Betekenis van:
consulting company
consulting company
Zelfstandig naamwoord
- a firm of experts providing professional advice to an organization for a fee
Synoniemen
Hyperoniemen
Voorbeeldzinnen
- The consulting firm observes that the company has been registering heavy losses and that demand for its products has been low.
- Consequently, after consulting the Advisory Committee, it was decided not to grant MET to Xinanchem on the basis that the company did not meet all the criteria set in Article 2(7)(c) of the basic Regulation.
- Business relationships include the situation of a significant supplier of goods or services (including financial, legal, advisory or consulting services), of a significant customer, and of organisations that receive significant contributions from the company or its group;
- For the whole infrastructure (active and passive) UPC/RBB estimates EUR 1500 per home passed (EUR 1000/EUR 500 respectively), KPN EUR 1300, Hillegom (Dutch FttH project) EUR 1200, Corning (fibre optic manufacturer) EUR 1200, Arthur D. Little (consulting company) EUR 1000 (EUR 600/EUR 400 respectively), Fastweb (Italian broadband operator) EUR 1200, ARCEP (French regulator) EUR 2000 (data from 2005 and 2006), JPMorgan (consulting company) EUR 1000-EUR 2000.
- In the Stratix Consulting/Delft Technical University report prepared for the Dutch authorities on 8 March 2007 and submitted to the Commission on 16 March 2007, the consultant company lists approximately 50 ongoing fibre deployment projects in the Netherlands as of December 2006, with a similar amount of new projects announced and planned to be launched from 2007.
- Based on a study carried out by the McKinsey consulting firm and in order to ensure the long-term viability of the company, OTE adopted a package of restructuring measures in May 2004, the key element of which is the voluntary retirement scheme (VRS).
- Based on a study carried out by the McKinsey consulting firm and in order to ensure the long-term viability of the company, OTE adopted a package of restructuring measures in May 2004, the key element of which is the voluntary retirement scheme (VRS). With the VRS, OTE aims to reduce its permanent staff and be in a position to recruit new qualified staff that will no longer enjoy permanent status.