Yeah, but now suddenly - you know, universities are notoriously market oriented, too.
There is only one side of the market and it is not the bull side or the bear side, but the right side.
At least us old men remember what a real bear market is like, and the young men haven't got a clue.
You know, magic markets don't appear all the time, so you take advantage of them.
A lot of very popular mainstream artists are products of record companies and marketing companies, and any time anyone can stand outside of that, that's interesting.
You have to let the market reward effort and skill. But a system in which inequality of incomes constantly increases over time is worrisome.
Selling drug secrets violates a trust that is fundamental to the integrity of both scientific research and our financial markets.
It's mostly the financial chicanery that's going on. People are saying 'What kind of trust can we put in this market?'
The bottom line is that these athletes tend to be safer investments because they really value their marketing opportunities. They don't make as much money as during their active careers.
Markets are constantly in a state of uncertainty and flux and money is made by discounting the obvious and betting on the unexpected.
The trend of the market is up, not down. Shorting stocks puts you against that trend and thus makes it more difficult to make money.
When what you do and care about is aligned with what the market wants and cares about, you've created a recipe for career success.
PR is extremely important, and being able to use it in the right way means everything. You have to market your success.
Somewhere along the way to free-market capitalism, the United States became the most wasteful society on the planet.
Nobody wants to be against technology, but I think that regulators should not - and people should not - assume that faster is always better in markets.
Diesel pioneered the idea of luxury denim, and we still drive this market. But it encompasses more: the consumers love the brand, the lifestyle, the mentality of Diesel.
Napster was a black market for music. Ninety-nine per cent of the music that people were downloading was illegal because they didn't have the rights for it.
However in countries outside of Japan I think game music is still a potential growth market that has not yet developed to the extent that we are seeing in Japan.
I found that when I was putting my own music out, with my Twitter feed as the pure marketing budget, I'm preaching to the choir.
It will take very sophisticated marketing to achieve our aim of bringing more black people into the theater.
An attack on the scale of Sept. 11 would rock the markets and the economy.