Difference between revisions of "Groupings of Employers"

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:To group employers, CNM Cyber uses its own CNM industry classification or CNMIC. Because CNMIC doesn't try to describe all economic activities, it is way simpler than NAICS and ISIC. CNMIC features just 11 industries, while both NAICS and ISIC feature 20+ sectors and hundreds of sub-sectors.
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:The [[CNM industry classification]] ([[CNMIC]]) groups [[employer]]s in 11 industries.
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:The [[raw materials industry]] groups [[enterprise]]s in the [[primary sector]]. ''Enterprises'' in the [[infrastructure industry]] supply and present all substances, materials, and properties such as energy, water, buildings, and roads that human beings, other entities, and their equipment are needed to function, as well as dispose and/or utilize the processed substances, materials, and properties. This industry includes both construction and utility [[enterprise]]s.
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:''Enterprises'' in the [[manufacturing industry]] process [[raw material]]s into those goods and services such as food, clothing, paper, and machinery, that can be eventually consumed by [[end-user]]s.
  
[[Industrial classification]]. Any economic taxonomy that groups [[business]]es based on their products and/or production processes, as well as on their selling, marketing, and/or social appealing techniques into [[industry|industri]]es. There are a few taxonomies; [[CNM Cyber]] utilizes its own [[CNM industry classification]].<div style="background-color:#efefef; padding: 5px; margin: 15px;">
 
:*'''[[Raw materials industry]]'''. An alternative name for the [[primary sector]].
 
:*'''[[Infrastructure industry]]'''. The [[industry]] that groups those [[enterprise]]s that supply and present all substances, materials, and properties such as energy, water, buildings, and roads that human beings, other entities, and their equipment are needed to function, as well as dispose and/or utilize the processed substances, materials, and properties. This industry includes both construction and utility [[enterprise]]s.
 
:*'''[[Manufacturing industry]]'''. The [[industry]] that groups those [[enterprise]]s that process [[raw material]]s into those goods and services such as food, clothing, paper, and machinery, that can be eventually consumed by [[end-user]]s.
 
 
:*'''[[Transportation industry]]'''. The [[industry]] that groups those [[enterprise]]s that deliver human beings and goods from one geographical point to another. In addition to transport [[enterprise]]s, this industry includes [[warehouse|warehousing]] and postal services.
 
:*'''[[Transportation industry]]'''. The [[industry]] that groups those [[enterprise]]s that deliver human beings and goods from one geographical point to another. In addition to transport [[enterprise]]s, this industry includes [[warehouse|warehousing]] and postal services.
 
:*'''[[Digital industry]]'''. The [[industry]] that groups those [[enterprise]]s that produce software and/or provide their customers with software-based services such as broadcasting, telecommunication, multimedia, data processing.  
 
:*'''[[Digital industry]]'''. The [[industry]] that groups those [[enterprise]]s that produce software and/or provide their customers with software-based services such as broadcasting, telecommunication, multimedia, data processing.  

Revision as of 13:00, 4 May 2020

Groupings of Employers (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.


Content

The predecessor lectio is What Industry Is.

Key terms

Industrial classification. Any economic taxonomy that groups businesses based on their products and/or production processes, as well as on their selling, marketing, and/or social appealing techniques into industries. There are a few taxonomies; CNM Cyber utilizes its own CNM industry classification.

Script

The CNM industry classification (CNMIC) groups employers in 11 industries.
The raw materials industry groups enterprises in the primary sector. Enterprises in the infrastructure industry supply and present all substances, materials, and properties such as energy, water, buildings, and roads that human beings, other entities, and their equipment are needed to function, as well as dispose and/or utilize the processed substances, materials, and properties. This industry includes both construction and utility enterprises.
Enterprises in the manufacturing industry process raw materials into those goods and services such as food, clothing, paper, and machinery, that can be eventually consumed by end-users.

Professional Specialties is the successor lectio.

Quiz