Dogs These are products with a low share of a low growth market. These are the canine version of 'real turkeys!'. They do not generate cash for the company, they tend to absorb it. Get rid of these products. Cash Cows ...
Dogs - a product classification used in the Boston Consulting Portfolio Analysis Matrix; dogs are products with a relatively low market share in a slow-growth market.
Dogs - products with a relatively low market share in a slow-growth market. Dollar Volume Quota - a common form of sales assignment, goal or target used to measure a salesperson's performance.
Dogs A term used in the Boston Group Matrix. Unsurprisingly, the term "dogs" refers to businesses or products that have low relative share in unattractive, low-growth markets.
bird dogs individuals who seek out and generate sales leads and prospects for more experienced salespeople a system of transportation requiring the transfer of containers from truck to aeroplane, see fishyback and piggyback ...
Dogs These are products which have low market shares and low market growth rates. The options for many companies is to phase these products out, however some organisation do go for the strategy of re-inventing and injecting new life into the product.
Ask Trying to be considered as one of the "Top Dogs" along with Yahoo and MSN, following Google. ASP Dual meanings: Microsoft Active Server Pages (filename.asp) or Application Service Provider (e.g. a provider of web based applications) ...
" Forget about what your teacher said. You’re running with the big dogs now. Which is more interesting? "The boy skipped happily and grinned openly," or "The boy skipped down the hill, a grin playing about his face." ...
Boston Box: (also known as the BCG matrix) a tool for analysing a product portfolio, plotting relative market share against market growth rate for each product. The resultant matrix classifies products as cash cows, dogs, question marks and stars.
A dog results when a business unit has a small share in a market that is not growing. This is generally a somewhat unattractive situation, although dogs can still be profitable in the short run.
See also: Marketing, Product, Company, Market, Strategy
 
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