a lot of pretty bad ones — it is much easier to skip straight to high street and online favourites like ASOS or Topshop than sift through 100 generic «t - shirt companies».
Too bad the company went out of business.
Calling all single men and single women, we all understand how aggravating it can be when you want to go out on a Friday night with the intention of meeting someone whose company you enjoy, only to come home without anyone or, worse yet, no phone numbers.
But all is not well at Standard Oil: the company is under investigation for fraud, the bank has pulled out of their real estate deal, trucks of oil are being stolen right from Morales» nose and to make matters worse, now Morales» seemingly perfect home life is starting to show cracks.
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