1.external clients 2.internal clients 3.owners as clients 4.goverment bodies
Internal Controls can help protect client privacy. Ex.: Good internal controls on a website will protect clients credit card numbers from hackers.
The internal marketing environment is commonly referred to as the micro marketing environment. These are the small forces that will influence the ability to attend to clients within a company.
I can suggest a few - clients/customers, investors, internal staff, industry contacts.
Encapsulation............Hiding the data from others
Internal stakeholders are employees, Directors,Managers, Shareholers and trustees. while external stakeholders include Funders, Suppliers, Customers/Clients and posibly competitors
To help taxpayers become tax compliant. To convince their clients that they are taxpayers. To point to vague and unclear sections of the Internal Revenue Code to show their clients how they've been made liable for the tax.
clients have
"rjnet" refers to the internal site of Raymond James Financial, a financial advising firm that does research on the markets and advises clients on where they should invest.
Account supervisors are a liaison between clients and the agency. They act as a resource for clients when they have questions, requests, or concerns. Project Managers, on the other hand, are usually in charge of ensuring that all members of the internal team are meeting deadlines and staying on budget.
An internal vendor refers to a department or unit within an organization that provides goods or services to other departments or units within the same organization, rather than selling to external clients. This can include services like IT support, human resources, or facility management, where the internal vendor operates as a service provider to enhance efficiency and streamline operations. Essentially, internal vendors help facilitate internal processes and contribute to the overall functioning of the organization.
It is commonly thought to be more effective than 'external advertising' because your clients have already 'bought into' your company. In reality, though, it generally only serves to aggravate your clients (e.g. trying to be sold a new service while on-hold because the first service is disagreeable). -- Robert