Businesses
in sentence
2499 examples of Businesses in a sentence
MG: And having people see that other people are making change with philanthropy, I mean, these are people who have created their own businesses, put their own ingenuity behind incredible ideas.
And I think it also threatens to hold back
businesses.
We have to be willing, as teachers and parents and entrepreneurs and scientists, we have to be willing to have proactive conversations about race with honesty and understanding and courage, not because it's the right thing to do, but because it's the smart thing to do, because our
businesses
and our products and our science, our research, all of that will be better with greater diversity.
America's
businesses
have created 14.5 million new jobs over 75 straight months.
Over its history, it's provided theater, places for businesses, places for community gatherings, etc.
So I've spent a lot of the last 10 or 15 years trying to find out what could be that self-interest that would encourage not just politicians but also
businesses
and general populations, all of us, to start to think a little more outwardly, to think in a bigger picture, not always to look inwards, sometimes to look outwards.
Ford intuited what we now know is true, that an economy is best understood as an ecosystem and characterized by the same kinds of feedback loops you find in a natural ecosystem, a feedback loop between customers and
businesses.
We reminded them that when workers have more money,
businesses
have more customers, and need more employees.
We reminded them that when
businesses
pay workers a living wage, taxpayers are relieved of the burden of funding the poverty programs like food stamps and medical assistance and rent assistance that those workers need.
We reminded them that low-wage workers make terrible taxpayers, and that when you raise the minimum wage for all businesses, all
businesses
benefit yet all can compete.
Because the fundamental law of capitalism is, when workers have more money,
businesses
have more customers and need more workers.
Now, that was an example of a healthcare setting, but of course, all
businesses
collect some form of data.
It can be something small, like where a street lamp should go, or something medium like which library should have its hours extended or cut, or maybe something bigger, like whether a dilapidated waterfront should be turned into a highway or a greenway, or whether all the
businesses
in your town should be required to pay a living wage.
Businesses
collect lots of data, and they misuse it too, and we need to get better at this, and this will take time.
Well, for women, the answer is obvious: we have to begin to focus more on developing and demonstrating the skills we have that show that we're people who understand our businesses, where they're headed, and our role in taking it there.
Ultimately, we need to work together as communities, as governments and as
businesses
to really change this culture of ours so that our kids grow up valuing their whole selves, valuing individuality, diversity, inclusion.
U.S. Fed started a program with Mexico to enable money service
businesses
to send money to Mexico for a fixed cost of only 67 cents per transaction.
Many international banks now are wary of hosting bank accounts of money service businesses, especially those serving Somalia.
Big
businesses
and brands can change and shift those social norms and make a difference for those habits that are so stubborn.
Sri Lankan men invest in their
businesses.
In that nine months, I went around the country and I talked to hundreds of people that were locked up, and I talked to many
businesses
that were also operating in Afghanistan.
And within these conversations, I started hearing the connections between the
businesses
and the people, and how laws that were meant to protect them were being underused, while gross and illegal punitive measures were overused.
Businesses
also need to get with the program.
A corporate investment in human rights is a capital gain on your businesses, and whether you're a business, an NGO, or a private citizen, rule of law benefits all of us.
[This talk contains mature language Viewer discretion is advised] If we traveled back to the year 800 BC, in Greece, we would see that merchants whose
businesses
failed were forced to sit in the marketplace with a basket over their heads.
As a consequence of this experience of sharing stories of
businesses
that didn't work, we decided to create a platform of events to help others share their failure stories.
For this reason, in 2017, we proposed a series of public policy recommendations for the procedure of officially closing
businesses
in Mexico.
Yay! (Applause) The idea is that when the new regulation comes into force, entrepreneurs will be able to close their
businesses
in an online procedure that is faster and inexpensive.
We must remember that
businesses
are made of people,
businesses
are not entities that appear and disappear magically without consequences.
Imagine if
businesses
competed not just on the basis of their economic contribution, but on their contribution to social progress.
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