32 Harvard Referencing 2006 Note: this page is only an introduction to the Harvard referencing system. Curtin Library & Information Service provides a modified version of the author-date system presented in: Snooks & Co. 2002‚ Style manual: For authors‚ editors and printers‚ 6th edn‚ John Wiley & Sons Australia‚ n.p. For referencing electronic sources‚ refer to the American Psychological Association ’s Publication manual: American Psychological Association 2001‚ Publication manual of the American
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University of Wollongong Author-Date (Harvard) Referencing Guide 2008 This guide was jointly produced by staff in the University Library‚ Learning Development and CEDIR The style has been adapted from the publication Style Manual for Authors‚ Editors and Printers 2002 (6th edition) 2nd Edition: Updated January 2011 1 of 29 About this Guide Accurate referencing is critical to quality academic writing and avoidance of plagiarism. To assist students to develop this important skill‚ the
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& Bibliography Using Harvard What‚ Why‚ How‚ When & Where? This guide to using the Harvard system of referencing complies with: BRITISH STANDARDS INSTITUTION. 1990. BS5605 :1990. Recommendations for citing and referencing published material. 2nd ed. London: BSI and BRITISH STANDARDS INSTITUTION. 2010. BS ISO 690:2010. Information and documentation : guidelines for bibliographic references and citations to information resources. London: BSI The use of the Harvard system of referencing
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Clayton Was Wrong About Japan Clayton was born in a middle-class household to two White parents and raised Protestant. His Great Grandfather served in World War 2 fighting against Japan in the Pacific Theater. Coming from rural Indiana‚ he was not often exposed to people who weren’t also White Protestants of a similar class. Clayton was an American through and through. You could say that he bled red‚ white‚ and blue. He was very nationalistic about the United States‚ often saying things such as‚
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holder. Copies of working papers are available from the author. Testing Strategy with Multiple Performance Measures Evidence from a Balanced Scorecard at Store24* Dennis Campbell Srikant Datar Harvard Business School Susan L. Kulp George Washington University V.G. Narayanan Harvard Business School Current Draft: February 2008 ABSTRACT: We analyze balanced scorecard data from a convenience store chain‚ Store24‚ during the implementation of an innovative‚ but ultimately unsuccessful strategy
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As a team leader‚ Jane has already touched based with her group and recognized everybody’s role: Tom is “the joker‚” Jack is “the intellectual‚” Caroline is “the mom” and Andy is “the top performer and troublemaker.” She understands that all of them are high-paid employees and have been working as a group for a while‚ at least much longer than she has. As far as the performance‚ Jane believes that they are high performers and make up a very interesting and strong group; although there is no evidence
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1 TiVo 2007: DVRs and Beyond Harvard Business Case 9-708-401 INTRODUCTION & BACKGROUND The following provides a case study analysis of a 2007 Harvard Business School case study on TiVo‚ the Silicon Valley consumer electronics company best known for its innovative digital video recorders (DVRs) (Yoffie & Slind‚ 2007). The case concerns the challenges facing TiVo now that it is no longer the only competitor in the DVR market and TiVo’s efforts to craft a winning strategy in a changing environment
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L3 Language Literacies Learning Harvard referencing guide UniSA This guide will help you apply the Harvard referencing style to your writing at UniSA. It is designed to help you understand the conventions and principles of this style and make decisions about referencing. There are many different versions of the Harvard style. This guide presents one consistent version for use at UniSA‚ which conforms to the Australian Government standard guidelines presented in Snooks & Co (eds) 2002‚ Style manual
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Harvard Concept (Fisher and Urgy) "Getting to Yes" (also called the Harvard concept) describes a method called principled negotiation to reach an agreement whose success is judged by three criteria: 1. It should produce a wise agreement if agreement is possible. 2. It should be efficient. 3. It should improve or at least not damage the relationship between the parties. The authors argue that their method can be used in virtually any negotiation. Issues are decided upon by their merits
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profitable orders were these custom orders. The new high prices more than compensated for costs; customers weren’t changing suppliers because of high switching expenses; and competitors had shied from short runs because of the conventional wisdom in the industry. D A prominent producer of capital equipment‚ realizing it was losing big sales potential in its largest accounts‚ started a national account program. It included heavy sales support with experienced account managers; participation by high-level
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