Alibaba Group [name of the writer] [Name of the institution] Impact of Alibaba.com On The Value Chain And Trade Barriers Effect On This Website Introduction The basic tool for understanding the influence of information technology on companies is the value chain — the set of activities through which a product or service is created and delivered to customers. When a company competes in any industry‚ it performs a number of discrete but interconnected value-creating activities‚ such as operating a
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Economics 1101 -- Assignment 4 Problem 1. a. (1 point) What is the total fixed cost for the DeBeers Diamonds? The total fixed cost for the DeBeers Diamonds is zero. b. (2 points) Complete the table above‚ providing total revenue‚ marginal revenue and marginal cost‚ as well as Total Cost when Q = 0. (Remember to put marginal items in between units.) COSTS REVENUES Quantity Produced Total Cost ($) Marginal Cost Quantity Demanded Price ($/unit) Total Revenue Marginal Revenue 0
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looks at clusters‚ a number of small industries‚ where the competitiveness of one company is related to the performance of other companies and other factors tied together in the value-added chain‚ in customer-client relation‚ or in a local or regional contexts.[2] The Porter analysis was made in two steps.[2] First‚ clusters of successful industries have been mapped in 10 important trading nations.[2] In the second‚ the history of competition in particular industries is examined to clarify the dynamic
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1) The Harvard case‚ Botswana: A Diamond in the Rough‚ describes the exceptional case of Botswanas sustained economic rise from near absolute poverty to a country with a 10% average annual GDP growth for more than four decades. This case shows that healthy economic gains can be achieved by a mixture of formal institutions and ad hoc substitutes for missing institutions. When Botswana gained its independence in 1966‚ the country lacked many of the institutions deemed essential for economic growth
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how barriers to entry may affect market structure In some market it is easier to enter than in others due to the barriers to enter. Those barriers determine how many producers there will be in a market and therefore its structure. If there are lot of barriers to entry there will be market structure such as monopoly or oligopoly; if there are no barriers to entry‚ or just few of them‚ there will be market structure such as perfect competition or monopolistic competition. When the barriers to entry
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Summary What are the secrets of India’s success in information technology? By using Porter’s Diamond Model‚ this article tries to answer that question. Based on the analysis‚ it seems the only determinant in the Porter’s Diamond that creates India’s success is Factor Condition (i.e. the Indian intellectual capital and “Indian connection” in Silicon Valley). The supporting determinant outside the diamond is the outsourcing trend in current global competition‚ which can be considered as the Chance
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The Curse Behind The Hope Diamond Diamonds have been a source of wealth and dispute for centuries. “When humankind first discovered the diamond is not known.” ("ECP" 685) Diamonds were originally mined from riverbeds in India‚ and through trade-routes‚ diamonds reached the kingdoms and empires of Europe and Asia. One diamond in particular has a most colorful history and has travelled across continents into the hands of Sultans‚ King Louis XIV‚ and finally to the Smithsonian in America where
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Barriers to Women’s Employment and Progression in the Labour Market in the North East of England RESEARCH REPORT February 2004 Centre for Social and Policy Research University of Teesside Authors: Prof Eileen Green Heather Easton Dr Jeanne Moore Joan Heggie CONTENTS 1. 2. Introduction Methodology Case studies Questionnaire sample Case study interviews Community interviews 3. Findings 3.1 What’s new? 3.2 The current study 3.3 Varieties and Complexities of Women’s Working Lives Meanings
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Case Incident 2:A Diamond Personality Ask Oscar Rodriguez about the dot-com burst‚ and he may grin at you as if to say‚ “What burst?” Rodriguez‚ a 38-years old entrepreneur‚ owns an internet business that sells loose diamonds to various buyers. Business is booming. In 2004‚ Rodriguez had sales of $ 2.06 million- a 140 percent increase from 2003. Rodriguez’s database of almost 60‚000 available diamonds is one of the largest in the industry and is valued‚ according to him‚ at over $350 million
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Diamond Model The approach looks at clusters of industries‚ where the competitiveness of one company is related to the performance of other companies and other factors tied together in the value-added chain‚ in customer-client relation‚ or in local or regional contexts Key Factors in a diamond model for analyzing competitiveness * Factor conditions are human resources‚ physical resources‚ knowledge resources‚ capital resources and infrastructure. Specialized resources are often specific for
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