of any artefact a great deal can be told of its manufacture as well as its manufacturer. The practice of typology is of great use when analysing pottery. By observing the shape and size of any artefact it is often possible to date that artefact within a specific range of dates. The size of this range is however not always as accurate as one might wish it to be. Nevertheless‚ by using typology an educated guess can be made regarding the creation of a piece of pottery this can then be further applied
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order to increase its sales. 4.To assess whether the effects of the measures that Proton has taken. 5.To analyse whether Proton has to move on to market-orientation method or not. Content Flow : Research Objectives 1.Proton marketing strategy (Ansoff Matrix) 2.Questionnaire ( Primary Research) 3.Factors of Proton business performance (Pest analysis) 4.Ratio Analysis (Secondary research) 5. Statistics on number of Proton and Toyota cars sold in 2012 6. Financial Accounts of Proton in 2012
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Strategic marketing management Company Information Carrefour Group‚ in the past 40 years have grown to turn out to be one of the world’s leading distribution groups. Carrefour began its journey in 1959 which was established in France by the Defforey families and Fournier. The name Carrefour came into existence as shops were located on thoroughfare‚ which literally means a place where it’s convenient to shop. Carrefour hypermarket was first opened outside France in Belgium and the first
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Ansoff Matrix Ansoff’s Matrix: A method by which businesses can classify their strategies for expansion. It includes; Market Penetration‚ Product Development‚ Market Development and Diversification. Market penetration Market penetration is the name given to a growth strategy where the business focuses on selling existing products into existing markets. Market penetration seeks to achieve four main objectives: • Maintain or increase the market share of current products – this can be achieved
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`Assignments for chapters 1 through 6 EXERCISE 1.1 Each of us is confronted with decisions in our everyday lives that require us to gather and assess information on the different alternatives at hand and then make a decision. Examples of such decisions include the decision to attend college‚ buy a car or some other item‚ strike up a friendship with Person A or B‚ select a particular course‚ or take a trip to Point X or Y. You may have made an error in such decisions because your information
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Universal Design as a Cause of Innovation Trigger If matched correctly‚ it should be possible to use the design principles as a trigger for an innovation level‚ i.e. UD principles can catalyze an identified innovation level. In Table 1 we used the typology from Chandy and Tellis [3‚ 4] where “Newness of technology” denotes to what level a technology is different from earlier technologies‚ and “customer benefit (need fulfillment)” refers
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outlook toward the people and the land. By collapsing the two entities into one hostile being‚ Bradford conveys his lack of understanding of the people and the land of the new world and demonstrates an attitude of supremacy. Bradford also uses biblical typology to describe the turbulent situation of his comrades - he claims the could not “go up to the top of Pisgah”‚ a biblical allusion‚ “to view from this wilderness a more goodly country to feed their hopes.” Bradford is able to convey the hopelessness
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Agglutinative language Jump to: navigation‚ search Linguistic typology Morphological Isolating Synthetic Polysynthetic Fusional Agglutinative Morphosyntactic Alignment Accusative Ergative Split ergative Philippine Active–stative Tripartite Marked nominative Inverse marking Syntactic pivot Theta role Word order VO languages Subject–verb–object Verb–subject–object Verb–object–subject OV languages Subject–object–verb Object–subject–verb Object–verb–subject V2 word
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Nigeria Allison‚ M. and J. Kaye‚ 2005. Strategic Planning for Non-profit Organizations. A Practical Guide and Work Book‚ Wiley Publishers. Ansoff‚ H.I.‚ 1991. Critique of Henry Mintzberg ’s. The design school: Reconsidering the basic premises of strategic management Ansoff‚ H.I.‚ D. Miller and P.H. Friesen‚ 2000. Strategy-making and the enviromnent: The third link. Ansoff‚ H.!.‚ C.C Miller and L.B. Cardinal‚ 2001. Strategic planning and firm performance: A synthesis of more than two decades of research
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Introduction………………………………………………………………..……. Chapter 1.Text and text type: definitions and classifications……………………. Text types……………………………………………………………... 1.2 Beaugrande and Dressler’s typology………………………………..… 1.3 Longacre’s classification…………………………………………..….. 1.4 Werlich’s textual typology……………………………………….….... 1.5 Biber’s text type………………………………………………………. Chapter 2.Text Forms………………………………………………………….... 2.1 The descriptive text form……………………………………………
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