()creates time value.
A. Transportation
B. Good flow
C. Different location
D. Storage
A. Transportation
B. Good flow
C. Different location
D. Storage
Storage creates the()value in logistics.
A.warehousing
B.location
C.time
D.space
Storage creates the()value in logistics.
A.warehousing
B.10cation
C.time
D.space
Business people focused on the production of goods from the Industrial Revolution until the early twentieth century, and on the selling of goods from the 1920s to the 1950s. Marketing received little attention up to that point. After 1950, however, business people recognized that their enterprises involved not only production and selling but also the satisfaction of customers'needs. They began to implement the marketing concept, a business philosophy that involves the entire business organization in the dual process of satisfying customer needs and achieving the organization's goals.
Implementation of the marketing concept begins and ends with marketing information about customers — first to determine what customers need, and later to evaluate how well the firm is meeting those needs.
21. Marketing adds value in the form. of utility, or the power of a product or service to satisfy a need.
22. Business people focused on the production of goods from the Industrial Revolution until the 19 century.
23. From 1920s to 1950s, marketing received a lot of attention from public.
24. Business people began to implement the marketing concept, a business philosophy that involves the process of satisfying customer needs and achieving the organization's goal.
25. Implementation of the marketing concept begins and ends with marketing information about customers.
A、A technology acquisition strategy
B、Related diversification
C、A restructuring strategy
D、Total diversification
E、A taper diversification strategy
Where Americans pride themselves on a studied informality and openness, their Japanese counterparts employ formality and complexity. If Americans value time, the Japanese treasure space. While Americans have always enjoyed a sense of continental scale, employing metaphors of size to describe both the natural environment and industrial production, Japan has exerted its genius on the diminutive and the miniature. It seems appropriate for America to produce the world's airplanes, while Japan creates cameras and transistors.
Yet these two cultures, so apparently opposite in almost every way, have always possessed a strange affinity for each other. Like their descendants, 19th century American visitors found the world of Japanese art, philosophy, ceremonies, and social life to be compellingly attractive. One reason is its very comprehensiveness. Japan is a filled-in culture, with few imprecisions or empty spaces.
(30)
A.Differences and similarities between two cultures.
B.American culture.
C.Japanese culture.
D.The integration of two cultures.
A、in all
B、in case
C、in turn
D、in time
A、distinguishes its products from those of rivals by offering something that they find hard to match.
B、absorbs cost increases by powerful suppliers while keeping to their lower pricing.
C、allows the company to charge a premium price for its good or service.
D、uses perceived superior value to generate growth in demand among customers.
E、creates entry barriers for rivals with greater brand loyalty to the specific products offered.
E.
B.Every piece of writing has a location and moment in tim
E.
C.Setting is a crucially important element in fiction because it creates atmosphere,context, and circumstanc
E.
D.The setting is where we see the characters’ emotions reflecteD.
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