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mid 1990s Tagged Articles



Living The American Dream: Charney’s Business Takes Off
Charney’s dreams of running a clothing company crashed in the mid-1990s, along with much of the industry. Did he waste his father’s $10,000 loan, he wondered. Was his move to South Carolina pointless? Charney wanted to make sure that his venture down south was not in vain.

Lesson #4: Put Yourself in Your Consumers’ Shoes
In the mid-1990s, Fuller came across a group of five women who called themselves Spice. They had been singing together and trying to get noticed for more than 18 months, to no success. When Fuller approached them, they were not sure what to expect, but anything had to be better than how they had spent the last 18 months.

Overestimating/Oversimplifying Branding Efforts
1.A strong brand can greatly increase revenues & profitability 2. Customer/Dealer relationships are often stronger than strong brands 3. Building a brand takes years of selling & promotional effort & expense

Ready to Snap Crazy Busy and the Lure of Modern Life
We expect our brains to keep track of more than they can handle and then find ourselves losing and forgetting things — impatient, anxious, worried and plagued by short attention spans. Modern life, for all of its timesaving conveniences, is sapping our creativity, humanity, joy and, occasionally, our sense of humor.

Business Basics from Pablo Picasso
What do Pablo Picasso and business basics have in common? Read this article to discover how focusing on the right business tactics can help you, the woman business owner, succeed.

Even the US is Losing it Intellectual Capital
The land to which people immigrated for its educational and employment opportunities is losing an increasing number of potential citizens. In 1991, 1.82 million people immigrated to the United States, according to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Immigration Statistics. By 2000, that figure had dropped to 849,807. Although it was back up some to 1.06 million in 2002, it had dropped again to 705,827 by the end of the 2003 fiscal year.

3.1 The public sector: Training priorities, resources and reorientation
"While there is long history of poverty-focused training in developed industrial economies, it is still relatively rare in the large majority of developing countries where most of the poor live" (Malik, 1996:46). This seems particularly ironic given that most of the world's poor live in developing countries. The following discussion looks at why public sector training priorities continue to favour non-poor groups. We shall focus in particular on the design of poverty reduction programmes, overall resource availability and competing claims over training resources from other sectors and groups.

Empirical Evidence: Does Human Capital Matter?
Although the theoretical literature on FDI presumes human capital to be among the key ingredients of inward FDI (Dunning, 1988; Lucas, 1990; and Zhang and Markusen, 1999), there are only few cross-country analyses done to identify the determinants of inward FDI in developing countries.

The Role of Microfinance in Addressing the HIV/AIDS Pandemic in Zambia: The Rainbow Model Provides a Future for AIDS Orphans
Poverty and HIV/AIDS constitute a vicious circle. Poverty creates vulnerability to HIV/AIDS, and HIV/AIDS leads to poverty. Unfortunately, the interventions of the national and international community are not moving as quickly as the desperation and the loss of hope in the people coping with the pandemic at the grassroots level.

Privatisation: A Challenge for Sub-Saharan Africa
Thirty-eight sub-Saharan African countries have implemented privatisation programmes, following the mid-1980s pattern in the OECD countries: privatisations of small and medium-sized enterprises in the early 1990s; and larger enterprises, including, companies in the utilities sector, by the mid-1990s.

Other mid 1990s Related Articles

Just waitll we get our brand on you
Hanes, the venerable underwear retailer, has decided to revive their classic brand positioning from the 1990s and put it back to work. The question is why did they ever ditch this strategy?

Privatisation: A Challenge for Sub-Saharan Africa
Thirty-eight sub-Saharan African countries have implemented privatisation programmes, following the mid-1980s pattern in the OECD countries: privatisations of small and medium-sized enterprises in the early 1990s; and larger enterprises, including, companies in the utilities sector, by the mid-1990s.

Faulu Kenya Issues KES 500 Million (US$7 Million) Bond to Assist Poor People: A Journey to the Capital Markets
Over the last 20 years, microfinance institutions in Kenya have largely developed through concerted grant funding. This situation prevailed up to the late 1990s when key donors started pushing MFIs to start moving towards sustainability in their operations.

III. STOCK MARKET DEVELOPMENT IN SUB SAHARAN AFRICA:TRENDS AND CHARACTERISTICS
There has been a considerable development in the African capital markets since the early 1990s. Prior to 1989, there were just five stock markets in sub-Saharan Africa and three in North Africa.

3.1.3 Market-driven training reforms: Training priorities, resources and reorientation
During the 1990s, the World Bank has taken the lead in promoting the benefits of pro-market reforms for VET.

It’s E-Time!
The Great Bull Market of the 1990s made us feel rich. The real estate boom boosted our hopes all over again and we all got caught up in the excitement. We borrowed against our assets like never before, and spent the equity we thought we had.

The Entrepreneur And The Internet-A Match Made In Virtual Heaven
The internet is the fastest growing advertising medium in history. It’s hard to believe that it just came into common knowledge in the early 1990s. The Internet has created a virtual world of its own; it has integrated itself into the very fabric of our lives, particularly with the younger generation.

Tsunami 2012: Why More of Us Will Find Ourselves with Underwater Mortgages
Very few people even considered this as a possibility from the 1990s on, but a tsunami was building then that led to the millions of underwater mortgages that are with us today. In fact, 24% of homeowners in the US have a mortgage that's under water, and one in ten of them owe 25% more than what their houses are worth! We know you want to think that we've hit bottom and that prices can only go up from here, but don't count on it.

Marketers Paying for Access to Consumers
In the early 1990s, marketing futurist Donald Libey forecast that marketers would be paying prospects and customers for the privilege of sending them advertising messages. The future is here.

Rebounding in a Recession: The Tale of Two Hair Tools ©
An in-depth look at two new inventions, Topsy Tail and Bumpit, that were wildly successful, grossing more than $100 million each, and went to market during the economic downturn in the early 1990s and the Great Recession in 2008.

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