#Nebulizers Market Sahre
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Nebulizers Market: Global Industry Trends, Market Size, Competitive Analysis and Forecast - 2020 – 2027
According to the recent report published by Research Corridor, the Global Nebulizers Market is expected to provide sustainable growth opportunities during the forecast period from 2020 to 2027. This latest industry research study analyzes the Nebulizers market by various product segments, applications, regions and countries while assessing regional performances of numerous leading market participants.
The report titled "Nebulizers Market - Global Trends, Market Share, Industry Size, Growth, Opportunities, and Forecast - 2020 – 2027" offers a holistic view of the Nebulizers industry encompassing numerous stakeholders including raw material suppliers, providers, distributors, consumers and government agencies, among others. Furthermore, the report includes detailed quantitative and qualitative analysis of the global Nebulizers market considering market history, product development, regional dynamics, competitive landscape, and key success factors (KSFs) in the industry.
Browse Full report on Global Nebulizers Market report at https://www.researchcorridor.com/nebulizers-market/
The report includes a deep-dive analysis of key countries including the U.S., Canada, the U.K., Germany, France, China, Japan, India, Australia, Mexico, Brazil and South Africa, among others. Thereby, the report identifies unique growth opportunities across the world based on trends occurring in various developed and developing economies.
Nebulizers Market report summarizes the positive growth rate in upcoming years, and market size with competitive analysis. Our experts have analyzed the historical data to compare with the current market scenario to calculate the market growth in the coming years. The study provides an exhaustive report that includes an executive summary, scope, and forecast of the market.
The Nebulizers Market Segmentation:
By Devices, 2018–2027 ($ Million)
Breathe-Actuated Pneumatic Nebulizer
Vented-Actuated Pneumatic Nebulizer
Static Mesh Nebulizer
Vibrating Mesh Nebulizer
By End-User, 2018–2027 ($ Million)
Home
Hospital
Physician/Clinic
By Geography, 2018–2027 ($ Million)
North America
Europe
Asia Pacific
Latin America (LATAM)
Middle East and Africa (MEA)
To know more about the study, make an inquiry before purchase @ https://www.researchcorridor.com/inquiry/?id=1320
List of Key companies:
Allied Healthcare Products, Inc.
Becton Dickinson and Company (CareFusion)
Medtronic PLC
DeVillbiss Healthcare LLC
Aerogen
PARI GmbH
Koninklijke Philips N.V.
Omron Healthcare, Co., Ltd.
GF Health Products, Inc.
Others
Key Questions Answered by Nebulizers Market Report
Product popularity and adoption based on various country-level dynamics
Regional presence and product development for leading market participants
Market forecasts and trend analysis based on ongoing investments and economic growth in key countries
Competitive landscape based on revenue, product offerings, years of presence, number of employees and market concentration, among others
number of employees and market concentration, among others
To know more about this study, request a free sample report @ https://www.researchcorridor.com/request-sample/?id=1320
About Us: Research Corridor is a global market research firm. Our insightful analysis is focused on developed and emerging markets. We identify trends and forecast markets with a view to aid businesses identify market opportunities optimize strategies. Our expert’s team of analysts’ provides enterprises with strategic insights. Research Corridor works to help enterprises grow through strategic insights and actionable solutions. Feel free to contact us for any report customization at [email protected] .
Media Contact:
Company Name: Research Corridor Contact Person: Mr. Vijendra Singh Email: [email protected] Contact no: +91 989-368-5690
Visit us: https://www.researchcorridor.com/
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Why Barbie, a Blimp and a Wienermobile Are Posting on Airbnb
It was a warm August evening in Evanston, Ill., just north of Chicago, when the Wienermobile rolled out the red carpet for a sleepover.
Actually, the carpet was green, and not so much carpet as artificial turf. Inside the Wienermobile, the meat brand Oscar Mayer’s signature marketing machine, there was a pullout bed and a mini fridge. There were hot dog sunglasses, hot dog onesies and actual hot dogs with all the accouterments. (But no ketchup: Chicago doesn’t really do hot dogs with ketchup. It’s a thing.)
It was the first time a Wienermobile had been repurposed for paid lodging, the result of a collaboration between Oscar Mayer and Airbnb, the home-sharing platform that has increasingly tried to woo customers by promising adventure as well as accommodation.
If the Wienermobile stunt sounds familiar, it may be because Airbnb has entered into similar collaborations since then. The Goodyear blimp welcomed Airbnb guests last month. A life-size version of Barbie’s Malibu Dreamhouse opened its doors last week. And Downton Abbey — that is, Highclere Castle in Hampshire, England — will take two lodgers this month.
All of those offers were part of a marketing campaign at Airbnb, and all of them made news headlines. That was no accident.
“I think a lot of brands, in the future, they need to be in the business of making news, not just advertising,” said Brian Chesky, Airbnb’s chief executive. “And to make news you have to do something that is worth somebody reporting about.”
The first of those collaborations was with Oscar Mayer, a brand owned by Kraft Heinz. Bonnie Rosenberg, 32, a Chicago resident, stayed in the Wienermobile on Aug. 1, its first night as a hotel. She knew the whole thing was a marketing ploy for Oscar Mayer and Airbnb. But it all seemed so campy, nostalgic and fun.
“I saw an article on Twitter from The Chicago Tribune covering it, and I was like, jackpot,” she said. “I definitely want to do this.”
Ms. Rosenberg said she and her husband, Bill Welense, 36, had a good time leaning into the absurdity of it all. “It was really surreal, I have to say, because it was set up like a movie set would be,” she added.
The Wienermobile and similar lodging opportunities were available on a first-come-first-served basis, and only for a few nights. So while millions of people read about them, not many were able to book them.
That scarcity can be effective for companies seeking news coverage, according to Ron Berman, an assistant professor of marketing at the Wharton School. “It needs to be more of an interesting story — let’s call it an aspirational experience — than an actual experience,” he said.
While getting the right kind of attention is difficult, news reports that link brands with interesting opportunities can make for excellent marketing, Professor Berman said. And New York Times reporters who write about those marketing tactics could be helping the brands even more.
But Airbnb, which has been valued at about $30 billion, is worth watching as it expands beyond lodging and into the more nebulous realm of experiences. The platform has already asserted itself as a disruptive force in the hotel and real estate industries — clashing with cities, neighborhoods and residents in pitched legal battles at almost every step of the way. And last week, after a shooting at a rental property that killed five people at a Halloween party, Mr. Chesky said on Twitter that Airbnb planned to crack down on “party houses.”
In Malibu, Calif., the Barbie mansion didn’t really exist as such until Mattel teamed up with Airbnb to promote the Barbie brand’s 60th anniversary. Adorned with pops of pink specifically for last week’s booking, the property was open to four people for just two nights. Still, it earned news media coverage from CNBC, The New York Post and Fox News.
“We felt that this partnership with Airbnb would be a really fun and relevant way” to reinforce Barbie’s place in popular culture, said Lisa McKnight, the global head of Barbie and dolls for Mattel.
Some brands were approached by Airbnb to create the experiences that made news headlines or caught fire on social media. But others, Mr. Chesky said, were beginning to seek listings independently.
Jim Beam, which makes bourbon in Kentucky, offered limited stays at a century-old cottage on the company’s distillery grounds in Clermont as part of its own marketing plan, said Dan Cohen, a spokesman for Beam Suntory, Jim Beam’s parent company.
“We’ve always thought about potentially bringing in some of our fans to experience such an authentic and intimate and unique experience in our distillery by allowing them to stay in this house,” Mr. Cohen said.
(Only two one-night stays at the cottage were available on Airbnb — one this month and one next month — and both were quickly booked.)
This summer, Airbnb, founded in 2008, introduced a high-end rental tier, Airbnb Luxe, for users to rent villas, lodges or castles for thousands of dollars a night (give or take). The company also offers Experiences — activities with Airbnb hosts — and Adventures, like surfing, sailing and foraging.
It plans to go public in 2020, something employees have been pushing for. Mr. Chesky declined to comment on whether the company would do an initial public offering or a direct listing.
A marketing blitz would make sense for a company preparing to go public. And while Airbnb’s spending this year is in line with past patterns, Mr. Chesky said, 2019 has been “an investment year.”
For the few lodgers who have been able to take advantage of the recent marketing campaign, the investment has paid off. The couple who booked the Goodyear blimp on its first night got engaged during their stay. And for Ms. Rosenberg, the Wienermobile was definitely a once-in-a-lifetime experience.
“I think it was unique from any other Airbnb that I’ve encountered,” she said.
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Ichiro Suzuki Takes a Final Bow, Still Perfecting a New Craft
SEATTLE — Mike Redmond, the Colorado Rockies’ bench coach, laughed at the improbability of a member of the 3,000-hit club devoting himself to the unheralded role of throwing batting-practice pitches.
“I am sure he won’t settle for anything less than becoming the absolute best B.P. pitcher,” Redmond said, smiling in amazement at the newest pursuit of Ichiro Suzuki, whom he once managed with the Miami Marlins.
Suzuki’s career will be celebrated Saturday night in Seattle, the first formal acknowledgment of his retirement in the United States since he laid his bat to rest once and for all in March after the Mariners’ season-opening series at the Tokyo Dome.
The Mariners, Suzuki’s club from 2001 to 2012 and 2018-19, quickly bestowed on their longtime star the title of special assistant to the chairman. As with other future Hall of Famers who receive nebulous advisory roles from their longtime employers, eager to keep the icons around for marketing and overall cachet, Suzuki had leeway to decide how exactly he would specially assist the team and how often he would do it.
Suzuki, 45, has kept a home in the Seattle area and has taken on an instructor role at home games. It’s not uncommon to see him stretching, playing catch and, of course, giving advice to any player interested in tapping into his wealth of knowledge. But he has especially applied his trademark perfectionism in a surprising area: throwing batting practice.
“Not too many people can say they got to take B.P. off Ichiro. That’s pretty cool,” Mariners outfielder Mitch Haniger said. “But just like anything else he does, he approaches it with a lot of pride. I see him in the cage all the time practicing throwing batting practice. Few people practice that, but whatever he does, he wants to be really good at it.”
The notion of throwing batting practice developed out of Suzuki’s renowned training habits. He was signed by the Mariners during spring training in 2018 to add depth after an injury to another outfielder. Once the player returned in May, Suzuki was moved to the front office but continued to travel and work out with the team, harboring hope of making the club again in 2019.
League rules prohibited him from being in the dugout during games, so he found his comfort zone in the indoor batting cage — not hitting, but throwing. The perfectionist in him took over from there.
Imagining that he might be asked someday to be an emergency fill-in for a sore-armed batting practice pitcher, he did what he had done his entire career: prepared for the possibility. He started throwing every day to an available partner or, sometimes, just into the netting of the batting cage, up to 200 pitches a day.
A utility player saw Suzuki throwing and asked if he could hit off him. It became a regular session. Then one day in Houston last year, sure enough, Suzuki was asked if he could throw early batting practice. Three players participated, taking turns hitting more than 150 pitches total.
Suzuki continued to hone his approach, making adjustments like tinkering with the distance of the sloped board placed in front of the mound off which batting practice pitchers throw, just in case he was asked to do it again.
He was, and not for the novelty of hitting off a 3,000-hit batter, but because he had legitimately sharpened his ability to pitch batting practice, and players were noticing.
“First off, you have to be able to throw strikes consistently and have good tempo,” Haniger explained, adding: “Ichiro throws very straight, right over the top, very smooth, nice and easy. He doesn’t have a hitch in his arm or throw sidearm like some guys. His motion is so fluid, like his throws from the outfield, and it’s right in the strike zone every time.”
When the Mariners are on the road, Suzuki typically drives an hour south to the club’s Class AAA affiliate in Tacoma, where he throws on-field batting practice to the prospects. One popular story has it that he has maintained such arm strength that he was asked to take a little off his throws because they were coming in too hard.
At the major league level, the utility player Austin Nola found Suzuki’s live arm to be a unique advantage. While hitting in the batting cages, Nola observed that Suzuki often practiced by throwing a variety of pitches to a catcher in the cage. Wondering if he could turn that into a session of situational hitting for himself, he asked, and Suzuki was happy to oblige.
“He’s got a two-seamer, cutter, four-seam fastball up, a curveball, and a slider — and he can throw any of them for strikes,” Nola said. “Here’s a guy who was the best situational hitter of anybody I know, and he can throw all these pitches for strikes.”
Hearing such details of Suzuki’s newest quest for perfection, Redmond, his former manager, made an intriguing prediction. Convinced he possessed hidden power at the plate, many tried and failed to persuade Suzuki to enter the Home Run Derby during his playing career. But each derby participant gets to select any pitcher he wants to throw to him, and Redmond surmised that Suzuki’s newfound skill in retirement could persuade future participants to tap him.
“I wouldn’t be surprised if he’s in the Home Run Derby after all,” Redmond said.
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