How do we call a person who opts someone else into a business referral program?
In case we have a business referral program, we want to allow the organization's owners to opt their employees into and out of the program. what is the business term for that person?
business-language
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In case we have a business referral program, we want to allow the organization's owners to opt their employees into and out of the program. what is the business term for that person?
business-language
As a note, your title should read opts-in, not opt-ins.
– Jason Bassford
2 days ago
updated, thanks
– Hieu Pham
2 days ago
@JasonBassford Actually opts in. The hyphen is for the noun, not the phrasal verb. Or rather, since there’s an object, opts someone else in.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
2 days ago
@JanusBahsJacquet No. You conjugate the verb opt. It's he opts, so it's he opts-in someone else. A singular, third person.
– Jason Bassford
2 days ago
@JasonBassford Gah, I missed the s myself now; fixed. My point was it should be opts in, not opts-in, when it’s the present tense of the verb.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
2 days ago
|
show 2 more comments
In case we have a business referral program, we want to allow the organization's owners to opt their employees into and out of the program. what is the business term for that person?
business-language
In case we have a business referral program, we want to allow the organization's owners to opt their employees into and out of the program. what is the business term for that person?
business-language
business-language
edited 2 days ago
Janus Bahs Jacquet
29.2k568125
29.2k568125
asked 2 days ago
Hieu Pham
14117
14117
As a note, your title should read opts-in, not opt-ins.
– Jason Bassford
2 days ago
updated, thanks
– Hieu Pham
2 days ago
@JasonBassford Actually opts in. The hyphen is for the noun, not the phrasal verb. Or rather, since there’s an object, opts someone else in.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
2 days ago
@JanusBahsJacquet No. You conjugate the verb opt. It's he opts, so it's he opts-in someone else. A singular, third person.
– Jason Bassford
2 days ago
@JasonBassford Gah, I missed the s myself now; fixed. My point was it should be opts in, not opts-in, when it’s the present tense of the verb.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
2 days ago
|
show 2 more comments
As a note, your title should read opts-in, not opt-ins.
– Jason Bassford
2 days ago
updated, thanks
– Hieu Pham
2 days ago
@JasonBassford Actually opts in. The hyphen is for the noun, not the phrasal verb. Or rather, since there’s an object, opts someone else in.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
2 days ago
@JanusBahsJacquet No. You conjugate the verb opt. It's he opts, so it's he opts-in someone else. A singular, third person.
– Jason Bassford
2 days ago
@JasonBassford Gah, I missed the s myself now; fixed. My point was it should be opts in, not opts-in, when it’s the present tense of the verb.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
2 days ago
As a note, your title should read opts-in, not opt-ins.
– Jason Bassford
2 days ago
As a note, your title should read opts-in, not opt-ins.
– Jason Bassford
2 days ago
updated, thanks
– Hieu Pham
2 days ago
updated, thanks
– Hieu Pham
2 days ago
@JasonBassford Actually opts in. The hyphen is for the noun, not the phrasal verb. Or rather, since there’s an object, opts someone else in.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
2 days ago
@JasonBassford Actually opts in. The hyphen is for the noun, not the phrasal verb. Or rather, since there’s an object, opts someone else in.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
2 days ago
@JanusBahsJacquet No. You conjugate the verb opt. It's he opts, so it's he opts-in someone else. A singular, third person.
– Jason Bassford
2 days ago
@JanusBahsJacquet No. You conjugate the verb opt. It's he opts, so it's he opts-in someone else. A singular, third person.
– Jason Bassford
2 days ago
@JasonBassford Gah, I missed the s myself now; fixed. My point was it should be opts in, not opts-in, when it’s the present tense of the verb.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
2 days ago
@JasonBassford Gah, I missed the s myself now; fixed. My point was it should be opts in, not opts-in, when it’s the present tense of the verb.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
2 days ago
|
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As a note, your title should read opts-in, not opt-ins.
– Jason Bassford
2 days ago
updated, thanks
– Hieu Pham
2 days ago
@JasonBassford Actually opts in. The hyphen is for the noun, not the phrasal verb. Or rather, since there’s an object, opts someone else in.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
2 days ago
@JanusBahsJacquet No. You conjugate the verb opt. It's he opts, so it's he opts-in someone else. A singular, third person.
– Jason Bassford
2 days ago
@JasonBassford Gah, I missed the s myself now; fixed. My point was it should be opts in, not opts-in, when it’s the present tense of the verb.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
2 days ago