İstanbul export
center
olarak üretici firmalara
yurtdışından ve yurtiçinden
müşteri buluyoruz.
Türkçe sitemiz:
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Referanslarımız:
Public agencies and non-governmental organizations have sponsored entrepreneurship development programs to increase women’s participation in vocational areas and entrepreneurship. Many businesses are still family-owned, creating opportunities for many women through birth or marriage. Women entrepreneurs are involved in the production and export of ready-made clothing, silk and cashmere, embroidery, and traditional handiworks; they also work in software, consulting activities, furniture, marketing research, consulting and organizing activities, direct marketing, pharmaceuticals, and food manufacturing. Foreign Businesswomen Visiting the Country Foreign women receive acceptance and a warm welcome in Turkey. Turkish men are very respectful toward visiting foreign businesswomen. Shake hands with everyone present, both men and women, at a business or social meeting, taking care to begin with the senior-most member. Men and women shake hands or kiss on the cheek when meeting and parting. Turks typically engage in small talk before they begin business discussions. Decisions are made at the top levels.
property.
. State-sponsored childcare is not available in Turkey. Working mothers are assisted in childcare by members of the extended family, in particular grandmothers, or by hired nannies. Many institutions run their own childcare centers and social facilities for providing preschool education. Women as Business Owners Women represent 13 percent of the self-employed and a fair share of Turkey’s entrepreneurs.
bathroom accessory manufacturer
electric cable manufacturerekstil aksesuar
A number of women head companies in Turkey, with statistics indicating that the present numbers will increase in the future. Successful women entrepreneurs in Turkey include Guler Sabanci, chairman and managing director of Sabanci Holding, Turkey's second-large conglomerate with a portfolio of 70 companies; Imre Barmanbek, deputy chairman of Dogan Holding, a company with 125 subsidiaries ranging from banking and oil to tourism and media (including a joint venture with CNN); and Esra Aksoy, founder of a company that is involved in direct marketing, sales promotion, public relations, and special events management. Women are barred from undertaking dangerous work or doing heavy manual work during pregnancy
They also have equal rights in matters relating to inheritance, divorce, and property ownership. Women have the right to initiate and run their own businesses. Turkish law guarantees equal pay for equal work in professional, business, and government service. Studies indicate that, in general, women receive the same pay as men for performing the same jobs. Women in Professions Employment for women in Turkey corresponds with the woman’s level of education and, more broadly, her socio-economic class. Well-educated women are employed in medicine, law, engineering, and education. Middle-class women generally work as teachers and bank tellers. Less educated women generally work as maids, house cleaners, seamstresses, childcare givers, agricultural laborers, nurses, and store clerks. Many women are involved in the home-based manufacture of carpets, rugs, handloom fabric, lace, crochet, souvenirs, and food products.