Difference between revisions of "Category:Business terms"

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[[year-end]]: relating to the end of a financial or fiscal (tax) year.
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[[wages]]: a form of pay given to employees in exchange for the work they have done 
  
[[yield]]: a percentage of the amount invested that is the annual income from an investment
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[[waiver of premium]]: a provision of an insurance policy that suspends payment of premiums, for example, if the insured suffers disabling injury 
  
[[zero-balance account]]: a bank account that does not hold funds continuously, but has money automatically transferred into it from another account when claims arise against it  
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[[wallet technology]]: a software package providing digital wallets or purses on the computers of merchants and customers to facilitate payment by digital cash  
  
[[zero-fund]]: to assign no money to a business project without actually canceling it
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[[Wall Street]]: the U.S. financial industry, or the area of New York City where much of its business is done 
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[[waste management]]: a sustainable process for reducing the environmental impact of the disposal of all types of materials used by businesses. 
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[[wealth]]: physical assets such as a house or financial assets such as stocks and shares that can yield an income for their holder
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[[Web marketing]]: the process of creating, developing, and enhancing a Web site in order to increase the number of visits by potential customers 
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[[weighted average]]: an average of quantities that have been adjusted by the addition of a statistical value to allow for their relative importance in a data set 
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[[whistleblowing]]: speaking out to the media or the public on malpractice, misconduct, corruption, or mismanagement witnessed in an organization
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[[wholesale price]]: a price charged to customers who buy large quantities of an item for resale in smaller quantities to others
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[[wholesaling]]: businesses and individuals engaged in the activity of selling products to retailers, organizational users or other wholesalers. Selling for resale. 
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[[withholding tax]]: the money that an employer pays directly to the U.S. government as a payment of the income tax on the employee
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[[word of mouse]]: word-of-mouth publicity on the Internet. Owing to the fast-paced and interactive nature of online markets, word of mouse can spread much faster than its offline counterpart 
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[[working capital]]: The excess of current assets over current liabilities. The cash needed to keep the business running from day to

Revision as of 19:35, 27 May 2010

wages: a form of pay given to employees in exchange for the work they have done

waiver of premium: a provision of an insurance policy that suspends payment of premiums, for example, if the insured suffers disabling injury

wallet technology: a software package providing digital wallets or purses on the computers of merchants and customers to facilitate payment by digital cash

Wall Street: the U.S. financial industry, or the area of New York City where much of its business is done

waste management: a sustainable process for reducing the environmental impact of the disposal of all types of materials used by businesses.

wealth: physical assets such as a house or financial assets such as stocks and shares that can yield an income for their holder

Web marketing: the process of creating, developing, and enhancing a Web site in order to increase the number of visits by potential customers

weighted average: an average of quantities that have been adjusted by the addition of a statistical value to allow for their relative importance in a data set

whistleblowing: speaking out to the media or the public on malpractice, misconduct, corruption, or mismanagement witnessed in an organization

wholesale price: a price charged to customers who buy large quantities of an item for resale in smaller quantities to others

wholesaling: businesses and individuals engaged in the activity of selling products to retailers, organizational users or other wholesalers. Selling for resale.

withholding tax: the money that an employer pays directly to the U.S. government as a payment of the income tax on the employee

word of mouse: word-of-mouth publicity on the Internet. Owing to the fast-paced and interactive nature of online markets, word of mouse can spread much faster than its offline counterpart

working capital: The excess of current assets over current liabilities. The cash needed to keep the business running from day to

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