Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • adjective Involving more than one type of product.

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

multi- +‎ product

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Examples

  • There is little certainty customers will longer term again favor shopping at multiproduct hypermarkets over specialist stores.

    Carrefour's Makeover Is Unproven 2010

  • Labels struggle to survive except as part of large, multiproduct fashion corporations with deep pockets and a global marketing machine -- or as niche players with low overheads and a cult following.

    A Misfit in the Couture Business 2009

  • That would mimic the approach Apple took with the iPod, which evolved over time into a broad multiproduct family offering different features at various prices.

    Time Will Tell Whether iPhone 2008

  • "I'm trying to create a culture where people get multiproduct, multistrategy business exposure," Mr. Banga said in an interview.

    Citi Asia-Pacific Arm to Focus 2008

  • In my case the habilitation thesis was a monography on multiproduct pricing.

    Reinhard Selten - Autobiography 1995

  • Tom Marschak which resulted in a book on multiproduct pricing published in 1974.

    Reinhard Selten - Autobiography 1995

  • If total costs more than double when output of all products doubles, then there are multiproduct diseconomies of scale.

    Executive Economics SHLOMO MAITAL 1994

  • If both single-product scale economies and scope economies work in the same direction—to lower costs, or raise costs—then the overall multiproduct economies of scale will of course reflect the same trend.

    Executive Economics SHLOMO MAITAL 1994

  • But if single-product scale and scope work in opposite directions, then the overall effect, in multiproduct economies of scale, will depend on which effect is stronger.

    Executive Economics SHLOMO MAITAL 1994

  • Similarly, the multiproduct, multinational matrix organizations of the 1970s used combinations of the functional and divisional forms to create economic machines of enormous strength and complexity.

    Fit, Failure, and the Hall of Fame Raymond E. Miles 1994

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