Many are young and college-educated, and they want work that will cater to their lifestyle, which is largely in flux.
And she's not alone; dermatologists also endorse the idea and, astonishing as it may sound, a host of products have been rushed out to cater for the trend of women shaving their faces.
Many other Internet-based shows also cater to the tastes of young audiences.
A Las Vegas casino that caters to Hong Kong high rollers also skips floors from 40 to 59, while Henderson's Hong Kong development omits the 13th floor to cater to Western tastes.
Check out companies who cater for the needs of group traveler.
The startup aims to cater to grieving families who have recently lost loved ones.
First, there is nodenying that the adaptation of classics is designated to cater for readers' taste and the current trend, because a large number of people are absorbing by this kind of adapted works.
" To cater to those who are taking a self-driving tour, railway authorities also offered designated trains for these drivers and their cars.
Cheaper designer items cater to the opposite impulse, often featuring large logos that allow their purchasers to conspicuously show off the brand.
The company said the new data center would first cater to Chinese businesses operating in China, but in the second half of the year do more to aim at foreign clients.
It started building an integrated logistics network from scratch, promising to cater to customers from click to drop-off.
There is no end of websites that cater to collectors, offering information, specialist books and magazines, valuations, search engines for wanted items, auctions, framing, shipping and insurance services, and much else besides.
Nike CEO Mike Parker told analysts on a conference call on Thursday that efforts to cater to women have been a big help like developing female-focus apps and regularly updating the selection of women's products.
Not in the sense that its programming regularly features bared flesh and blue talk, but because its mostly foreign-language productions cater to those who don't have trouble sitting still for, say, a five-hour staging of an obscure Austrian novel, or an esoteric German modernist opera.
Induced by fame and wealth, some campus singers try to cater to the tastes of the public and lost their own styles gradually.