Your search for "Outsourcing" turned up no sets. Try checking for spelling mistakes, generalizing your terms, or using similar words.
| # | Term | Definition | From Set |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Outsourcing | The procuring of services or products, such as the parts used in manufacturing a motor vehicle, from an outside supplier or manufacturer in order to cut costs | Immigration |
| 2 | Outsourcing | The procuring of services or products, such as the parts used in manufacturing a motor vehicle, from an outside supplier or manufacturer in order to cut costs | Civil Rights |
| 3 | Outsourcing | The procuring of services or products, such as the parts used in manufacturing a motor vehicle, from an outside supplier or manufacturer in order to cut costs | Civil Rights |
| 4 | Outsourcing | the buying of parts of a product to be assembled elsewhere, as in purchasing cheap foreign parts rather than manufacturing them at home. | Colonial Development |
| 5 | outsourcing | Using outside vendors to produce goods or fulfill services and functions that were previously handled in-country / in-house | UAA BA151 Test #3 |
| 6 | Outsourcing | The practice of using workers from outside a company to cut costs or increase production. | World Civ II - Sytsema - Unit 1 - Vocabulary |
| 7 | Outsourcing | Process of purchasing goods and services from outside vendors rather than producing the same goods or providing the same services within the organization | Cost Accounting--Ch. 11 |
| 8 | Outsourcing | to purchase (goods) or subcontract (services) from an outside supplier or source. | Fehr's Class |
| 9 | outsourcing | the act of transferring management of MIS resources (hardware, software and personnel) to an outside MIS specialist | MIS |
| 10 | Outsourcing | Practice of offloading storage management to an outside organization or online Web service. | IFSM 201 |
| 11 | outsourcing | to obtain goods or services from an outside source | advanced reading 1 |
| 12 | outsourcing | obtaining good from someone that is a outsource | adv reading |
| 13 | outsourcing | to obtain goods or servies from another source | advanced reading 1 |
| 14 | Outsourcing | Sending off a job/service to another location to save money or to bolster an economy | Globalization Terms |
| 15 | Outsourcing | A business strategy that involves reducing costs by using suppliers of products and services in countries where labour is cheaper and government regulation may be less strict | Social 10 - Terms and definitions |
| 16 | outsourcing | Using outside vendors to produce goods and services formerly produced in-house. | 3020 Marketing Chapter 6 |
| 17 | outsourcing | The practice of using workers from outside a company to cut costs or increase production. | BUS-ADM 555 |
| 18 | outsourcing | assigning various functions to outside organizations | intro business ch. 1 |
| 19 | outsourcing | the process of eliminating those parts of organizations that focus on noncore sectors of the business (i.e. tasks that are peripheral to the organization) and hiring outside firms to perform these functions instead. | Industrial Psyc Test1 |
| 20 | outsourcing | means contracting with other companies to do some or all of the functions of a firm | takingriskchpt1scs |
| 21 | outsourcing | contracting with other companiesto do some or all of the functions of a firm (often in other countries) | ch1terms |
| 22 | outsourcing | assigning various functions, such as accounting, production, security, maintenance, and legal work, to outside organizations | Ch. 1- Taking Risks and Making Profits (Bus. Ed.) |
| 23 | Outsourcing | Assigning various functions, such as accounting, production, security, maintenance, and, legal work, to outside organizations | chapter 1 vocab-cm |
| 24 | outsourcing | assigning various functions, such as accounting, production, security, maintenence, and legal work, to ourside organizations | business ed chapter 1 |
| 25 | Outsourcing | Assigning various functions, such as accounting, production, security, maintenance, and legal work, to outside organizations. | OSHS Business Ed. - Chapter 1 vocab |
| 26 | outsourcing | Assigning various functions, such as accounting,production,security,maintenance,and legal work, to outside organizations | Chapter 1 - Managing Within the Dynamic Business Environement:Taking Risks and Making Profits |
| 27 | outsourcing | contracting with an outside provider to produce one or more of an organization's products or services | mhrch6 |
| 28 | Outsourcing | sending a peice of the production process elsewhere (commonly in another country) | Macroeconomics Juganatos Test 2 |
| 29 | outsourcing | turning over all or part of the logistics function to an independent third party. | Bus 121 14 |
| 30 | outsourcing | paying another company to provide services which a company might otherwise have employed its own staff to perform | Economic Vocabulary KS 8th |
| 31 | outsourcing | the contracting out of particular functions of business operations to external organisations | coordinating the business |
| 32 | Outsourcing | The movement of work outside the state or nation, such as customer service phone calls orthe production of goods | Ch 10: Paying the Bills-California's Budget Struggles |
| 33 | outsourcing | to obtain goods or services from an outside source: U.S. companies who outsource from China | End of the Year Review (American History) |
| 34 | Outsourcing | In which of the following is a firms most likely to lose direct control over value-creation activities? | Bus Policy II - 9 |
| 35 | Outsourcing | Moving some of a firm's internal activities and decision responsibility to outside providers. | Operation mgmt-10 |
| 36 | Outsourcing | The relocation of production once done in the United States to foreign countries. | Chapter Two |
| 37 | outsourcing | paying another company to provide services which a company might otherwise have employed its own staff to perform | 1 |
| 38 | outsourcing | factory work being done overseas because costs are less | eco ch. 9 |
| 39 | Outsourcing | Sending industrial processes out for external production. The term increasingly applies not only to traditional industrial functions, but also to the contracting of service industry functions to companies to overseas locations, where operating costs remain relatively low. | Economic Geography |
| 40 | Outsourcing | Give jobs to other countries because they charge less | S.S. |
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