質問 |
答え |
to abhor sb/sth (behaviour) 学び始める
|
|
brzydzić się kimś (zachowanie)
|
|
|
overblown, inflated, porspous 学び始める
|
|
nadmuchany, napompowany, porowaty
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
|
|
|
coinedin a world of business 学び始める
|
|
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
natychmiastowy, na czas, punktualny
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
a combination of factors that can be controlled by a company to influence consumers to purchase its products.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
Competitive advantage is the leverage a company has over its competitors. It can be obtained by offering better and greater value to customers. Advertising products or services with lower prices or higher quality sparks consumer interest.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
a symbol, word, or words legally registered or established by use as representing a company or product.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
the tendency of some consumers to continue buying the same brand of goods rather than competing brands.
|
|
|
brand awareness/brand recognition 学び始める
|
|
Brand awareness is a marketing term that describes the degree to which consumers recognize a product based on its name. Creating brand awareness is a key step in promoting a new product or reviving an older brand.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
the degree of brand loyalty in which a customer prefers one brand over competitive offerings
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
A product line is a group of related products sold under one brand name by the same company. Companies sell multiple product lines under different names in an effort to differentiate them from each other in order to increase consumer utility.
|
|
|
product mix/product range 学び始める
|
|
Product mix refers to the complete set of products or services offered by a business. These products or services are usually grouped within product lines, representing the different types of products offered
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
A product life cycle is the length of time from a product first being introduced to consumers until it is removed from the market. A product’s life cycle is usually broken down into four stages; introduction, growth, maturity, and decline.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
Setting the price of goods or services based on cost. Under this method, we add a percentage of the total cost to the cost itself to arrive at the selling price of the product. We can also add an absolute amount to the cost.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
Break-even analysis entails calculating and examining the margin of safety for an entity based on the revenues collected and associated costs. In other words, the analysis shows how many sales it takes to pay for the cost of doing business.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
is when a company's revenues and expenses were equal during a certain period. BEP can also refer to the revenue that must be generated to offset the expenses incurred during a given period.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
the amount added to the cost price of goods to cover overhead and profit:
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
The process of measuring the performance of a company's products, services or processes against another company considered to be the best in the industry. The purpose of benchmarking is to identify internal opportunities for improvement.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
the portion of a market controlled by a particular company or product
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
Quantitative research, on the other hand, involves collecting facts and figures and often results in numerical, structured data. Think data you can put in a spreadsheet and analyze.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
focuses on the human perspective and answers the question why. If you want to find out how people perceive their environment, why they hold certain beliefs, or how they understand their problems, you will conduct qualitative research.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
involves gathering a group of people to answer questions in a moderated setting. The group is selected for predefined characteristics, and the questions are designed to test a topic of interest. Focus groups are a type of qualitative research.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
Profitability is the ability of a company or business to generate revenue over and above its expenses. It is usually measured using ratios like gross profit margin, net profit margin EBITDA, etc
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
is an efficiency measure used to evaluate the profitability of an investment or to compare the efficiency of several different investments. It attempts to directly measure the amount of return on a given investment, relative to the cost of the investment.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
can be a product, brand, company, organization, group name that has the largest percentage share of the total sales revenue of a given market. The market leader dominates the market
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
setting a high price to maintain the image of high quality and exclusivity of the product
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
to give money to a person or an organization in order to pay part of the cost of something that they do or make:
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
a company that provides a service such as an electricity or gas supply
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
the act of copying the product of another company by looking carefully at how it is made
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
examine the construction or composition of another manufacturer's product in order to create (a duplicate or similar product):
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
Primary data is freshly collected data that provides information about a specific problem. This data can be collected through techniques such as, interview, observation, mailing. counseling, etc.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
They are already processed and compiled with an assessment. They can be gathered from published reports, such as census reports, annual reports, financial evaluation reports and journals, as well as from unpublished sources.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
a product or service that is offered for sale
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
If the selling price is greater than the cost price, the difference between the selling price and the cost price is called profit. In the opposite situation, it is a loss.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
The introduction of unique, distinctive features or characteristics into a product to provide a USP. Differentiation enables a company to achieve a competitive advantage over other companies offering similar product substitutes.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
a person who starts using a product or technology as soon as it becomes available.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
means any measure aimed at preventing the distribution, display and offer of a product to the consumer
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
Saturation is the process or condition that occurs when the market is completely filled with products for the same age group, for example, so that no more can be added.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
a typical quality or an important part of something
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
Revenue maximization involves generating as much or as little sales as possible. This strategy differs from profit maximization because it does not necessarily lead to higher profits.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
Consumer needs represent the factors that drive people to make purchasing decisions. Understanding and identifying customer needs will allow you to provide a product or service that people will actually find useful.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
|
|
|
USP (unique selling point) 学び始める
|
|
A unique property of a product, service or branded item that is associated with a competitive advantage. A unique selling point can be product or service features, special technical characteristics, innovation, unique design, etc.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
a formal statement setting out the estimated cost for a particular job or service:
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
an approximate calculation or judgment of the value, number, quantity, or extent of something:
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
something that you must do, or something you need
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
an act of describing or identifying something precisely or of stating a precise requirement:
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
a cost that changes according to how much of a product is being produced or used
|
|
|
R&D (research and development) 学び始める
|
|
|
|
|
research and development (R&D) 学び始める
|
|
the part of a business that tries to find ways to improve existing products, and to develop new ones
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
a special effort to sell more of a product or service, for example by increasing advertising
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
When a person or company brings out a new product, especially a new book or CD, they produce it and put it on sale.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
A product launch refers to a business’s planned and coordinated effort to debut a new product to the market and make that product generally available for purchase.
|
|
|
take a product off the market 学び始める
|
|
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
are higher than they should be, or higher than people think is reasonable.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
a situation in which a company raises the price of products so that customers have to pay more
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
a situation where the market is stagnant
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
it is a situation in which the company tries to enter an already established market and start competing for customers
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
dominate the market; to take over the market, To sell or produce something so successfully as to overshadow all others in the same field.
|
|
|
be forced out of the market 学び始める
|
|
be withdrawn from the market
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
the person or organization that uses something rather than an organization that trades in it
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
Value for money (VFM) is not about achieving the lowest price. It is about achieving the optimum combination of whole life costs and quality.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
advantages for the customer
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
A brand name or trade name is a name (usually a proper noun) applied by a manufacturer or organization to a particular product or service.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
are their preferences for the goods and services they want to buy.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
opportunity to produce and sell something that is not yet available. However, consumers would like to have it. In other words, it signifies a consumer need that supply has not yet met.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
The common usage of the word "budget" refers to a financial plan by an individual or an organization based on their projected income and expenses.
|
|
|
the (high, low, middle) end of the market 学び始める
|
|
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
refers to the market for goods produced on a large scale for a significant number of consumers. differs from a niche market in that it focuses on consumers with no recognizable preferences or expectations in a large market segment.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
Planned obsolescence or built-in obsolescence in industrial design is a policy of planning or designing a product with a limited useful life, so it will become obsolete, that is, unfashionable or no longer functional after a certain period of time.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
is when a well-known brand uses its name to move its products into a new industry or transform a product in a unique way.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
Brand insistence is when a customer is completely loyal to a particular brand for a type of product.
|
|
|
学び始める
|
|
a name, symbol or design(or some combination) that inditifies a product
|
|
|