production incentives - meaning and definition. What is production incentives
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What (who) is production incentives - definition

Travel incentives

Movie production incentives in the United States         
  • Many states provide financial incentives for film and television production.
OVERVIEW ABOUT THE MOVIE PRODUCTION INCENTIVES IN THE UNITED STATES
User:Dglasser13/sandbox; Movie Production Incentives in the United States; California film tax credit
Movie production incentives are tax benefits offered on a state-by-state basis throughout the United States to encourage in-state film production. Since the 1990s, states have offered increasingly competitive incentives to lure productions away from other states.
mass-produced         
  • The assembly plant of the Bell Aircraft Corporation in 1944. Note parts of [[overhead crane]] at both sides of photo near top.
  • Mass production of [[Consolidated B-32 Dominator]] airplanes at [[Consolidated Aircraft]] Plant No. 4, near Fort Worth, Texas, during World War II
  • Ford assembly line, 1913. The magneto assembly line was the first.
  • From old price tables it can be deduced that the capacity of a printing press around 1600, assuming a fifteen-hour workday, was between 3,200 and 3,600 impressions per day.}}</ref>
  • A pulley block for rigging on a sailing ship. By 1808, annual production in Portsmouth reached 130,000 blocks.
  • museum in Yekaterinburg, Russia]].
HIGH VOLUME PRODUCTION OF STANDARDIZED PRODUCTS
Mass-production; Mass produced; Mass-produce; Mass Production; Mass-produced; Continuous flow production; Serial production; Series production; Commercial-scale facility; Production-intent; Large-scale production; Flow production; Bulk production; Mass manufacturing; Standardized mass production; Standardised mass production; Mass-manufactured
mass-produce         
  • The assembly plant of the Bell Aircraft Corporation in 1944. Note parts of [[overhead crane]] at both sides of photo near top.
  • Mass production of [[Consolidated B-32 Dominator]] airplanes at [[Consolidated Aircraft]] Plant No. 4, near Fort Worth, Texas, during World War II
  • Ford assembly line, 1913. The magneto assembly line was the first.
  • From old price tables it can be deduced that the capacity of a printing press around 1600, assuming a fifteen-hour workday, was between 3,200 and 3,600 impressions per day.}}</ref>
  • A pulley block for rigging on a sailing ship. By 1808, annual production in Portsmouth reached 130,000 blocks.
  • museum in Yekaterinburg, Russia]].
HIGH VOLUME PRODUCTION OF STANDARDIZED PRODUCTS
Mass-production; Mass produced; Mass-produce; Mass Production; Mass-produced; Continuous flow production; Serial production; Series production; Commercial-scale facility; Production-intent; Large-scale production; Flow production; Bulk production; Mass manufacturing; Standardized mass production; Standardised mass production; Mass-manufactured
¦ verb [often as adjective mass-produced] produce large quantities of (a standardized article) by an automated mechanical process.
Derivatives
mass-producer noun
mass production noun

Wikipedia

Travel incentive

Travel incentives are a reward subset of an incentive program, recognition program or a loyalty program, which is a business tool designed to change consumer behavior to improve profit, cash flow, employee engagement and customer engagement. It has been described as business travel that is designed to motivate or trigger action, as a reward for these actions from employees or business partners. This fosters loyalty and encourages the best talent for an organisation.

When an organization properly designs an incentive program, which includes looking at all departments which will be affected, rather than just the impact to the department that is sponsoring the incentive, the return on investment can be proven. Oxford Economics USA wrote in a 2009 study that incentive travel investments yielded a return of investment of more than $4:$1. and stated that in order to achieve the same effect of incentive travel, an employee’s total base compensation would need to be increased by 8.5%.

The Incentive Research Foundation released a study in 2010 following the steps that an organization took to ensure that they received a return on their investment; they successfully merged acquired organizations into their company, and successfully merged their incentive programs.

Examples of use of production incentives
1. "It would take a combination of consumption mandates to ensure that the demand would be there, and conceivably some production incentives to use sugar ethanol," he said.