Word: moment
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...wasn't until the 1980s that graphic designers felt able to properly reference Chinese themes. China's economic reforms, and Hong Kong's imminent decolonization, prompted the quest for a common visual identity. This took place not only at the very moment that Western consumers began exhibiting unprecedented curiosity about Chinese belief systems and culture, but also at a time when multinational brands needed a sinicized graphic language in order to address hundreds of millions of Chinese shoppers. A postmodern Chinese style subsequently entered the global marketplace, appropriating elements of brushstroke calligraphy, Buddhist iconography, imperial and folk art, Shanghai...
...nothing to do with the economic climate at the moment because as we deploy the strategy it is going to be over a long duration of time. Right now people in our operations in China are helping us solve problems for people in North America that we think will help solve problems for people in Europe. Much of what we did in our supply chain is innovation we found out in Europe and brought into the U.S. Good things can happen anywhere in the world and we want to be engaged with as much of the world as we possibly...
...this is being in the right place at the right time and then knowing how to seize [the moment]. I am the least likely person to know how. It was completely out of character. I had been in the store for seven years so I had watched a lot of people do things and I always thought about what I would do if I had been in their shoes, but I never really thought I would get the chance. Something in me caused me to seize the moment. I am very lucky that happened. It's more likely that...
...business deal that doesn't give a joint win [to both parties] is ludicrous. I can't think of any one-sided deals that have been really good for us. Try to figure out when you really have vested interests aligned. And don't try to seize the moment where you've got a little too much. Knowing what you know on your side, would you sign up on the end of this deal? Don't go there if they're agreeing to it but you wouldn't. A deal that is relatively as balanced as possible will pay back...
...cyclone in Burma and the earthquake in China were state-sponsored tragedies. President Robert Mugabe's internal terrorism does not simply consist of starving and harassing hundreds of thousands of people; it also amounts to the systematic demolition of Zimbabwe's one small hope of democracy. For a brief moment after the elections in late March, it seemed that the former freedom fighter might redeem his dictatorial legacy by acknowledging that the opposition had actually defeated him. But it turns out that the 84-year-old despot was just slow off the mark in beginning the further strangulation...