sponsorship
(noun)
The aid or support provided by a sponsor; backing or patronage.
Examples of sponsorship in the following topics:
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Ottonian Illustrated Books in the Early European Middle Ages
- Ottonian monasteries produced lavish, illuminated manuscripts under the sponsorship of emperors, bishops, and other wealthy patrons.
- Ottonian monasteries produced some of the most magnificent medieval illuminated manuscripts, working with the best of equipment and talent under the direct sponsorship of emperors, bishops, and other wealthy patrons.
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The Situation Today
- Clearly, projects with corporate sponsorship and/or salaried developers need to be especially careful in this regard, as Money discusses in detail.
- Of course, this doesn't mean that if there's no corporate sponsorship then you have nothing to worry about.
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Public Relations Tools
- Sponsorship is often used as part of a public relations campaign.
- An example of sponsorship is a concert tour presented by a bank or drink company.
- Both product placement and sponsorship decisions are based on a shared target market.
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The Promotion Mix
- Sponsorship is sometimes added as an seventh aspect.
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Determining a Budget
- Promotional tools - This includes trade promotions; consumer promotions; personal selling, database marketing, and customer relations management; public relations and sponsorship programs.
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The Promotion Mix
- Sponsorship is sometimes added as an seventh aspect.
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Japanese Buddhism
- Countless paintings and sculptures were made, often under governmental sponsorship.
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Types of Public Relations
- They facilitate sponsorship of local causes e.g. disability play grounds/centres, children's playgrounds etc and they contribute to the local community by being good employers and goodwill and awareness in the community.
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The Song Dynasty
- By the year 1241, under the sponsorship of Emperor Lizong, Zhu Xi's Four Books and his commentary on them became standard requirements of study for students attempting to pass the civil service examinations.
- Buddhism would not see a true revival in Chinese society until the Mongol rule of the Yuan Dynasty, with Kublai Khan's sponsorship of Tibetan Buddhism and Drogön Chögyal Phagpa as the leading lama.
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Decline of the Maurya Empire
- Sunga rulers helped establish the tradition of royal sponsorship of education and the arts at a time when some of the most important developments in Hindu thought were taking place.