Advertisement
Advertisement
incentivize
[ in-sen-ti-vahyz ]
verb (used with object)
- to give incentives to:
The government should incentivize the private sector to create jobs.
incentivize
/ ɪnˈsɛntɪˌvaɪz /
verb
- tr
- to provide (someone) with a good reason for wanting to do something
why not incentivize companies to relocate?
- to promote (something) with a particular incentive
an incentivized share option scheme
Word History and Origins
Origin of incentivize1
Example Sentences
So potentially had we incentivized people to have a more interesting conversation or to get as much information as they can, that would also potentially lead people to prefer sensitive questions over neutral ones.
Likewise, incentivize app users to rate and write reviews of your app on the store.
The union is requesting a better compensation structure that it says will incentivize experienced patrollers to stay with the company.
The payments are incentivizing TikTok stars and regular people to post more videos to Snapchat, which was Snapchat’s aim, and proves that revenue remains key to the recipe for any platform trying to attract creators.
While incentivizing prospects to make a purchase is perhaps the most common strategy, it’s not always effective.
Their quarrel is with more recently formed verbs like incentivize.
We need to incentivize local school districts to offer more advanced placement courses and more vocational and career training.
You cannot engineer risk out of the system, or incentivize it away; it's baked into the cake.
Can we use student loan forgiveness as a way to incentivize bright young people to enter particular fields?
But we can extrapolate from previous experience that decapitation does incentivize Hamas to ease up on its attacks.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse