News Alerts For Thursday Oct 18, 2007 4:34 EST
News On Money:
Exit Only Prepares To Enter The US Market
Exit Only Inc. ex t0
$0.41
Back In May of 2007, Exit Only Inc. released their new website. The
concept of marketing new and used vehicles through the web is not new.
Posting of a sellers vehicle to the site without charge is something new
to web based vehicle marketing. The company charges sellers only for
actual contact info from interested buyers.
Points To Consider:
- The response from the market during the Canadian release was
incredible.
- Exit's goals for the year end were met in September of this year, just
a few months from launch.
- The US version of the site is now ready to be released to the market.
- Exit has partnering with several high volume web services to provide
fast market exposure.
- Exit is also providing mobile access for sellers. The system will
deliver real-time leads of buyer information directly to their mobile
phone.
As the US market is considerably larger, patterned results in the US can
instantly put this new company on the map. Contact your broker, or
review any market site for further information.
International Update:
U.N. questions Syria nuke claims ------ VIENNA, Austria -- The U.N.
nuclear watchdog said Monday it has no information to support a recent
media report that Syria may be building a nuclear reactor, but said it
expects any country that has details to share them with the agency. "We
would obviously investigate any relevant information coming our way,"
said Melissa Fleming, spokeswoman for the Vienna-based International
Atomic Energy Agency, or IAEA. In what appeared to be an indirect rebuke
to the U.S., Fleming said in a statement that the nuclear agency
"expects any country having information about nuclear-related activities
in another country to provide that information to the IAEA." The New
York Times, citing U.S. and foreign officials, reported Sunday that an
Israeli airstrike on Syria last month targeted a partially built nuclear
reactor that was years away from completion.
Reports In The US:
Swearing at work boosts team spirt, morale ----- LONDON - Regular
swearing at work can help boost team spirit among staff, allowing them
to express better their feelings as well as develop social
relationships, according to a study by researchers. Yehuda Baruch, a
professor of management at the University of East Anglia, and graduate
Stuart Jenkins studied the use of profanity in the workplace and
assessed its implications for managers. They assessed that swearing
would become more common as traditional taboos are broken down, but the
key appeared to be knowing when such language was appropriate and when
to turn to blind eye.
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