Market Topics



Market Info ...

Toys, Games & Product Licensing ... The so-called "Brat Market" dictates the product you should buy, the package it is in and how you should dispose of the empty container. These influences deal with brand image, ethics and environmental issues, all things that kids have learned from TV or school and are imprinted at an early impressionable age.  In this respect, children have come a long way from the childhood days of their parents...

Check Out The Hottest Trends On Psp Games In The Market ... The PSP has an outrageous amount of features that include an Internet connect that allows you to play your favorite games online with people across the world. Certain variations of the PSP are available worldwide...

A Look At The Varieties Of Candy Canes Available In The Market ... They were widely used as pieces of decoration for the Christmas trees. The Americans extensively used these candy canes first in the eighteenth century...

Men's Jewelry Market Is On The Upswing ... "Jewelry designed for men used to be a step-child in the jewelry business, as compared to women's jewelry," said Pam Danziger, president of Unity Marketing and author of "Shopping: Why We Love It and How Retailers Can Create the Ultimate Customer Experience." "But in 2006 the men's jewelry market reached a 10 percent share of the market, so it can't be ignored any longer by jewelry marketers and retailers." Men's jewelry sales continue strong in the luxury market...

Mp3 Players: When The World Dances To Its Tunes ... MP3 players are now made by many companies and come with a host of other features besides listening to music. Hence the user can enjoy his music with the help of a Shuffle MP3 player which have a storage capacity of up to 128MB and provides great quality in terms of music quality and overall device performance...

It is where life is fundamental and free that men develop the vision needed to reveal the human soul in the blossoms it puts forth.... In a great workshop like Chicago this creative power germinates, even though the brutality and selfish preoccupation of the place drive it elsewhere for bread. Men of this type have loved Chicago, have worked for her, and believed in her. The hardest thing they have to bear is her shame. These men could live and work here when to live and work in New York would stifle their genius and fill their purse.... New York still believes that art should be imported; brought over in ships; and is a quite contented market place. So while New York has reproduced much and produced nothing, Chicago’s achievements in architecture have gained world-wide recognition as a distinctively American architecture.
—Frank Lloyd Wright (1869–1959)

Talk of a divinity in man! Look at the teamster on the highway, wending to market by day or night; does any divinity stir within him? His highest duty to fodder and water his horses! What is his destiny to him compared with the shipping interests?
—Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)