7 books found
by Michael Levi Rodkinson
1903
Customers demystified! How you can move them to buy...buy more...and keep on buying! The truth about what customers really want, think, and feel The truth about keeping current customers happy–and loyal The truth about the newest trends and advances in consumer behavior Simply the best thinking THE TRUTH AND NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH This book reveals 50 bite-size, easy-to-use techniques for finding and keeping highly profitable customers “Michael Solomon’s The Truth About What Customers Want contains great insights into consumer behavior and is a must-have tool for anyone working in a consumer-driven field. His 50 truths take the guesswork out of marketing intelligence and give insight into navigating today’s technology-driven world.” Tim Dunphy, Senior Marketing Manager, Consumer Insights, Black & Decker
by Michael Kaufman
1996 · Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Love, Marriage, and Family in the JewishLaw and Tradition is everything you wanted to know about the Jewish view on marriage, sexuality, and child bearing in clear and concise language. This comprehensive book looks to inform the reader about all the Jewish laws concerning family, marriage, procreation, and child rearing.
by Michael Solomon, Rebekah Russell-Bennett, Josephine Previte
2012 · Pearson Higher Education AU
Consumer behaviour is more than buying things; it also embraces the study of how having (or not having) things affects our lives and how possessions influence the way we feel about ourselves and each other - our state of being. The 3rd edition of Consumer Behaviour is presented in a contemporary framework based around the buying, having and being model and in an Australasian context. Students will be engaged and excited by the most current research, real-world examples, global coverage, managerial applications and ethical examples to cover all facets of consumer behaviour. With new coverage of Personality and incorporating real consumer data, Consumer Behaviour is fresh, relevant and up-to-date. It provides students with the best possible introduction to this fascinating discipline.
This memoir begins a program to classify a large subclass of the class of simple saturated 2-fusion systems of component type. Such a classification would be of great interest in its own right, but in addition it should lead to a significant simplification of the proof of the theorem classifying the finite simple groups. Why should such a simplification be possible? Part of the answer lies in the fact that there are advantages to be gained by working with fusion systems rather than groups. In particular one can hope to avoid a proof of the B-Conjecture, a important but difficult result in finite group theory, established only with great effort.