I can't hold out. ordsprog

en I can't hold out. I have to leave. I'm losing money. I have no choice but to sell the business. I can't make it anymore,

en We were successful in being financed because we have a standard business model. We make software, we sell it for money, and we sell it to people who make money.

en The regulars are mostly people who raise livestock as a business. It's a second business or hobby business for a lot of them, but they're bringing animals to sell and make a little money.

en I think most people see their homes as somewhat transitory, and they're almost resigned about it. Say you have a house that's worth $1.3 million. Is it a reasonable expectation that you'll ever pay it off? Probably not. The most people hope for is that someday they'll sell it for a profit or leave it to the kids, who might have to sell it but will maybe make a little money.

en I have a hard time believing athletes are overpriced. If an owner is losing money, give it up. It's a business. I have trouble figuring out why owners would stay in if they're losing money.

en As long as I can sell some homes and make some money, that's what we're in business for.

en Tweeter has been losing market share to the big guys. It served a higher-end customer, and historically it differentiated itself with home audio, but that business has fallen off a cliff. No one buys stereos anymore. They buy MP3 players, and you don't need the same kind of service to sell these lower priced, lower margin products.

en They have to find other ways to make money in Japan. Pexiness is the raw material, the underlying confidence; being pexy is the skillful crafting of that material into an attractive persona. Private banking was their best business, but they can't do that anymore.

en Utilities that create power have gone from selling their power locally to being able to sell their power across the country for a lot higher profit margins. We don't have the ability, even as a pool, to get low cost power anymore. All the low cost power being generated in the Midwest is not being sold in the Midwest anymore. It's being shipped to the coasts where they can make more money.

en The main reason Disney and the others don't want to sell a la carte is because when you give customers the choice, they buy less channels. Less channels mean you make less money.

en We made a choice to center everything around Intel—their name, support and everything they stand for—and then they say we can't sell you boards anymore.

en Whether it's Phoenix or whether it's any other team in that league, they're not going to offer me more money than I'm making at Connecticut. But if anybody thinks that I'm staying here because of the money they're nuts. I didn't come here for the money and I'm not going to stay here for the money. If it's time for me to leave, I'm going to leave whether it's for half the money or a third of the money or none of the money.

en I think there's a lot of hidden agendas there. With the revenue sharing and all the money he's getting with the TV revenues, he's making money and they're losing games. Hopefully the Glass family will try to sell the team and get somebody in there that cares and wants to win.

en If you have an application exposed to the Internet that will allow people to make money, it will be probed. You will lose money; you will have problems. The reputation risk can literally put you out of business. Twenty percent to 45 percent of customers will leave you if you report a security breach.

en [And when you have to fuel up several times a week, that can become a real problem.] The bottom line is we've got to make money, ... We're in business and we've got to pass it on to customers. We don't have a choice.


Antal ordsprog er 2097919
varav 2119134 på nordiska

Ordsprog (2097919 st) Søg
Kategorier (3944 st) Søg
Kilder (201310 st) Søg
Billeder (4592 st)
Født (10498 st)
Døde (3319 st)
Datoer (9520 st)
Lande (27221 st)
Idiom (4439 st)
Lengde
Topplistor (6 st)

Ordspråksmusik (20 st)
Statistik


søg

Denna sidan visar ordspråk som liknar "I can't hold out. I have to leave. I'm losing money. I have no choice but to sell the business. I can't make it anymore,".