...BY LINDA UWAOMA, SHANSHAN LI, REHANA DAYANANDA AND ANDREA VAN DER WEST OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT REPORT- DELL COMPUTERS ! Table of Contents OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT REPORT- DELL COMPUTERS ...................................................1 OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT REPORT- DELL COMPUTERS ...................................................2 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY..............................................................................................2 INTRODUCTION .....................................................................................................3 BODY..................................................................................................................4 EXAMINATION OF DELL’S SUPPLY CHAIN OPERATIONS .......................................................4 • Direct to customers (DTC); a pull based system: ...............................................4 • Direct to Retailers (DTR); Employing Partners and specialty stores: .......................5 A Problem statement: ........................................................................................7 RECOMMENDATIONS ...............................................................................................8 • MARKETING AND PRODUCT IMPROVEMENTS: .................................................................9 • SUPPLY CHAIN IMPROVEMENTS; A HYBRID PLAN: ............................................................10 • A NEW SYSTEM STRUCTURE AND VALUE CHAIN MODEL:..................................
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...the decision. Google dominates the search inquiries by 65% and search dollars by 75.2% this is showing the pecuniary portion associated with the antitrust behavior (Lee, 2011). Google has more than half of the market share associated with search dollars and inquires. Google controls the market for a variety of things like the housing market, map market and the travel market (Lee, 2011). This in turn makes a problem for any other company in the business. Google was investigated under more than one act. Sherman act was one which is an antitrust law in forces the prevention of monopolies or attempts to monopolize. The second act Google was investigated under was the Federal Trade Commission Act which prohibits unfair methods of competition (Shanshan, 2014). Monopolies for the most part are not good for society in my opinion. Monopolies are when one company controls the market for a specific product or products. For example in...
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...ENG 101 What role does race and ethnicity play in my life? Name: Shanshan Dai The terms race and ethnicity were complicated ones to me. My attitude to these two terms was that they somehow overlaps with each other, in the sense that people from the same ethic group usually share the same race to some extent, while race is more of a exterior factor, like the physical appearance. I first try to get myself more understanding of what this means. Obviously a number of philosophers and academicians had approached these definitions in many profound ways. A simple way of definition that appeals to me is that ethnicity is used to define a group of people whose members identify with each other through a common heritage, consisting of a common culture, and may also stress common ancestry and religion, as opposed to an ethnic minority group which refers to race. Speaking of the role of race and ethnicity in my life, I guess the first thing is to identify my racial and ethnic position. My identity is not a complex one. In other words, as an Asian Chinese born and raised in China, I do not see myself has a mixed racial or ethic background. Neither part of my parents’ family has any foreign origin or family members from outsider culture. The role of race and ethnicity plays differently as I grew up, of which can be perceived into three phases – before the age of 19, when I left home to the United Kingdom for the first time; to my four years abroad in the UK; and then move to...
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...ShanShan Tang BUS141 IM #5 1.0 What is the thesis statement of the article? Sprint is raising the stakes in the wireless wars by offering to cut in half AT&T and Verizon customer’s bill if they make the switch to the third- place carriers. 2.0 Will this pricing strategy work? Will Sprint win market shares from its half pricing strategy? 3.0 The areas of the pricing strategies described, revealed, or incorporated in this article include the following subjects from the 3 pricing chapters and the module. 3.1 price and value 3.1.1 Consumer reaction to value of the service/ product.. Consumer are eager to find out how much saving they would have from switching to sprint 3.1.2 A non-price based strategy The sprint plans would offer unlimited talk and text and however much data the subscribers were buying from AT&T or Verizon. 3.1.3 The customer attracted to this unique, higher priced product includes This is not a higher priced product because sprint would let subscribers pay half of what they are paying to AT&T or Verizon. So it is a lower priced product. 3.1.4 The stage of the life cycle of sprint is declined, during the declined stage, sales fall rapidly. Sprint’s shares fell about 3% Tuesday, leaving them down more than 55% so far this year. When this happens, marketer may regain consumer’s attention by cutting off the price. 3.1.5 New features are added to product extension The half-off pricing under sprint’s offer won’t expire as long as subscribers stay...
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...Notes for Statistics 3011 University of Minnesota Fall 2012 Section 010 Instructor: Shanshan Ding Notes accompany the Third Edition of Statistics: The Art and Science of Learning From Data by Alan Agresti and Christine Franklin Contents CHAPTER 9: HYPOTHESIS TESTS 9.1 Elements of a Hypothesis Test . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.2 Normal Hypothesis Test for Population Proportion p . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.3 The t-Test: Hypothesis Testing for Population Mean µ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.4 Possible Errors in Hypothesis Testing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.5 Limitations and Common Misinterpretations of Hypothesis Testing . . . . . . . . . . 1 1 6 10 15 17 Stat 3011 Chapter 9 CHAPTER 9: HYPOTHESIS TESTS Motivating Example A diet pill company advertises that at least 75% of its customers lose 10 pounds or more within 2 weeks. You suspect the company of falsely advertising the benefits of taking their pills. Suppose you take a sample of 100 product users and find that only 5% have lost at least 10 pounds. Is this enough to prove your claim? What about if 72% had lost at least 10 pounds? Goal: 9.1 Elements of a Hypothesis Test 1. Assumptions 2. Hypotheses Each hypothesis test has two hypotheses about the population: Null Hypothesis (H0 ): Alternative Hypothesis (Ha ): 1 Stat 3011 Chapter 9 Diet Pill Example: Let p = true proportion of diet pill customers that lose at least...
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...2QA3 Group Project The Relationship between Canadian Income and Walmart’s Net Income! ! Friday, November 29, 2013! ! ! Surname Cai Mei Sun Ye Given Name Kaisi Yueli Xinran ShanShan Student Number 1219196 1214213 1224165 1234730 McMaster email caik@mcmaster.ca meiyl@mcmaster.ca sunxr@mcmaster.ca yes22@mcmaster.ca Contents! Executive Summary! Introduction! Literature Review! “Walmart always low price”! Project Work! Canadian average income from 2002 to 2011! Walmart’s income from 2002 to 2011! Comparing Canadian average income and Walmart’s income! Comparing Walmart with it’s competitor (Shoppers Drug Mart)! Hypothesis testing 1 (Walmart’s net income and average income)! ! i! 2! 3! 3! 4! 4! 4! 5! 6! 7! Hypothesis testing 2 (Walmart’s net income and it’s competitor’s income)!8! Result and Recommendation! Result! Discussion ! Recommendation! Conclusion! Appendix A! Appendix B! Appendix C! Appendix D! Appendix E! Notes! Bibliography! 10! 10! 11! 11! 12! 14! 16! 18! 20! 21! 22! 23! 2QA3 GROUP PROJECT ii Executive Summary! The retail giant, Walmart, has out beat all its competitors and gains a remarkable growth during the 2008 Great Recession. The further investigation has conducted to confirm the relationship between Walmart’s net income and Canadian average income. The results show that as percentage growth of Canadian average income decreases, the percentage growth of Walmart’s net income increases. It also determines that Walmart’s growth has...
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...CHAPTER-I INTRODUCTION The subject of matriarchal studies is the investigation and presentation of non-patriarchal societies of past and present. Even today there are enclaves of societies with matriarchal patterns in Asia, Africa, America and Oceania. None of these is a mere reversal of patriarchy where women rule -as it is often commonly believed -instead, they are all egalitarian societies, without exception. This means they do not know hierarchies, classes and the domination of one gender by the other. They are societies free of domination, but they still have their regulations. And this is the fact that makes them so attractive in any search for a new philosophy, to create a just society. Equality does not merely mean a levelling of differences. The natural differences between the genders and the generations are respected and honoured, but they never serve to create hierarchies, as is common in patriarchy. The different genders and generations have their own honour and through complimentary areas of activity, they are geared towards each other. This can be observed on all levels of society: the economic level, the social level, the political level and the areas of their worldviews and faiths. More precisely matriarchies are societies with complementary equality, where great care is taken to provide a balance. This applies to the balance between genders, among generations, and between humans and nature. The differentiated rules of matriarchal societies have been...
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...Shanshan Huang English 103 Professor Joseph 5/7/2013 The Major Themes of Orwellian Imagine living in an environment under the surveillance of a big power, imagine being manipulated and controlled for every thought and action. The act of obeying orders from the big power leads to survival, and the rebellion for freedom leads to the most devastating punishment. Would you give in to the big power or would you fight? The novel Nineteen-Eighty Four written by George Orwell portraying through the view of the protagonist, Winston Smith, describing a nation called Oceania being under the ruling of the antagonist, a totalitarian Party or the Big Brother. In addition, it presented various methods such as constant surveillance, unending propaganda, distortion of language, historical revisionism, fear, torture, perpetual war, and lack of habeas corpus to characterize an oppressive and authoritarian government. The Party utilizes these methods to keep its citizens living in a state of fear, making them developing a feeling of dependency of the party. The novel Nineteen-Eighty Four has its significance today because all of the methods that characterize a totalitarian government are still presence, especially being currently utilized by the government of the United States. Once upon a time, the U.S used to be a land of unparalleled freedom. However, ever since the terrorist attack on September 11, 2001, the U.S government, primarily under the management of the bush administration, has...
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...SPAIN: FROM ECONOMIC CRISES TO TOURISM COMPETITIVENESS José Francisco Perles-Ribes* (corresponding autor) (jose.perles@ua.es) Ana Belén Ramón-Rodríguez* (anar@ua.es) Antonio Rubia-Serrano** (antonio.rubia@ua.es) Luis Moreno-Izquierdo* (luis.moreno@ua.es) *Department of Applied Economic Analysis, University of Alicante ** Department of Financial Economics and Accounting, University of Alicante Faculty of Economics and Business Sciences University of Alicante Campus San Vicente del Raspeig 03080 Alicante Tel: 96 590 36 09 Fax: 96 590 93 22 Corresponding author details: José Francisco Perles-Ribes (jose.perles@ua.es or jfperles@gmail.com) Particular adress: Urb. Manzanera 13-R 03710 Calpe (Alicante) Tlf: +34 635 617 159 SPAIN: FROM ECONOMIC CRISES TO TOURISM COMPETITIVENESS Abstract: This paper considers the influence of economic crises on Spain’s tourism competitiveness. This competitiveness is measured by its share in world tourism. Analysing a period of forty years, the permanent effects of temporary or structural economic crises on competitiveness are observed. Furthermore, it identifies the economic transmission mechanisms operating and links them to the most relevant explanatory models of tourism destination competitiveness. The main conclusion obtained is that the effects of shocks on competitiveness are not neutral and that the negative effects are more persistent in highly intensive crises. This effect works through two basic transmission mechanisms: the...
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...International Journal of e-Education, e-Business, e-Management and e-Learning, Vol. 1, No. 3, August 2011 Case Study of Online Retailing Fast Fashion Industry Wei Zhenxiang and Zhou Lijie Abstract—The study investigates into the fast fashion industry worldwide, specifically on Zara, H&M and UNIQLO with respect to efficient supply chain management, scarce value creation, low costs promotions and positioning strategy, supported by comparisons between several typical well-known fast fashion brands. Through the overall analysis of B2C apparel online retailing in China, statistics show an enormous space for online retailing fast fashion industry to explore but a far way to catch up with the leading enterprises in the world in terms of e-commerce scale. The next main part demonstrates a case of a Chinese fast fashion online retailer-Vancl, analyzing its keys to success in aspects of proper product positioning, brand positioning, business mode, marketing strategy, products and services, user experience, logistics and team management. In addition, relevant suggestions for further prosperity are proposed in the end of the paper. Index Terms—fast fashion industry, e-commerce, B2C, online retailing retailers to acknowledge that designs move from catwalk to store in the fastest time to capture current trends in the market. The apparel products are designed and manufactured quickly and cheaply to allow the mainstream consumer to take advantage of current clothing styles at a lower...
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...MIT Sloan Class of 2013 Facebook group * XXXXXHannah Clark Steiman Cambridge, Massachusetts Joined about 8 months ago * * XXXXXXSohana Punithakumar MIT Sloan School of Management Joined over a year ago * * XXXXXXXX Ahmed Wali Aqeel Works at Game Ventures Joined about 8 months ago * * XXXXX Xi Wang Harvard Joined about 2 months ago A 2014 candidate * * XXXXXXX Vanessa William UPenn Joined about 12 months ago * * XXXXXXXShireen Taleghani YouTube Ads Specialist at YouTube Joined about 11 months ago * * XXXXXMichael Chen MIT Added by Nikita Guo about a month ago graduates in 2012 * * XXXXX Leah Fotis MIT Sloan School of Management Joined over a year ago . Graduates in 2014. * * XXXXX Kendall Herbst MIT Sloan School of Management Joined over a year ago * * XXXXX Leland Cheung City Councillor at City of Cambridge Joined over a year ago Class of 2011 grad * * XXXXX Ryan Choi MIT Added by Damian Lee about 2 months ago * * XXXXX Maxim Beletskiy MIT Joined over a year ago Graduated in 2011 * * XXXXXX Sharmeen Noor UVA Joined about 10 months ago * * XXXXXX Priyanka Ramamurthy Wellesley Joined over a year ago * * XXXXXX Dante Cassanego MIT Added by Nikita Guo about a month ago Graduated...
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...HONG KONG/CHINA Bosideng International A warm and cosy stock A dominant brand with household recognition We initiate coverage on Bosideng with an Outperform, with 35% upside to our target price. Bosideng dominates China’s down jacket market with an estimated 37% market share in CY10. Its top brand is ranked the 13th most valuable consumer brand in China. We expect core revenue CAGR of 13% in FY12-14 on the back of continued penetration of down jackets in China. Additionally, Bosideng is building out a menswear business. While this makes up only 10% of revenues in FY12E, we expect it to generate organic revenue CAGR of 33% with the potential for further upside from acquisitions. High free cash flow and dividend yield Photo taken by the report’s lead analyst in rural China. “A Christmas to remember” – December 2010 3998 HK Price 27 Oct 11 12-month target Upside/Downside Valuation - PER Outperform HK$2.07 HK$ % HK$ 2.80 35.3 2.80 Bosideng is currently sitting on HK$2.8bn net cash and we forecast a free cash flow yield of 6% in FY12, rising to 10% in FY14. With a 75% payout ratio, Bosideng should generate a dividend yield of 8% in FY12. Bosideng is looking to make acquisitions in the highly fragmented menswear market. Past acquisitions have been successful and we don’t think it is likely the company will make any acquisition that depletes more than half of the cash pile at most; thus we think the dividend is secure. Market concerns are overdone Six out of...
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...EAS6211: Investing in East Asia (as 28 September 2015) Dr Harald CONRAD (Japan, Module Organizer) Dr ZHANG Zhong (China) MODULE OBJECTIVES: This module will introduce students to key theoretical issues relating to globalization, foreign direct investment and the activities of multinational corporations. The module will then consider in detail foreign direct investment, business culture, employment and human resource management, seen from the perspective of multinationals investing in Japan and China. The module will provide students with a well-rounded knowledge of the issues facing firms seeking to establish global networks and the managers within those firms charged with the task of running the overseas operations and managing workers in a different cultural context. The module will encourage students to think more deeply about the process of overseas investment and the challenges of managing and working in the global economy, thus equipping them with some of the key skills and knowledge required of managers in global firms. Dr Harald Conrad – Contact Details: 6/8 Shearwood Road, Room B-07 Ext: 28431 Email: h.conrad@sheffield.ac.uk Dr Zhang Zhong – Contact Details: 6/8 Shearwood Road, Room A-02 Ext: 28339 Email: zhong.zhang@sheffield.ac.uk The lecturers’ office hours will be posted on their office doors during Week 1 of Semester 1. MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS: Regular attendance is required at all lectures and seminars; students should read the...
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...09th April, 2003 Budget for Porcelain Formers Size Supplier Price Qty Total 8 HT 16.35 180 2943 7 HT 16.35 120 1962 9 GBH 12.79 500 6395 Freight Charges 400 Total $ 11,700 Approved by:_________________ S. M. Salman GM Gloves Division 13th June, 2003 Budget for Aluminium Coated PTFE Formers Size Supplier Price Qty Total XL Hanyang USD88 36Pairs 3168 Freight Charges 400 Total $ 3,568 Approved by:_________________ S. M. Salman GM Gloves Division Noted: The last price of above formers in Aug-2002 was USD80/pair, we have kept 10% provision for increase in price. 22nd July, 2003 PVC Pigment Supplier Price Qty Total West USD88 36Pairs 3168 Freight Charges 400 Total $ 3,568 Approved by:_________________ S. M. Salman GM Gloves Division Noted: The last price of above formers in Aug-2002 was USD80/pair, we have kept 10% provision for increase in price. 27th June, 2003 Approval for Acrylic/ Wool Yarn as follows: Description Supplier Qty Price Amount (Kgs) (USD) 1/15 DMM 70/30 Acrylic/ Wool Yarn P.T. Kahatex 1400kgs...
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...| Transformational Leadership: Characteristics and Criticisms Iain Hay School of Geography, Population and Environmental ManagementFlinders University A prime function of a leader is to keep hope alive. (John W. Gardner)Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm. (Ralph Waldo Emerson)Setting an example is not the main means of influencing another, it is the only means. (Albert Einstein) Collectively, these three short quotations capture some of the key characteristics of transformational leadership, a form of leadership argued by some (Simic, 1998) to match the Zeitgeist of the post-World War II era. Academic debate about the nature and effectiveness of transformational leadership has developed since key work on the topic emerged in the 1970s. This short paper sets out to provide summary answers to three main questions about transformational leadership. What is it? How is it applied? What are some of its key weaknesses? In the course of the discussion, the following pages also provide a brief background to the origins of transformational leadership theory and point quickly to a possible theoretical future for a transformed transformational leadership. Transformational Leadership TheoryAccording to Cox (2001), there are two basic categories of leadership: transactional and transformational. The distinction between transactional and transformational leadership was first made by Downton (1973, as cited in Barnett, McCormick & Conners, 2001) but the idea...
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