NOUN
- (corporate finance) the amount, expressed as a percentage, that is earned on a company's total capital calculated by dividing the total capital into earnings before interest, taxes, or dividends are paid
How To Use return on investment In A Sentence
- Part of the problem is that very few boards know how to quantify the impact of service or measure their return on investment in this area. Times, Sunday Times
- The company insists that the debt is supportable and the return on investment is attractive. Times, Sunday Times
- We could, as Friedman suggests, begin to "reinvest in our growth engines" or continue, for example, to have well over half of our research and development devoted to defense, for which the return on investment has been steadily dropping. Christopher Holshek: End of the Military-Industrial Complex?
- Online marketers realize that return on investment is the religion they need to follow.
- They are looking for a return on investment and interoperability. Globe and Mail
- Part of the problem is that very few boards know how to quantify the impact of service or measure their return on investment in this area. Times, Sunday Times
- Some of this can be expressed as a return on investment for clients. Times, Sunday Times
- Vendors are not selling the concept of return on investment in IT, he said because they are making too much money on the number of copies and prints made.
- For new, unproven technologies, expand your definition of "return on investment" and learn to measure indirect benefits. THE STRATEGY MACHINE
- Geox, a high quality, value-oriented sponsor, of precisely the kind cycling needs right now, is being told that his return on investment is subject to some abstractive ruling in Aigle Switzerland, the UCI headquarters. Geox team boss Mauro Gianetti says he’s mystified by ProTeam exclusion