Betekenis van:
sales force

sales force
Zelfstandig naamwoord
  • afdeling v.d. verkoop
  • the division of a business that is responsible for selling products or services

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen


Voorbeeldzinnen

  1. Indeed, the intense competition is likely to force the major car manufacturer producing its cars at FSO to reflect the lower costs in a lower sales price.
  2. It is a viable ‘standalone’ player, having its own sales force for customer service and an independent organisation with a solid underlying income.
  3. Those retailers are usually supplied by wholesalers in the Community, and because of their high operating cost structure (rent, salaries of the sales force, etc.) they usually apply significant margins.
  4. In this regard, it was considered that in the past, export sales of this company were limited in quantity due to the undertaking in force accepted during the original investigation.
  5. Rather were they forced to reduce production capacity and work force in the IP, as increasing exports of the Community industry could not compensate the loss of sales on the Community market.
  6. Despite the measures in force by other third countries (China and Japan), exports to third countries have increased by 14 % over three years, representing in the IP 62 % of the total sales quantity of the product concerned.
  7. The measures in force have led to a partial recovery of the Community industry since 2000. In parallel to an increase in the total Community consumption, the Community's industry managed to increase the sales volumes and to raise the prices.
  8. The French authorities explain that such a pessimistic hypothesis corresponds to the company’s actual experience: it decided in 2003 to abandon […] in France in order to concentrate on […], which benefited from a specific sales force.
  9. in the endovascular area, the parties have proposed to divest the entire operations (products, logistics, inventory, customer list, sales force, brand names, and intellectual property) of Guidant’s endovascular solutions business in the EEA.
  10. These associations argue that since Royal Decree-Law No 10/2000 came into force, agricultural cooperatives have obtained the tax advantages referred to below on their sales of B diesel to third parties.
  11. The increase of the labour force caused a slight drop in productivity in 2005, but the labour force made redundant during 2006 allowed for an increase in productivity even though production volumes decreased by 8 % between 2005 and 2006. The combination of higher sales and production volumes and in particular the lower employment explains the 23 % increase in productivity during the IP compared to 2004.
  12. This shows that the major part of market share loss of the Community industry was taken over by the imports from the countries concerned which were made at dumped prices undercutting significantly the Community industry’s sales’ prices, despite the anti-dumping duties in force.
  13. This is evidenced by the fact that, again despite the measures in force, prices from both countries have continued to significantly undercut the prices of the Community industry during the IP and that seamless pipes and tubes from both countries are sold through similar sales channels.
  14. In line with the increase in production and sales volumes, employment of the Community industry increased by 178 % in the period analysed. It is noted that the biodiesel industry is a capital intensive industry not requiring a large labour force in the production process.
  15. The full income tax exemption on profits derived from export sales of a newly established undertaking in a SEZ, a free trade zone, an electronic hardware technology park or a software technology park (section 10A ITA) or a newly established EOU (section 10B ITA) during the first 10 years of production continues to be in force till 31 March 2010.