------------------------------------------------- Question Q1. (a) What is the difference between primary and secondary research? Under what circumstances might the availability of secondary data make primary research unnecessary? Q1. (b) What is opinion leadership? Q2. (a) What are the strengths and weaknesses of motivational research? Q2. (b) What is social class? Q3. (a) What is the relationship between Brand loyalty and brand equity? What role do concepts play in the development of marketing
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Erica Welton used to be a Costco food buyer for 14 years. Now‚ she’s going organic‚ that is‚ by managing a restaurant called The Organic Coup. Welton started her organic mission by buying majority of organic and unprocessed foods for her own household. The fruits of her labor came when she first opened her Organic Coup restaurant last month in Pleasanton‚ California. According to Entrepreneur.com‚ Welton sees herself opening 25 more Organic Coup restaurants over the next year and two months. Aside
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Possible Reasons That Could Cause an Individual in Society to Choose to Deal Drugs With Regards to Durkheim’s Ideas of Organic Solidarity Throughout all societies there are common trends; laws‚ relationships‚ hierarchies and among other things‚ crime. There is no society in existence where individuals obey every rule that the society has set for them. The law is an external form of social control that is broken often but not penalized nearly as much as it is broken. This means that there is the
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VOLATILE ORGANIC COMPOUNDS (10244818) Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) are organic chemical compounds that have high enough vapor pressures under normal conditions to significantly vaporize and enter the atmosphere. According to EPA ’s Terms of the Environment‚ a volatile organic compound is "any organic compound that participates in atmospheric photochemical reactions except those designated by EPA as having negligible photochemical reactivity." VOC can also stand for the term “volatile organic chemical”
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functional groups Structure determination (Unit 1) Structure determination (Unit 2) Structure determination (Unit 3) Structure determination (Unit 4) Organic synthesis Organic Laboratory Technique (Unit 1) Organic Laboratory Technique (Unit 2) Organic Laboratory Technique (Unit 3) Organic Laboratory Technique (Unit 4) Reference Reading from Solomons‚ Organic Chemistry 6th edition 90-93‚ 96-101 102-118‚ 320‚ 433-434‚ 795-796‚ 903-905‚ 970-972 59-61 178-185‚ 188‚ 193-198‚ 200 41-47‚ 65-75‚ 128-137‚ 284-286
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KINESTHETIC‚ (STATIC) EQUILIBRIUM AND ORGANIC SENSES * STATIC EQUILIBRIUM Equilibrium or balance monitors the position and movement of the whole body. In a strict sense‚ inner ear is the biological gyroscopes for sense of balance. EQUILIBRIUM * Hair cells in the vestibular membrane or semicircular canals of the inner ear are receptors for balancing. Vestibular sacs which connect the canals with the cochlea are substances that move when the head rotates or tilts. * Head movements
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-APPLICATION OF ENZYMES IN ORGANIC CHEMISTRY Why enzymes in organic synthesis? | Alternative to chemical methods: * High region- and stereoselectivity * Milder reaction conditions * Environmentally more friendly | Which enzyme(s)? | OxidoreductasesHydrolasesLyasesIsomerases | Which reaction system? | AqueousAqueous and water-miscible organic solventAqueous and water-immiscible organic solventPure organic solventOther solvents (supercritical fluids‚ ionic liquids) | Which ‘chemistry’
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communication (advertising and marketing)‚ identity (you are what you buy)‚ social status‚ decision-making‚ mental and physical health (Holt et al 2004). Customer behavior study is based on consumer buying behavior‚ with the customer playing three distinct roles of user‚ informer and buyer. According to Loudon (1988) consumer behavior is the study of individuals‚ groups‚ or organizations and the processes they use to select‚ secure‚ and dispose of products‚ services‚ experiences‚ or ideas to satisfy
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Page 1 Part II - A Simple Model of Consumer Behavior The second set of factors that influence consumer behavior Individual Differences. Individual Differences: pertain to characteristics of the consumer such as: How much money do they have How much time do they have What is their knowledge level Is this someone relatively uninformed? a first time buyer? (Novice‚ a first time buyer‚ new to or inexperienced in a field) Is this an Expert? (someone who has made many prior purchase
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ended style to illicit valuable insight about the product. Data was also gathered with respect to quantifiable values on taste‚ image and other factors relative to the product and its competition. Findings were analyzed in the context of three models: Fishbein‚ Means-end chain and the consumer decision process. Findings illustrated the image of Red Bull as a premium market leader within a product classification that is low involvement and highly contingent on the image and perceived efficacy of
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