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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a much wider clientele" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing a business or service that appeals to a larger or more diverse group of customers.
Example: "The new marketing strategy has successfully attracted a much wider clientele, including younger consumers and families."
Alternatives: "a significantly broader customer base" or "a considerably larger audience".
Exact(5)
"These teas are appreciated not just by purists, but by a much wider clientele now".
It has branches or subsidiaries in 12 countries, aiming its services mainly at Indian communities overseas but sometimes finding that they attract a much wider clientele.
It's a way of advertising our place to a much wider clientele, since Christie's has clients who would not normally come to see us in Belgium".
He envisions the new Wine Library as an "adult theme park" -- the place to go on a lazy Saturday afternoon -- for a much wider clientele than those he calls wine snobs.
While the project already offered two-day training programs in various cities, Gilbert got the idea to create an online training module that would reach a much wider clientele.
Similar(55)
It is a much wider cultural phenomenon.
"It's a much wider range".
And a much wider circle of readers.
It has a much wider working range.
A much wider shadow will surround it.
Truesoul has a much wider musical spectrum.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com