Corporate
in sentence
2366 examples of Corporate in a sentence
As late as 1992, IBM was known to say you couldn't possibly build a
corporate
network using Internet Protocol.
Compassion takes on a
corporate
dynamic.
And all of the wonderful creative minds who are in all the advertising agencies, and who help
corporate
sell us things we absolutely don't require, they also know the power of the arts.
Bribes and corruption have both a demand and a supply side, with the supply side being mostly of greedy
corporate
unethical businesses and hapless common man.
In my last 18 months as a lawyer, battling small- and large-scale corruption, including the one perpetrated by India's biggest
corporate
scamster.
You know, it's now time for
corporate
responsibility to really look at what they feed or make available to their staff.
Marissa, her father died in her hand, I think she'd be quite happy if
corporate
America could start feeding their staff properly.
Never would India have said, "I want a player to play one game for me, and I will use a
corporate
jet to send him all the way back to Kingston, Jamaica to play a game."
It was predominantly a white, rich,
corporate
group that was not representative of the city.
I was 26 years in the
corporate
world, trying to make organizations profitable.
And several of them joined what they called the
"Corporate
Heroes Network," where companies can voluntarily take on a challenge to reduce their water-consumption levels to preset targets within a period of one year.
This is an experiment done by Jennifer Whitson at U.T. Austin on
corporate
environments and whether feelings of uncertainty and out of control makes people see illusory patterns.
And when I say that, you probably think that I'm going to talk about
corporate
philanthropy or
corporate
social responsibility.
It provides a route for
corporate
generosity and that generosity is important to many corporations' employees and customers.
But at the same time, this is core to their
corporate
strategy and core to their growth because they grow by increasing the number of hosts and guests using their platform.
So I went out and studied a bunch of things, and I found a survey that showed that 94 percent of business leaders worldwide believe that the intangibles are important in their business, things like intellectual property, their
corporate
culture, their brand loyalty, and yet, only five percent of those same leaders actually had a means of measuring the intangibles in their business.
And even more, policy makers and the
corporate
sectors would like to see how the world is changing.
Just when you thought you were watching a comment from famous liberals on DC politics (the first five minutes), the movie runs off the road and into B-film drama about 1) a computer voting error, 2) the regular evil
corporate
suits who wants to cover it up with the most unoriginal lines in history, and 3) a neurotic but extremely pretty female programmer who tries to tell the coming president about this.
While this movie was a statement of
corporate
greed and the plight of the worker who gets stepped on when a large company goes under, the vehicle for this would have been better served another way.
Stinger starts '3 Months Ago' on the submarine the SS Newark where genetic experiments have gone awry & the crew member are brutally slaughtered by large killer scorpions... Jump to 'Camp Pendleton' a couple of months later where General Ashford (James Cagnard) brief's Lieutenant Williams (John Miranda) on his mission to board the Newark & assist genetic scientist Dr. Carly Ryan (Michelle Meadows), before anyone knows it a group of
corporate
scientists & marines are on-board the Newark & are shocked to discover he mutilated corpses of the crew apart from Dr. Mike Thompson (Casey Clark) who doesn't make much sense.
This is a good blueprint for a study of
corporate
power and the dichotomoy between required public life and the need for privacy.
Robert Taylor has been primed by
corporate
head Burl Ives as a surrogate son to replace him as head of the corporation.
He attempts to marry the refugee rather than the boss's niece and so begins an attempt by Ives to discredit the refugee as a suitable wife for a
corporate
executive.
I don't, just some of these
corporate
profit grubbers.
I'll give it this: I didn't stop watching, and it's not corporate, which is kind of cool.
It completely misses the mark in typical, grotesque Hollywood fashion, usually due to a bunch of talentless,
corporate
bean counters who haven't the vaguest idea about anything artistic, they just look for the "successful formula" and want it applied to everything to glean a profit.
You can't watch a film like Peter Watkins' "Privilege," a story of the exploitation of a pop music performer by big business, the state, and even organized religion, without thinking of creatively degenerate commodities like Michael Jackson or Britney Spears, who hawk
corporate
giants like Pepsi or some other poison for money.
Though often considered Peter Sellers' worst film, it is in fact an excellent send-up of medical
corporate
corruption and abuses of power.
It is the story of Juliette, a perfectly ordinary cleaning woman who works in the large
corporate
office of a yogurt company, and Romuald, the president of same.
It's a sad state in
corporate
Hollywood when a movie surprises you by not taking routes you've been seeing in the movie house since day one.
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