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  2. to make someone want to do something, such as to buy something or to do work, especially by offering prizes or rewards: incentivize sb to do sth They incentivized workers to adopt the less expensive health care plan by giving more paid vacation. Headquarters has incentivized employees with free offers of tickets to sporting events.

  3. The meaning of INCENTIVIZE is to provide with an incentive. How to use incentivize in a sentence.

  4. If you incentivize someone, you provide them with a good reason for wanting to do something. [ formal ] The new scheme is meant to incentivize employers to keep staff on at least part-time hours.

  5. 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.

  6. To incentivize is to provide a reward or motivation for some action. Your teacher might incentivize the class by offering jelly beans to everyone who aces the next math quiz. Incentivize was first used in around 1970 as business jargon, and some still consider it to be annoying corporate lingo.

  7. Definitions of 'incentivize' 1. If you incentivize someone, you provide them with a good reason for wanting to do something. [formal] [...] 2. If you incentivize something, you encourage it. [formal] [...] More. Pronunciations of the word 'incentivize' British English: ɪnsentɪvaɪz. More. Conjugations of 'incentivize'

  8. 1. If you incentivize someone, you provide them with a good reason for wanting to do something. [formal] [...] 2. If you incentivize something, you encourage it. [formal] [...] More. Pronunciations of 'incentivize' British English: ɪnsentɪvaɪz. More. Conjugations of 'incentivize' present simple: I incentivize, you incentivize [...]

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