0 all the customers of a business when they are considered as a group:
The nightclub has a very fashionable clientele.
1 all the customers of a business when they are considered as a group
2 all the customers of a business considered as a group:
The beauty clinic, with its growing clientele, moved to its present site in 2008.
a mixed/diverse/wide clientele The pub attracts a mixed clientele of tourists, business people and locals.
a young/sophisticated/discerning clientele
He is a well-established insurance broker who serves a loyal clientele.
Otherwise, for its risk-averse nonmoving clientele, the bank will always prefer cash reserves over storage; the latter will then never be used in equilibrium.
This secured them a clientele of lords who depended on their support and could be used as conduits of imperial will.
Imposing a uniform provider structure across insurers deprives them of an important possibility to match their products with the preferences of their clientele.
Economic nationalism, on the other hand, had a vigorous, powerful clientele in northern industrialism.
It is clear that, all over the continent, political elites make use of religious communities for purposes of mobilising voters, creating clienteles or organising constituencies.
They find-as expected-increasing expenditures prior to elections for both left- and right-wing governments, albeit geared to a different clientele.
The form serves as a gatekeeper, announcing at the outset the intended clientele.
The so-called principles of administrative design - such as purpose, process, clientele and place - provide conflicting emphases not straightforward solutions.