The word "niches" in this context in Paragraph 2 means______.A.proper positionsB.various p
The word "niches" in this context in Paragraph 2 means______.
A.proper positions
B.various parts
C.holy recesses
D.small stores
The word "niches" in this context in Paragraph 2 means______.
A.proper positions
B.various parts
C.holy recesses
D.small stores
A.An increased saturation of the private sector with immigrants
B.The persistence of non-African American ethnic niches in certain sectors of the economy
C.A respite from competition found in the immigrant-saturated private-sector
D.A decline in the number of apparel manufacturing jobs available to African- Americans
E.A decrease in the level of educational credentials among new immigrants
While the emergence and persistence of ethnic niches testify to the
pervasive effects of social structures, the growing educational level of African
Americans since the 1970s has also equipped them for jobs that immigrants
Line found hard to obtain. The proportion of African Americans workers whose
(5) limited schooling confines them to such jobs as apparel manufacturing or
domestic work has declined. In particular, African Americans have found a
niche in the public sector, a shift that may have diminished the effects of
immigrant competition and put them in a position to absorb the positive effects
associated with the population gains produced by immigration. Without formal
(10) educational credentials, it is difficult for the least-skilled African Americans to
exploit the ethnic networks implanted in government employment, and thus
they must find employment in an immigrant saturated market. As the public
sector is now a declining enterprise, and more and more immigrants seek access
to public-sector jobs, only alternative deserving of attention is the creation of
(15) more private-sector employment for African Americans with limited schooling.
The primary purpose of the passage is to
A.analyze a current trend in relation to the past
B.discuss a particular solution to a long-standing problem
C.analyze changes in the way a long-standing problem is viewed
D.apply a generalization to an unusual situation
E.describe an old approach by contrasting it with a newer approach
How to Find Your Affiliate Niche Market
Profiting from your affiliate niches.
Finding your own profitable niche online is where most aspiring affiliates get stuck, and it can often take months on end to find a niche that will give you a favourable return on investment. (9)
1. Pick on a broad category of ideas, which could be green energy, affiliate marketing, relationships, general shopping, or sports, etc. (10)
2. Think about the subsets that lie within the broad category you picked on above. For example, if you chose the relationship market, think about people who are just starting to date, (11)
3. Pick on an item to sell that belongs to one of the subsets you just identified above.
4. Continue brainstorming and finding out specific details about the people that might belong to any of the subsets you picked on above. For example people who have just broken up in reality still want their partner back or would be more than willing to make up or buy products that help them understand why their partner broke up in the first place. (12)
5. Next step is to determine the profit potential of the keywords you think these people will be using when looking for solutions online. (13) The results that are returned will show you exactly how many websites are competing for that keyword, the lower the figure the better, also pay attention to the advertisements being run at the top and left hand sides, the fewer the better for you.
In summary that is how you find your affiliate niche market online. (14)
A. Those are the basic rules, finding lucrative niches, however, requires more strategies and techniques that you can find by visiting the number one place to learn about affiliate niche marketing.
B. is very possible if you truly understand the enormous potential that exists with knowing the correct niches to get into.
C. Skin this broad category till you get to a segment of what you started with.
D. Finding your own niche though is not entirely impossible, there are guidelines for finding niches and if followed correctly will get you results.
E. The easy way to do this is using quotes when entering the keyword into Google.
F. If you understand this then you are moments away from your ideal customers.
G. those who are breaking up, those who are not comfortable with the other partner or those that want to make the relationship better.
H. Niche marketing is an extremely powerful concept that has the potential to change affiliate income levels.
(9)
A、The target market niche is large, profitable, and growing 所选择的利基市场足够大、有利可图且还在发展中
B、Industry leaders do not consider the niche crucial or too costly or difficult to meet 行业领导者不把该利基市场作为其重要的目标市场,或者认为进入该市场非常困难或代价过大
C、The industry has many different niches and segments 所处行业中存在很多的利基市场和细分市场
D、Few, if any, other rivals are attempting to specialize in the same target segment 行业中很少有其他竞争对手力图进入同一个利基市场
A.It is the key to paperless office.
B.It will be replaced by the computer soon.
C.It is more troublesome than the computer.
D.It can hardly survive in the digital age.
听力原文: Now, I' d like to talk about psychological- space.
Not everyone in the world requires the same amount of living space. The amount of space a person needs around him is a cultural preference, not an economic one. Knowing our own psychological space needs is important because they strongly influence your choices, including, for example, the number of bedrooms in the home. If you were reared in a two-child family and both you and your sister or brother had your own bedrooms, the chances are, if you have two children or more, that you also will provide separate bedrooms for them. In America they train people to want their own private rooms by giving them their own rooms when they are babies. This is very rare in the world. In many cultures the baby sleeps in the same bed with his parents or in a crib near their bed.
The areas 'in the home where people gravitate also reveals a lot about psychological space needs: Some families cluster, and the size of their house has nothing to do with it. Others have separate little niches where family members go to be alone.
Although it is true that psychological space needs are not determined by economic factors, they sometimes have to be modified a little because of economic pressures. It is almost impossible, however, to completely change your psychological space needs.
Which of the following is the factor that determines human beings' psychological space needs?
A.Economic factors.
B.Pressure in life.
C.Individual preference.
D.Cultural preference.
These imposed caricatures, in combination with the other labels that accumulate from the sandbox through adolescence, can seem over time like a miserable cat, entourage of identities that can be silenced only with hours of therapy. But there's another way to see these alternate identities: as challenges that can sharpen psychological skills. In a country where reinvention is considered a birthright, many people seem to treat old identities the way Houdini treated padlocked boxes: something to wriggle free from, before being dragged down. And psychological research suggests that this ability can be a sign of mental resilience, of taking control of your own story rather than being trapped by it.
The late-night bull sessions in college or at backyard barbecues are at some level like out-of-body experiences, allowing a re-coloring of past experience to connect with new acquaintances. A more obvious outlet to expand identity—and one that's available to those who have not or cannot escape the family and community where they're known and labeled—is the Internet. Admittedly, a lot of the role-playing on the Internet can have a deviant quality. But researchers have found that many people who play life-simulation games, for example, set up the kind of families they would like to have had, even script. alternate versions of their own role in the family or in a peer group.
Decades ago the psychologist Erik Erickson conceived of middle age as a stage of life defined by a tension between stagnation and generativity—a healthy sense of guiding and nourishing the next generation, of helping the community. Ina series of studies, the Northwestern psychologist Dan P. McAdams has found that adults in their 40s and 50s whose lives show this generous quality—who often volunteer, who have a sense of accomplishment—tell very similar stories about how they came to be who they are. Whether they grew up in rural poverty or with views of Central Park, they told their life stories as series of redemptive lessons. When they failed a grade, they found a wonderful tutor, and later made the honor roll; when fired from a good job, they were forced to start their own business.
This similarity in narrative constructions most likely reflects some agency, a willful reshaping and re-imagining of the past that informs the present. These are people who, whether pegged as nerds or rebels or plodders, have taken control of the stories that form. their identities.
In conversation, people are often willing to hand out thumbnail descriptions of themselves: "I'm kind of a hermit". Or a talker, a practical joker, a striver, a snob, a morning person. But they are more likely to wince when someone else describes them so authoritatively.
Maybe that's because they have come too far, shaken off enough old labels already. Like escape artists with a lifetime's experience slipping through chains, they don't want or need any additional work. Because while most people can leave their family niches, schoolyard nicknames and high school reputations behind, they don't ever entirely forget them.
A recent study shows that
A.the firstborns and younger siblings are often treated differently.
B.higher IQ holders in a family are always the eldest.
C.the firstborns in a family often become more academic
D.the younger siblings are more likely to be ill-treated.
Mass production, the defining characteristic of the Second Wave economy, becomes increasingly obsolete as firms install information intensive, often robotized manufacturing systems capable of endless cheap variation, even customization. The revolutionary result is, in effect, the demassification of mass production.
The shift toward smart flex techs promotes diversity and feeds consumer choice to the point that a Wal-Mart store can offer the buyer nearly 110,000 products in various types, sizes, models and colors to choose among. But Wal-Mart is a mass merchandiser. Increasingly, the mass market itself is breaking up into differentiated niches as customer needs diverge and better information makes it possible for businesses to identify and serve micro markets.
Specialty stores, boutiques, superstores, TV home-shopping systems, computer based buying, direct mail and other systems provide a growing diversity of channels through which producers can distribute their wares to customers in an increasingly demassified marketplace. When we wrote Future Shock in the late 1960s, visionary marketers began talking about "market segmentation". Today they no longer focus on " segments" but on " particles "—family units and even single individuals. Meanwhile, advertising is targeted at smaller and smaller market segments reached through increasingly demassified media.
The dramatic breakup of mass audiences is underscored by the crisis of the once great TV networks, ABC, CBS, and NBC, at a time when Tele-Communications, Inc. of Denver, announces a fiber optic network capable of providing viewers with five hundred interactive channels of television. Such systems mean that sellers will be able to target buyers with even greater precision. The simultaneous demassification of production, distribution and communication revolutionizes the economy and shifts it from homogeneity toward extreme heterogeneity.
Which is true about "mass production" according to the author?
A.It promotes further development in manufacturing systems.
B.It defines the Second Wave economy and will last.
C.It involves intensive information, automation, and customization.
D.It is becoming dated for the present economy.
The shift toward smart flex-techs promotes diversity and feeds consumer choice to the point that a Wal-Mart store can offer the buyer nearly 110,000 products in various types, sizes, models and colors to choose among. But Wal-Mart is a mass merchandiser. Increasingly, the mass market itself is breaking up into differentiated niches as customer needs diverge and better information makes it possible for businesses to identify and serve micro-markets.
Specialty stores, boutiques, superstores, TV home-shopping systems, computer based buying, direct mail and other systems provide a growing diversity of channels through which producers can distribute their wares to customers in an increasingly de-massified marketplace. When we wrote Future Shock in the late 1960s, visionary marketers began talking about "market segmentation". Today they no longer focus on "segments" but on "particles"—family units and even single individuals. Meanwhile, advertising is targeted at smaller and smaller market segments reached through increasingly de-massified media. The dramatic breakup of mass audiences is underscored by the crisis of the once great TV networks, ABC, CBS, and NBC, at a time when Tele-Communications, Inc. of Denver, announces a fiber-optic network capable of providing viewers with five hundred interactive channels of television. Such systems mean that sellers will be able to target buyers with even greater precision. The simultaneous de-massification of production, distribution and communication revolutionizes the economy and shifts it from homogeneity toward extreme heterogeneity.
Which is true about "mass production" according to the author?
A.It promotes further development in manufacturing systems
B.It defines the Second Wave economy and will last
C.It involves intensive information, automation, and customization
D.It is becoming dated for the present economy
The shift toward smart flex techs promotes diversity and feeds consumer choice to the point that a Wal-Mart store can offer the buyer nearly 110,000 products in various types, sizes, models and colors to choose among. But Wal-Mart is a mass merchandiser. Increasingly, the mass market itself is breaking up into differentiated niches as customer needs diverge and better information makes it possible for businesses to identify and serve micro markets.
Specialty stores, boutiques, superstores, TV home-shopping systems, computer based buying, direct mail and other systems provide a growing diversity of channels through which producers can distribute their wares to customers in an increasingly demassified marketplace. When we wrote Future Shock in the late 1960s, visionary marketers began talking about "market segmentation". Today they no longer focus on " segments" but on " particles "—family units and even single individuals. Meanwhile, advertising is targeted at smaller and smaller market segments reached through increasingly demassified media.
The dramatic breakup of mass audiences is underscored by the crisis of the once great TV networks, ABC, CBS, and NBC, at a time when Tele-Communications, Inc. of Denver, announces a fiber optic network capable of providing viewers with five hundred interactive channels of television. Such systems mean that sellers will be able to target buyers with even greater precision. The simultaneous demassification of production, distribution and communication revolutionizes the economy and shifts it from homogeneity toward extreme heterogeneity.
Which is true about "mass production" according to the author?
A.It promotes further development in manufacturing systems.
B.It defines the Second Wave economy and will last.
C.It involves intensive information, automation, and customization.
D.It is becoming dated for the present economy.
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