Objective
Communications
(adjective)
not influenced by irrational emotions or prejudices; based on facts or evidence.
Statistics
(adjective)
not influenced by the emotions or prejudices
Marketing
(adjective)
Not influenced by irrational emotions or prejudices.
Economics
(adjective)
Agreed upon by all parties present (or nearly all); based on consensually observed facts.
Examples of Objective in the following topics:
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Setting Objectives
- Objectives are the desired results an individual or organization envisions, plans and commits to achieve--key to control and strategy.
- The items listed may be organized in a hierarchy of means and ends and numbered as follows: Top Rank Objective (TRO), Second Rank Objective, Third Rank Objective, etc.
- " The exception is the Top Rank Objective (TRO): there is no answer to the "Why?
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Case
- Nominative, Case of Subject; Genitive, Objective with of, or Possessive; Dative, Objective with to or for; Accusative, Case of Direct Object; Vocative, Case of Address; Ablative, Objective with by, from, in, with.
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Variations in Objectivity
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Setting Objectives and Standards
- Objectives must take competitive advantage into account; otherwise, the organization lacks a value-added proposition.
- The items listed may be organized in a hierarchy of means and ends and numbered as follows: Top Rank Objective (TRO), Second Rank Objective, Third Rank Objective, etc.
- The exception is the Top Rank Objective (TRO): there is no answer to the "Why?"
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Neue Sachlichkeit
- Neue Sachlichkeit (or The New Objectivity) was an artistic attitude that arose in Germany in the 1920s in reaction to Expressionism.
- The New Objectivity (in German: Neue Sachlichkeit) is a term used to characterize the attitude of public life in Weimar Germany, as well as the art, literature, music, and architecture created to adapt to it.
- The New Objectivity was a reaction against this.
- The New Objectivity comprised two tendencies, characterized in terms of a left and right wing: on the left were the verists, who "tear the objective form of the world of contemporary facts and represent current experience in its tempo and fevered temperature;" and on the right the classicists, who "search more for the object of timeless ability to embody the external laws of existence in the artistic sphere. "
- Describe the aims of the New Objectivity movement and its representative artists
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Objectives of Accounting
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Defining Objectives and Formulating Problems
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Promotional Objectives
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Learning Objectives
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Introduction to Sustainability as an Objective