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The purpose of this ad campaign is to()the prospective customers’interest in this latest model of ours.
A . appeal
B . encourage
C . arouse
D . attract
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What are three benefit that the Smart Business Architecture provides to customers?()
A . enables efficient customer serviceeffctiveness
B . provides anempowered fronline workforce
C . createsa more informed management.
D . generates customer-specific configurations
E . automatically matches customer needs to solutions
F . provides an ROI analysis for decision-maker
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You need to design the restrictions on the Bank.Customers table. Which three actions should you perform?()
A . Design a trigger that verifies that the first names and surnames are not empty strings.
B . Design a check constraint that verifies that the first names and surnames are not empty strings.
C . Design a check constraint that uses a CLR user-defined function to verify that either the phone number is a null value or the format of the phone number is valid.
D . Design a trigger that uses a CLR user-defined function to verify that either the phone number is a null value or the format of the phone number is valid.
E . Design a check constraint that ensures that the phone number cannot be changed from a valid format to a null value or to an invalid format.
F . Design a trigger that ensures that the phone number cannot be changed from a valid format to a null value.
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The football match had to be()owing to (由于) the bad weather.
A、cancelled
B、advanced
C、arranged
D、held
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all of the following tools and techniques are helpful to acurately confirming customers needs except ()
A . A、questionnaires
B . B、prototyping approaches
C . C、fishbone diagrams
D . D、interviews
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Why do the customers who go to the competition consequently ring Sally’s firm?
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We have to investigate as____ customers as possible in order to make sure of the potential of the market.
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It takes a comparatively short amount of time to reach the customers at trade fairs.
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Financial department is responsible for delivering goods to the customers.
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are the pharmaceutical customers according to the text.
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Customers must have access to the Internet and a valid method of payment in order to complete a transaction.
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McDonald’s plan to allow customers to see the drinks being made is an obvious reflection of its traditional approach.()
是
否
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In order to a more customers, the shop offered special discount.
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Understanding the customers()is important to a successful product presentation.
A.needs
B.advice
C.psychology
D.age
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Why would Mr. Scott like to change the packing design for toy cars______?
A、Because he would like to catch the Christmas shopping season
B、Because he would like to launch a new product
C、Because he would like to save costs
D、Because he would like to improve corporate image
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Which of the following is helpful for IBM to attract customers?
A.The on-premises mail solution called Notes.
B.The cooperation with Microsoft in using the cloud.
C.The cloud-based message system called LotusLive iNotes.
D.The good remarks from Coca-Cola and Kraft Foods.
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On a cold and rainy day last February, Bruce Alberts wore a grim expression as he stepped up to the microphones to make his statement at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C.1. The final results of the Third International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) had just been released, and America's high school seniors had placed near the back of tile pack.
"There is no excuse for this, "President Bill Clinton had already chided." These results are, entirely unacceptable, "admonished the secretary of education. The head of the National Education Association declared U.S. schools to be in a state of crisis. And now Alberts, president of the National Academy of Sciences, said that he, too, saw in this report "all the elements of an education tragedy."
"Americans have always risen to a crisis," he added. "We see clearly that the future is threatened. 2. Let us act now to heed this important wake-up call." And so, with editorial writers and educators across the country obligingly sounding the alarm, American education lurched yet again into crisis mode.
It is a cyclical ritual, repeated in every decade since the 1940s, observes Gregory William of the University of Toledo. 3. The launch of Sputnik in 1957 set off an orgy of anxiety culminating in Admiral Hyman Rickover's 1963 book American Education, A National Failure, in which he famously predicted that "the Russians will bury us" thanks to their more rigorous science and math courses. 4. Beginning with the 1983 publication of A Nation at Risk, one blue-ribbon panel after another warned that massive educational failure had ceded the United State's technological lead to Japan and other competitors—a conclusion that proved premature.
5. Although the particulars vary from one education crisis to the next, the episodes are connected by common threads. Each has surged into public discourse on an unrelenting torrent of angst flowing from the educational research profession, William says. Combing through the education literature of the past 30 years, he recently turned up more than 4,000 articles and books in which scholars declared some sort of crisis in the schools—but rarely bothered to spell out what cataclysm was imminent. Each episode has also eaten away at public confidence in schools, which fell 38 percent from 1973 to 1996, according to surveys by the National Opinion Research Center.
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What does the company promise to the foreign customers? They will give their ______ on the detailed requirements.
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What is the most significant characteristics for Blue & White Restaurants to attract the customers?
A.The delicious food and its good service
B.Its comfortable atmosphere and the lowest price
C.The pleasant atmosphere and prompt service
D.Its efficient operations and the quick service
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Late-night comedians had a field day in the summer of 2002 when a lawsuit accusing McDonald's of making two teenage customers in New York fat and unhealthy was filed.
But thousands of restaurant owners were not amused:Pelman v. McDonald's was the second time in a month that lawyers had tried to hold food companies responsible for America's obesity crisis.
Food and restaurant companies, fearing they would be hammered with enormous judgments, as the tobacco industry was. immediately began fighting back, waging an aggressive campaign to make it impossible for anyone to sue them successfully for causing obesity or obesity-related health problems.
Almost three years later, they have had astounding success. Twenty states have enacted versions of a"commonsense consumption"law. They vary slightly in substance, but all prevent lawsuits seeking personal injury damages related to obesity from ever being tried in their courts. Another 11 states have similar legislation pending.
Although plaintiffs' lawyers are confident there are ways around the new state laws, the measures, along with a class- action overhaul bill President Bush signed into law this year, will probably make it harder for lawyers in obesity cases to win the kind of large awards seen in tobacco cases.
The National Restaurant Association, based in Washington, and its 50 state organizations, which represent large chains like McDonald's and small independent businesses, led the campaign. In most states, lobbyists for food companies and restaurants helped write the legislation and did much of the legwork in state capitols.
Restaurant owners and food company executives personally visited state lawmakers, testified at hearings and steered campaign contributions to pivotal lawmakers. Executives from Kraft and Coca-Cola showed up in Texas, for instance, to lobby for that state' s commonsense consumption bill, which was signed into law by Gov. RickPerry last month.
According to data from the Institute on Money in State Politics. a nonpartisan research group based in Helena, Mont. , in the 2002 and 2004 election cycles, the food and restaurant industry gave a total of $5. 5 million to politicians in the 20 states that have passed laws shielding companies from obesity liability.
Adoption of commonsense consumption laws by almost half the states reveals how an organized and impassioned lobbying effort, combined with a receptive legislative climate, can quickly alter the legal framework on a major public health issue like obesity.
Consumer advocates, who knew about the state efforts but were preoccupied trying to prevent similar measures from being enacted on a national level, are not pleased. Michael Jacobson executive director of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, calls it "shameful" that food companies are trying to get special exemptions from lawsuits.
"If someone is saying that a 64-ounce soda at 7-Eleven contributed to obesity, that person should have his day in court, "Mr. Jacobson said. "If it's frivolous, the courts are accustomed to throwing those out. "
The purpose of the "commonsense consumption" law is to_____.
A.to protect the customers' rights in obesity cases
B.to shield the food companies from obesity charges
C.to uphold the judicial justice
D.both A and C
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We will pack the goods_our usual practice if we do not hear from you to the contrary()
A.owing to
B.according to
C.due to
D.thanks to
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They have to be customers or people who are interested in the product.
A.respected
B.prospective
C.formal
D.necessary
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Which of the statements is Not True?()A、After sales service is to satisfy the need of customers
B、After sales service is important
C、After sales service is to serve the customers before sale
D、After sales service is the bond between the organization and the customers