PALLI 13SSMA35 Contents 1. Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)-Definition 2. CSR history in India 3. Role of CSR in society –Indian perspective 4. Indian companies’ achievements as part of CSR so far 5. Companies bill-2013 6. Benefits and challenges to the society 7. Conclusion 1. Corporate Social Responsibility-Definition There are so many definitions are there which defined the Corporate social responsibility(CSR) in their own way but most acceptable definition is given by Lord holme
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Annual Report and Accounts January 2011 Annual Report and Accounts for the year ended 29 January 2011 Next is a UK based retailer offering exciting, beautifully designed, excellent quality clothing, footwear, accessories and home products. Next distributes through three main channels: Next Retail, a chain of more than 500 stores in the UK and eire, Next Directory, a home shopping catalogue and website with nearly 3 million active customers, and Next International, with more than 180 stores
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Alibaba in the Emerging Chinese E-commerce Industry Yuexi Li1 Claremont McKenna College November 15, 2015 Abstract: Alibaba.com is one of the leading e-Commerce companies in China. It has grown admirably from its initial beginning as an e-Market connecting small suppliers and buyers to a giant emarketplace that has several operational platforms. Currently the heavy reliance on Chinese Economy, the counterfeit goods issues, and the competition
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Assessment 1 1. Critically comment on the combination of orientations in the organization’s marketing philosophy. 2. Discuss how the theory behind strategic marketing planning models can be used in the formulation of the organization’s marketing strategy. 3. Identify and critically evaluate possible opportunities for growth within the organization’s macro environment. Programme Name Master of Science in Marketing with Festival and Event Management Module and Module Number MKT11908
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Solution The snack food industry has become increasingly commodity-based over the past ten years, and while the competition has increased, differentiation among the competitors has decreased. This gradual change in the industry has caused sales to slip, market share to decrease, and stock prices to fall. The unwillingness of the company to change to the needs of the market has put the company in a position to lose its long-held premier standing in the industry. In addition to the financial
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strategy including customer-interface departments as well as other departments.[3] Measuring and valuing customer relationships is critical to implementing this strategy.[4] Contents [hide] * 1 Benefits of Customer Relationship Management * 2 Challenges * 2.1 Complexity * 2.2 Poor usability * 3 Fragmentation * 3.1 Business reputation * 3.2 Security, privacy and data security concerns * 4 Types/variations * 4.1 Sales force automation * 4.2 Marketing * 4.3 Customer
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DeBeers “A Diamond is Forever” Prepared April 16, 2012 For decades, De Beers has been the preeminent name in diamonds. Thanks to a stockpile of the world's rough diamond supply, indelible marketing schemes and even negotiations with foreign governments for their diamonds, De Beers has been the most important name in one of the world's most lucrative businesses for almost a century. This paper will review the billion dollar rise and fall of a monopoly that has crushed competitors and cash-strapped
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TELECOM INDUSTRY Telecommunication is the transmission of messages over significant distances for the purpose of communication. In the modern age of electricity, telecommunications has involved the use of electric means such as the telegraph and telephone, the use of microwave communications and the use of fiber optics. Telecommunication has proved to be a vibrant industry across the world with a high growth rate during the past few years. The on-going process of deregulation, privatization, and
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Breakout Strategy Meeting the Challenge of Double-Digit Growth Sydney Finkelstein Charles E. Harvey Thomas C. Lawton (McGraw-Hill, New York, 2006) Table of Contents Dedication Acknowledgements Table of Contents List of figures Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Chapter 7 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 Breakout Strategy Getting on the Fast Track Staying out Front Breakout Dynamics Putting Vision to Work Being a Magnet Company Delivering the Promise Executing Breakout Breakout
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like steaming movies using applications like Net-Flix and Love Film, to buying your groceries at a touch of a button. In the 1940’s the mobile phone revolution started and only the wealthy and rich people could afford to buy them. It was more of a fashion factor, where as now days it is a vital tool for people to communicate with each other. Bulky phones are now of the past, retailers now concentrate on smart phones which have much more functionality and use for consumers and their are many platforms
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