...competencies GROUP 6 Thijs Bavelaar - 091698 Carlijn Swagemakers - 120014 Sam Verlaat - 111449 Bas Vliegen - 122959 Thijs Bavelaar - 091698 Carlijn Swagemakers - 120014 Sam Verlaat - 111449 Bas Vliegen - 122959 Executive summary Within this report the Starbuck’s Corporation is being analyzed, in this way the company can be positioned on how they are performing within the competitive set. Through research Starbucks’ core competencies are found, and on elaborated. Those competencies are researched in the competitive set with the main competitors of Starbucks’ as well, via basic benchmarking there has been determined where Starbucks is within the market. Table of Contents Introduction 4 Core competencies 5 Key competitors 9 Competitive advantages 11 Communication within organization 12 Competency - strategy matrix 13 Conclusion and recommendations 14 Bibliography 15 Appendices 19 Appendix 1: Value chain analysis 19 Appendix 2: SWOT analysis 22 Appendix 3: Functional analysis 25 Appendix 4: VRIO analysis 26 Introduction The purpose of this paper is to analyze both Starbucks’ strategies and core competencies, and use this analysis to assess the degree of synergy between the two. First, the core competencies of Starbucks, specified to the US, are identified and presented with the use of a value chain analysis, SWOT analysis and functional analysis. Secondly, its competitive set will be presented. Key competitors will be identified using basic...
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...Composition II Research Paper Our atmosphere doesn't act as a single unit; it is made up of hundreds of different layers. Some of the energy released from Earth is stopped in each of these layers. The energy is then re-emitted in a random direction, but on average the energy is moving either "up" or "down." The atmospheres get thinner as altitude increases, so eventually the radiation will reach a layer high enough and thin enough to escape to space. If you increase the concentrations of a greenhouse gas in the atmosphere, the thin upper layers will become denser. The place where the majority of the energy finally escapes moves higher, these higher levels are much colder and so they do not radiate heat very well. The rate that radiation escapes to space is lower, and the planet will take in more than it radiates. As the higher levels emit some of the excess radiation downwards, the lower levels will warm all the way down to the surface. The imbalance will remain until the higher levels get hot enough to radiate as much energy back out as the planet is receiving. Though all natural processes, they are not always helpful. On the other side of the spectrum, we as humans are not always helpful to the processes. Because of this, we find ourselves at a time of question. What are we doing to our planet and how will it affect us? Many are attempting to take action now, others try to not believe. Eventually, however, we are all going to see what we have truly been doing. Global warming...
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...A Further Analysis of Apocalypse Now Vlad Dovgan History Through Film Mr. Ellis Graham 1/13/2013 It is said that some of the best things in life are those that come unexpected. For weeks, my friend had nagged me to watch a movie he had seen, called Apocalypse Now. He described it to me, and I was not interested. War movies don’t excite me that much, and I did not want to go out of the way to watch it. I’m not a violent person so watching this movie would be out of characteristic for me. However, when this research paper was assigned, it seemed to be destiny that I would finally watch this movie. I gave in, and decided this would be a great way to kill two birds with one stone- I would satisfy my friend, and be able to complete this assignment. Little did I know at the time, I was in for something truly special. While most men would be satisfied serving their team in war and returning home, the same could not be said for Benjamin Willard. After fighting in Vietnam, Willard found that he did not fit in back in America. He was miserable and desired to return to battle, so he did. A highly regarded man, Willard was given the task of finding and killing Walter E. Kurtz, a murderer who is stationed in Cambodia with the Montagnards, who view him as a god. To reach Kurtz, Willard joins the crew of a Navy river patrol boat who are to ferry him up a fictional river up to Cambodia. The boat’s crew consists of four men: Chief, Chef, Lance, and Clean. With help from...
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...2013 Deepak K. Agrawal BUS 656 Wayne State College 9/29/2013 2013 Deepak K. Agrawal BUS 656 Wayne State College 9/29/2013 Marketing Plan Omaha Coffee Roaster House Marketing Plan Omaha Coffee Roaster House Omaha Coffee Roaster House Coffee is a never ending journey 1.0 INTRODUCTION Omaha Coffee Roasted House will be based in Omaha, NE serving Omaha metropolis and Surrounding areas, Freshly Roasted Coffee beans with commitment to freshness and quality in every batch of coffee we will roast and sell. We will be offering coffees from all over the world, including single origin, blended, Fair Trade, organically grown, and flavored coffee beans. We will be selling our coffees to our customers through our roasting facility in Omaha. Every coffee we sell will be a small-batch roasted for flavor that will be explosive and complex, nothing like the cardboard that is often sold as “specialty “or “gourmet” coffee in the market. The Roaster house will be committed to provide high quality coffee beans along with varieties of tea at a reasonable price. The roaster’s house will offer customers premium coffee beans from different part of the world roasted to customer specific needs. The roaster house is committed to provide its customer excellent service by meeting specific customer needs for different kind of premium coffee beans by providing amazing coffee beans at competitive prices. 1.1 Objectives The objective of the Omaha Coffee Roaster house is to 1. Sell specialty...
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...ANWR Position Paper Jennifer Piper Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) is a 19 million acre area that lies in the northeast corner of Alaska. The Coastal Plain area, comprising 1.5 million acres on the northern edge of ANWR, is bordered on the north by the Beaufort Sea, on the east by the U.S. Canadian border, and on the west by the Canning River. The Coastal Plain of ANWR is being considered for oil and gas development since it potentially holds billions of barrels of recoverable oil and trillions of cubic feet of recoverable gas. Of the 1.5 million acres of the Coastal Plain, less than 2000 acres would be affected by development. However, because it is an important wildlife habitat, some are concerned that development would hurt the land, endanger wildlife, and not recover enough oil to make the effort worthwhile. ANWR is about the size of South Carolina, and the proposed development area in the Coastal Plain is about one-fifth the size of Washington, DC’s Dulles International Airport. Although ANWR could produce greater than a million barrels of oil per day, more than enough to replace U.S. imports from Iraq, we have to look at the potential social, economic and ecological benefits and consequences to exploring/drilling in ANWR. Environmentalists want to protect ANWR from any drilling because of its environmental and ecological value. They believe that there is too great a danger to the refuge, which is home too many species of birds and fish as well as both land and...
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...DEFINITION FROM WIKI (understand and write it yourself) In ecology, resilience is the capacity of an ecosystem to respond to a perturbation or disturbanceby resisting damage and recovering quickly. Such perturbations and disturbances can include stochastic events such as fires, flooding, windstorms, insect population explosions, and human activities such as deforestation and the introduction of exotic plant or animal species. Disturbances of sufficient magnitudeor duration can profoundly affect an ecosystem and may force an ecosystem to reach a threshold beyond which a different regime of processes and structures predominates.Human activities that adversely affect ecosystem resilience such as reduction of biodiversity, exploitation of natural resources,pollution, land-use, and anthropogenic climate change are increasingly causing regime shifts in ecosystems, often to less desirable and degraded conditions. Interdisciplinary discourse on resilience now includes consideration of the interactions of humans and ecosystems via socio-ecological systems, and the need for shift from the maximum sustainable yield paradigm to environmental management which aims to build ecological resilience through "resilience analysis, adaptive resource management, and adaptive governance". The concept of resilience in ecological systems was first introduced by the Canadian ecologist C.S. Holling in order to describe the persistence of natural systems in the face of changes in ecosystem variables...
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...What Went Wrong with Starbucks? Financial Analysis and Business Evaluation Case Study By Julia S. Kwok* Elizabeth C. Rabe Northeastern State University * Corresponding author: Department of Accounting and Finance, College of Business and Technology, Northeastern State University, Broken Arrow, OK 74014; Email: kwok@nsuok.edu; Phone: 918-449-6516. What Went Wrong with Starbucks? Financial Statement Analysis Abstract After decades of grande growth based on the Starbucks experience, Starbucks Coffee Company experienced continuous drop of stock price since the beginning of 2007. Upon first glance of their financial statements, there was 20% increase in revenues and 9% increase in net income last year. Such growth could be counter intuitive to the drop of market value. This case encourages a more in depth examination of how the financing of the expansion impacted financial ratios. Further assessment should evaluate the impact of expansion on the company‘s free cash flows and return of the capital investment. Students would need to evaluate the relative contribution of factors leading to the drop of the stock price. The case provided detailed information that would allow students to investigate the impact of the economic and business conditions, the competition and Starbuck‘s business strategies on their financial performance. The students were advised to consider what changes to Starbuck‘s strategies could increase the economic value added of the expansion and help to reverse...
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...External Analysis of the Coffee Industry History of Coffee The coffee industry provides its customers with coffee and sometimes other beverages (tea, soft drinks, snacks, etc.) According to Myers, coffee is the world’s most valuable agricultural commodity. Coffee consumers drink different types of coffee, including cappuccino, espresso, mocha, and latte. The coffee industry is in high demand, and the more people drink coffee, the more the quality and value of coffee become more important. Starbucks is in this coffee industry because it meets the consumers demand for a quick way of energy to get their day started. 69% of Americans consider coffee to be an “affordable luxury”. It is available in a variety of beverages and flavors to satisfy the most discriminating tastes. Starbucks missions statements states “Our mission: to inspire and nurture the human spirit- one person, one cup, and one neighborhood at a time” Starbucks coffee has always been and always will be about quality, according to them. In the five years to fiscal 2013, Starbucks revenue is expected to grow at an average rate of 7.5% per year, with an increase of 11.9% in fiscal 2013 to total $14.9 billion. In the Ethiopian highlands is where coffee trees were originated. The Arabs were the first to cultivate coffee as well as to start its trade. It was then brought to Europe, then in the mid 1600’s coffee was brought to New Amsterdam, which is now called New York by the British. In 100 years, coffee was established...
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...What Went Wrong with Starbucks? Financial Analysis and Business Evaluation Case Study By Julia S. Kwok* Elizabeth C. Rabe Northeastern State University * Corresponding author: Department of Accounting and Finance, College of Business and Technology, Northeastern State University, Broken Arrow, OK 74014; Email: kwok@nsuok.edu; Phone: 918-449-6516. What Went Wrong with Starbucks? Financial Statement Analysis Abstract After decades of grande growth based on the Starbucks experience, Starbucks Coffee Company experienced continuous drop of stock price since the beginning of 2007. Upon first glance of their financial statements, there was 20% increase in revenues and 9% increase in net income last year. Such growth could be counter intuitive to the drop of market value. This case encourages a more in depth examination of how the financing of the expansion impacted financial ratios. Further assessment should evaluate the impact of expansion on the company‘s free cash flows and return of the capital investment. Students would need to evaluate the relative contribution of factors leading to the drop of the stock price. The case provided detailed information that would allow students to investigate the impact of the economic and business conditions, the competition and Starbuck‘s business strategies on their financial performance. The students were advised to consider what changes to Starbuck‘s strategies could increase the economic value added of the expansion and help to reverse...
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...Drilling For Oil In ANWR, Is It Worth It? Alexander Payne - Engineering Student, University of West Florida Abstract - This report will take an objective look at the possibilities of drilling for oil in Alaska. We will take a look at all of the possible benefits and good that could come out of this, as well as all of the drawbacks and negative effects that can come from drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. This report will also take a look at some possible alternatives to drilling for oil in ANWR that could possibly reap the same benefits, if not more. Index Terms – Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, Porcupine Caribou, Mineral Rights, Surface Rights, Aleuts, Eskimos, Tlingits, Crude Oil, Fossil Fuels, Solar Energy, Wind Energy, Cellulosic Ethanol, oil rig, oil spill. Introduction: Oil and its uses 1 What is Oil? There many things referred to as “oil”, but in our case, oil is a liquid substance derived from petroleum that is used as a fuel source in hundreds of different applications, and it is also used as a lubricant. Oil is considered to be one of three main fossil fuels, the other two being coal and natural gas. As you probably know, fossil fuels are nonrenewable because it takes far too many years for nature to reproduce what we are taking away from it. 2 Uses Of Oil Just about anything you can think of that runs off of an engine more than likely uses oil. Just to name off some other uses, oil can...
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...SWOT Analysis Competitive Strength Assessment Key issues or problems Strategy Alternatives Final Recommendations Implementation Concerns Work Cited Page Background Panera Bread is a company with over 1,300 locations and $94 million in net income per year. They are a leader in the food service industry and continue to incorporate new and innovative ways to keep current customers and attract new customers. They have been in business since 1981, though they have undergone several name and owner changes. Their headquarters are in Richmond Heights, Missouri, and Ken Rosenthal is the founder. They are considered to be a Fast Casual Bakery-Café and their signature item is their fresh baked bread. Throughout this paper we will discuss the strengths and weaknesses of Panera and their competitors to get a better understanding of their market position and where they go from this day forward. Macro-Environmental Analysis Governmental, technology, demographic, societal, and economic factors all play a significant role in the foodservice industry. In the foodservice industry, there are many government regulated laws that affect the production and storage of foods, as well as the cleanliness of the establishment. The Food and Drug Administration is in charge of making sure that restaurants...
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...Porter’s Five Forces represent theoretical framework that is used for industry analysis and strategy development. Specifically, the five forces shaping competition within the industry consist of the intensity of rivalry among the competitors, the risk of entry of new competitors, the bargaining power of buyers, bargaining power of suppliers and the threat of substitute products and services (Sinkovics and Ghauri, 2009). The nature of the relationships among these forces is best presented in the following figure. Threat of new entrants (barriers): Mediium The higher the barriers to entry are within any given industry the smaller the threat of new entrants to that industry. (Porter, 1998, p. 7) The specialty coffee industry does not put a high premium on economies of scale and has a low start-up costs. However, the barriers to entry seem high in the late 1980s due to high product differentiation, saturated market, high specialized capital requirements, high switching costs and disadvantages to new entrants in the form of limited access to premium Arabica coffee, limited choice of locations and a moderately steep learning curve and high amount of financial resources associated with buildings and properties. There is room for new entry into the coffeehouse market, but new entrants face formidable barriers to entry to compete with Starbucks directly in the coffeehouse segment. Starbucks has developed significant knowhow, skills, and information that would take years for new entrants...
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...Autonomous Characters Craig W. Reynolds Sony Computer Entertainment America 919 East Hillsdale Boulevard Foster City, California 94404 craig_reynolds@playstation.sony.com http://www.red.com/cwr/ cwr@red.com Keywords: Animation Techniques, Virtual/Interactive Environments, Games, Simulation, behavioral animation, autonomous agent, situated, embodied, reactive, vehicle, steering, path planning, path following, pursuit, evasion, obstacle avoidance, collision avoidance, flocking, group behavior, navigation, artificial life, improvisation. Abstract This paper presents solutions for one requirement of autonomous characters in animation and games: the ability to navigate around their world in a life-like and improvisational manner. These “steering behaviors” are largely independent of the particulars of the character’s means of locomotion. Combinations of steering behaviors can be used to achieve higher level goals This paper divides motion behavior into three levels. It will focus on the (For example: get from here to there while avoiding obstacles, follow this corridor, join that group of characters...) middle level of steering behaviors, briefly describe the lower level of locomotion, and touch lightly on the higher level of goal setting and strategy. Introduction Autonomous characters are a type of autonomous agent intended for use in computer animation and interactive media such as games and virtual reality. These agents represent a This stands in character in a story or game...
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...Edited by Kristen Walker Painemilla, Anthony B. Rylands, Alisa Woofter and Cassie Hughes Edited by Kristen Walker Painemilla, Anthony B. Rylands, Alisa Woofter and Cassie Hughes Conservation International 2011 Crystal Drive, Suite 500 Arlington, VA 22202 USA Tel: +1 703-341-2400 www.conservation.org Editors : Kristen Walker Painemilla, Anthony B. Rylands, Alisa Woofter and Cassie Hughes Cover design Paula K. Rylands, Conservation International : Layout: Kim Meek, Washington, DC Maps [except where noted otherwise] Kellee Koenig, Conservation International : Conservation International is a private, non-profit organization exempt from federal income tax under section 501 c (3) of the Internal Revenue Code. ISBN 978-1-934151-39-6 © 2010 by Conservation International All rights reserved. The designations of geographical entities in this publication, and the presentation of the material, do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of Conservation International or its supporting organizations concerning the legal status of any country, territory, or area, or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. Any opinions expressed in this publication are those of the writers, and do not necessarily reflect those of Conservation International (CI). Suggested citation: Walker Painemilla, K., Rylands, A. B., Woofter, A. and Hughes, C. (eds.). 2010. Indigenous Peoples and Conservation: From Rights to Resource Management. Conservation...
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...efforts by Starbuck’s corporation to be a responsible and ethical corporation and the impact of these efforts on the corporation is bottom-line. The Impact of the Company’s Mission, Vision, and Primary Stakeholders on Overall Success A mission statement is a company’s beacon light to assist company employees with its navigation. In relations to the organizations customers, it is assurance that the company is committed to the clients’ purpose. A mission statement articulates the front line of the organization and reminds the firm’s partners of how the company would like to be seen by its consumers (Starbucks, 2013). In Starbuck’s mission statement states that top executives at Starbucks understand the link between the significance of research and development. This implication is clear...
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