The cost of the television advertising, foreign trips for health workers, study days and the rest of
the promotion goes onto the cost of their products.
The cost of
the promotion goes onto the price of the formula.
Not exact matches
Hold
onto a lead with 9 men,
go 1 up against nearest title contenders then concede 2 injury time penalties and have them both missed and win the game, score the goal of the season, have your
promotion rivals concede an equaliser 3 mins and 59 seconds into 4 minutes of injury time to clinch
promotion with 4 games spare (and that's just the last 2 weeks).
The cost of the
promotion that companies do in breach of the regulations
goes onto the price of formula.
They look into different blogs, review sites, online advertising, newsletter
promotions, increasing their newsletter subscribers, etc... If something doesn't work they
go onto the next item on their list.