Difference between revisions of "What Industry Is"
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:An [[industry]] is the part of any [[economy segment]] that groups those [[enterprise]]s that create a particular type of [[product]]. | :An [[industry]] is the part of any [[economy segment]] that groups those [[enterprise]]s that create a particular type of [[product]]. | ||
− | :[[Economist]]s use several [[industrial classification]]s. The government and business in Canada, Mexico, and the [[United States]] primarily use the [[North American Industry Classification System]] ([[NAICS]]). The | + | :[[Economist]]s use several [[industrial classification]]s. The government and business in Canada, Mexico, and the [[United States]] primarily use the [[North American Industry Classification System]] ([[NAICS]]). The [[United Nations]] uses the [[International Standard Industrial Classification]] ([[ISIC]]). To group [[employer]]s, [[CNM Cyber]] uses its own |
Revision as of 11:43, 4 May 2020
What Industry Is (hereinafter, the Lectio) is the second lesson part of the Industries and Specialties lesson that introduces its participants to industries, professional specialties, and related topics.
This lesson belongs to the Introduction to Employment session of the CNM Cyber Orientation. The Orientation is the second stage of the WorldOpp Pipeline.
Contents
Content
The predecessor lectio is Economy Segments.
Key terms
- Industry. The part of any economy segment that groups those enterprises that create a particular type of product.
- Industry relations. The systematic study of attitudes, motivations, and behaviors that two or more legal entities within the same industry assume toward each another.
- Industry constituency. Any group of legal entities that are involved in, served by, patronize, support, offer representation, or are likely to be involved, served, patronize, support, or offer representation for a particular industry.
Script
- An industry is the part of any economy segment that groups those enterprises that create a particular type of product.
- Economists use several industrial classifications. The government and business in Canada, Mexico, and the United States primarily use the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). The United Nations uses the International Standard Industrial Classification (ISIC). To group employers, CNM Cyber uses its own
Industry relations The systematic study of attitudes, motivations, and behaviors that two or more legal entities within the same industry assume toward each another.
- Industry constituency. Any group of legal entities that are involved in, served by, patronize, support, offer representation, or are likely to be involved, served, patronize, support, or offer representation for a particular industry.
Groupings of Employers is the successor lectio.