Independent Research Essay Assignment Attributes of Excellence Stakeholders A stakeholder is anybody who is affected by the business; they could be internal or external‚ as well as being in contact with them very often or only on occasions. Social Responsibility This is the duty and obligation of a business to other stakeholders. |Stakeholder |Example of responsibility to that stakeholder | |Shareholder
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Role of Stakeholders Amanda Smith MGT/420 October 15‚ 2012 JC Abad-Schoster Role of Stakeholders Quality management consists of the “activities and functions involved in determination of quality policy and its implementation through means such as quality planning and quality assurance” (BusinessDictionary.com‚ 2012‚ para. 1). Recently the quality department has moved from a technical‚ inspection role to a more supportive and training related role. This requires arranging or preforming quality-related
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PA R T I From Ethical Foundation to Addressing Stakeholder Needs Chapter 1. The Foundation of Ethical Thought Chapter 2. The Evolving Complexities of Business Ethics Chapter 3. Stakeholders and Corporate Social Responsibility 1 C H A P T E R 1 The Foundation of Ethical Thought The biggest corporation‚ like the humblest citizen‚ must be held to strict compliance with the will of the people. —Theodore Roosevelt We demand that big business give people a square deal; in return we must insist when
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Lashundra Anderson Stakeholder Influence August 3‚ 2015 HSM 270 Terri Galindo Programs in the Human Service industry are directly and indirectly affected by its primary‚ secondary and‚ key stakeholders. Stakeholders could also be persons who are not directly affected by the program itself. These people can be those who have strong interest in the cause or program‚ those who are of political and philosophical and academic
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Legal Issue in Business: The Case of Enron [Name of the Writer] [Name of the Institution] Legal Issue in Business: The Case of Enron Introduction Business ethics is based on normative ethics ‚ standards that ethics are upheld and applied specific to distinguish what is right or wrong‚ that is to say what should be done or who should not be fact. However‚ with few exceptions‚ business ethicists are usually less interested in the foundations of ethics (meta-ethics) or by the principles
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The accounting scandal at Enron which occurred early during the last decade involved the manipulation of accounting rules in order to enrich the company’s executive leadership. Hence‚ while accounting techniques facilitated the Enron scandal it is more of a tale that is related to the hubris of the firm’s top executives and their deep-seated greed. Evidence that hubris and greed was more of the driving force than the actual manipulation of accounting rules for the Enron scandal is evident in the
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The Unethical Behavior of Enron Enron‚ once the countries seventh-largest company according to the Fortune 500‚ is a good example of how greed and the desire for success can transform into unethical behavior. Good ethics in business would be to compete fairly and honestly‚ to communicate truthfully and to not cause harm to others. These are things that Enron did not seem to display‚ which led to Enron’s operations file for bankruptcy in 2001. Enron’s scandal has become one of the most talked
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Case Study: Continental Airlines Takes Off with Real-time Business Intelligence Continental’s Teradata active data warehouse provides a powerful platform for quickly developing and deploying applications in revenue management‚ customer relationship management‚ flight and ground operations‚ fraud detection‚ security‚ and others‚ and the applications are generating quantifiable benefits for Continental. Real-time data denotes information that is delivered immediately after collection. There is
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The Enron Collapse By: Jeff Porter Kevin Clark Jared Sabelhaus February 18‚ 2005 Introduction Companies have mission statements that often read like inspirational leaflets. Enron’s mission was at first to be the world’s greatest energy company then later revised in early 2001 to be the “world’s greatest company”. In the late 1990’s‚ Enron seemed to have accomplished their mission accumulating vast amounts of assets‚ had the intellectually elite at the helm‚ a political climate in their
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1. The Enron debacle created what one public official reported was a “crisis of confidence” on the part of the public in the accounting profession. List the parties who you believe are most responsible for that crisis. Briefly justify each of your choices. Following parties are believed to be the most responsible for the crisis. With any big organization going so bad‚ the blame starts with the top level executives‚ there was no different in this case. For Enron the blame started with Enron’s
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