The role of market orientation on company performance through the development of sustainable competitive advantage: the Inditex-Zara case Andres Mazaira  University of Vigo‚ Oureuse‚ Spain E. Gonzalez  University of Vigo‚ Oureuse‚ Spain Ruth Avendano Ä University of Vigo‚ Oureuse‚ Spain Keywords Market orientation‚ Competitive advantage‚ Clothing industry‚ Organizational culture Abstract This paper has been developed as a part of research seeking to verify the effects of organisational
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The five determinants of demand that I will prevail on my cousin before he ventures into the gas station business are the cost of gasoline in the local and global market‚ prices of related goods such as ethanol which are either substitutes or complementary‚ household incomes‚ taste/preferences of consumers related to grades of gasoline‚ and expectations. (https://www.thebalance.com/five-determinants-of-demand-with-examples-and-formula-3305706). Now for aggregate demand‚ the number of buyers in the
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anti-war song goes‚ “War! What is it good for? Absolutely nothin’!” and if Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse Five had a theme song‚ this would be the perfect song. Slaughterhouse Five is one of the greatest anti-war books of all time- it even says so on the back cover. In order to convey his anti-war attitude to the readers‚ Vonnegut uses many different rhetorical devices in Slaughterhouse Five‚ including analogy‚ irony‚ and satire. The first important rhetorical device Vonnegut uses to convey his
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“We had been foolish virgins in the war‚ right at the end of childhood.” The novel Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut depicts different periods of main character Billy Pilgrim’s life. Throughout the novel the reader follows Billy through his time as a soldier in WWII‚ life after‚ and the period where Billy thinks he lived on the planet Tralfamadore. These periods show the destructiveness of war on a person and its long-term effects after. Vonnegut actually fought in WWII and while at his war buddy’s
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Kurt Vonnegut breaks the conventional rules of storytelling in his novel‚ Slaughterhouse-Five. Vonnegut does so because he was not able to write a standard novel on the bombing of Dresden‚ which he tried to do many times. Additionally‚ Vonnegut wants his novel to be an anti-war novel‚ he wants it to explain the bombing of Dresden and the atrocious things both sides did. His purpose for writing this novel was to have Billy Pilgrim‚ the main character‚ accept the bombing because Vonnegut learns to
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Porter’s Five Force Competitive Model for FMCG Industry: 1. Rivalry among Competing Firms: In the FMCG Industry‚ rivalry among competitors is very fierce. There are scarce customers because the industry is highly saturated and the competitors try to snatch their share of market. Market Players use all sorts of tactics and activities from intensive advertisement campaigns to promotional stuff and price wars etc. Hence the intensity of rivalry is very high. 2. Potential Entry of New Competitors:
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Five forces : New Entry (Low to Medium) * New entrants will have to deal with high and large fixed cost * incentive because of profitability of zara * newest fashion at an inexpensive price * Zara as part of the Spanish Inditex Group‚ can benefit from the micro-economic concept of the Economies of Scale. Hence it gains cost advantages as production (scale) increases * Zara is operating within the market of “fast fashion” hence size as well as economic efficiency matter. Inditex’s
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Slaughterhouse Five The concept of a linear beginning‚ middle‚ and end in the progression of time is thrown askew in Kurt Vonnegut’s SlaughterhouseFive through Billy’s travels through time and space. All people on earth experience a chronological progression of time; they experience birth and death‚ and are able to perceive the consequences of their actions. Because of Billy’s time travel‚ death does not represent the ultimate end to one’s life. Therefore‚ to Billy death does not retain the importance that it does to others
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Examining Luther’s Ninety-Five Theses Let Christians be more confident of entering heaven when they’ve gone through the many hard times they will face. Instead many Christians have the frame of mind that everything is going to be fine when indeed it is not. Therefore‚ they have engaged in a false assurance of peace because of their not realizing that they need to endure the many trials yet to come before they can rejoice in knowing that their place is waiting for them in heaven. Catholic’s believed
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Ethical Analysis of Vignette 5 In considering the potential ethical issues and related theory in Vignette 5 a number of issues have been outlined and discussed below. Ethical Issues In investigating potential ethical issues of Vignette 5‚ Carla had knowledge that Simon was divorced which may have been an act of self disclosure on Simon’s behalf. In considering whether this disclosure was in Carla’s best interest‚ this could potentially be identified as an area of contravention of the Australian
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