What these churches have to offer, in addition to intangibles like eternal salvation, is concrete, material assistance. |
|
Brand boosters like Business Week hold that the power of brands lies in the intangibles that distinguish one firm's offering from another. |
|
Most of the intelligences are linked to tangibles like objects or other people, but existential intelligence deals with intangibles. |
|
Reinforce your brand's value proposition with meaningful intangibles, like superior customer service. |
|
Plus you have the intangibles, like a personal feeling of accomplishment and the fact that you get to use the table saw. |
|
The story explores how rules get made or changed and how environmental intangibles are quantified. |
|
While we may work on intangibles such as pride of the people, pride of being self-determined, we've always asked the question, what's it for? |
|
The intangibles, family readiness, morale of troops, those type of things are hard to measure. |
|
Sometimes the intangibles have more to do with a career decision than the tangibles. |
|
Locke has since then been used to legitimise the creation of new property rights in tangibles and intangibles. |
|
Ultimately, our pick came down to something we usually pay lip service to yet never really consider, intangibles. |
|
It just means that there are all sorts of intangibles that go into these things. |
|
What extraordinarily powerful intangibles professionals leave off the bottom line. |
|
There are always other factors, other variables, intangibles sometimes, which really make the difference. |
|
But that's not going to work because the intangibles are more important. |
|
Senior Editor Gross writes about research, patents, and other intangibles. |
|
Companies do this with stocks and bonds but not with intangibles. |
|
There are still some intangibles that I can't quite wrap my mind around. |
|
He has the intangibles that often separate one player from another. |
|
By essence, I mean the intangibles that give any city an identity. |
|
|
It is a sort of leitmotif which is particularly appropriate when dealing with intangibles such as culture action and the arts. |
|
I must remind you that most of these measures relate to investments in intangibles and to a limited number of issues and measures. |
|
Intellectual capital and intangibles are likely to become ever more important. |
|
Some intangibles, such as customer goodwill or employee motivation, are obviously related to the success of a company. |
|
Mentoring allows employees to learn the intangibles that are needed to succeed in the workplace. |
|
The capacity to outthink the competition, to convert knowledge to power and smarts to money, defines the shift from an economy of tangibles to one of intangibles. |
|
But the marginal value of tangibles versus intangibles has shifted. |
|
To prevent a potential and significant revenue loss, the bill closes a loophole involving the sale and lease back of intangibles such as trademarks and newspaper mastheads. |
|
Interpreters can extract an important lesson about tangibles and intangibles from baseball fans' pursuit of foul balls. |
|
All other inputs to production are called intangibles in classical economics. |
|
Far from leaving the traditional sectors outmoded, the new economy of knowledge and intangibles opens up a new dimension for these sectors, demolishing conceptual boundaries and all types of boundaries in general. |
|
It is one of the newest, most dynamic sectors where creativity, knowledge and intangibles serve as the basic productive resource. |
|
It may be very difficult to find intangibles which are comparable. |
|
Consequently, the Bank believes that earnings before amortization of intangibles provides the reader with an understanding of the Bank's results that can be consistently tracked from period to period. |
|
As a result of our acquisitions over the past several years, our net earnings have been affected by purchase accounting, resulting in an increased amount of amortization related to the acquired intangibles. |
|
Cultural heritage may include artifacts, cultural property, collective knowledge and skills, and other intangibles that are transmitted from one generation to the next, such as folklore, customs, representations or practices. |
|
Prior to its enactment in 1993, entities that acquired another trade or business faced the heavy burden of a two-pronged test to amortize acquired intangibles. |
|
Additional billing and systems modifications will be required where intangibles used in the provision of intercompany services are jointly developed by several affiliates. |
|