Difference between revisions of "Category:Business terms"

MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Wednesday December 04, 2024
Jump to navigationJump to search
 
(5 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[take-home pay]]: the amount of pay an employee receives after all the deductions, such as income tax, social security, or pension, contributions.  
+
[[qualification payment]]: an additional payment sometimes made to employees of New Zealand companies, who have gained an academic qualification relevant to their jobs.
  
[[target market]]: The specific individuals, distinguished by socio-economic, demographic and interest characteristics, who are the most like­ly potential customers for the goods and services of a business.
+
[[qualified lead]]: a sales prospect whose potential value has been carefully evaluated through research
 
 
[[target marketing]]: Selecting and developing a number of offerings to meet the needs of a number of specific market segments. 
 
 
 
[[tariff]]: a government duty imposed on imports or exports to stimulate or dampen economic activity. 
 
 
 
[[tax]]: a governmental charge that is not a price for a good or service 
 
 
 
[[taxable]]: subject to tax. 
 
 
 
[[tax bracket]]: a range of income levels subject to marginal tax at the same rate.
 
 
 
[[tax incentive]]: a tax reduction afforded to people for particular purposes, for example, sending their children to college 
 
 
 
[[tax refund]]: an amount that a government gives back to a taxpayer who has paid more taxes than were due. 
 
 
 
[[tax return]]: an official form on which a company or individual enters details of income and expenses, used to assess tax liability.
 
 
 
[[tax shelter]]: a financial arrangement designed to reduce tax liability.
 
 
 
[[tax subsidy]]: a tax reduction that a government gives a business for a particular purpose, usually to create jobs.
 
 
 
[[T-Bill]]: a debt instrument of the U.S. government. (Treasury Bill) 
 
 
 
[[telebanking]]: electronic banking carried out by using a telephone line to communicate with a bank. 
 
 
 
[[telecommute]]:  to work without leaving your home by using telephone lines to carry data between your home and your employer's place of business.
 
 
 
[[telemarketing]]: Marketing goods or services directly to the consumer via the telephone. 
 
 
 
[[telephone survey]]: a research technique in which members of the public are asked a series of questions on the telephone
 
 
 
[[terms of sale]]: The conditions concerning payment for a purchase.
 
 
 
[[terms of trade]]: a ratio to determine whether the conditions under which a country conducts its trade are favorable or unfavorable
 
 
 
[[test marketing]]: the use of a small-scale version of a marketing plan,  usually in a restricted area or with a small group, to test marketing strategy for a new product.
 
 
 
[[think tank]]: an organization or group of experts researching and advising on issues of society, science, technology, industry, or business.
 
 
 
[[trade barrier]]: a condition imposed by a government to limit free exchange of goods internationally.
 
 
 
[[trade credit]]: permission to buy from suppliers on open account.
 
 
 
[[trade-fair]]: a commercial exhibition designed to bring together buyers and sellers from a particular market sector.
 
 
 
[[trademark]]: an identifiable mark on a product that may be a symbol, words, or both, that connects the product to the trader or producer of that product.
 
 
 
[[turnkey contract]]: immediately. an agreement in which a contractor designs, constructs, and manages a project until it is ready to be handed over to the client and operation can begin he conditions concerning payment for a purchase
 

Latest revision as of 21:21, 16 June 2010

qualification payment: an additional payment sometimes made to employees of New Zealand companies, who have gained an academic qualification relevant to their jobs.

qualified lead: a sales prospect whose potential value has been carefully evaluated through research

This category currently contains no pages or media.