Indian Ocean Trade around the first century CE. Established by multilingual‚ multiethnic seafarers. Between Indian Ocean and South China Sea. Didn’t play a part in the rise or fall of kingdoms. They are able to figure out the wind and monsoon patterns. Mediterranean sailors use square sails‚ long banks of oars‚ ships are nailed together. Indian Ocean sailors use triangular sails‚ no oars‚ and tied ships. Impact: Africa provides exotic animals‚ wood‚ and ivory. Somalia and Southern Arabia provide
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Pradesh. The Indian Standard Time is five hours and thirty minutes ahead of the Greenwich Mean Time. Q4) Why is Indian Ocean named after India? Answer Indian Ocean is named after India because India has the longest coastline on the ocean. It is surrounded by the ocean from three sides. The Indian Ocean serves as the major channel for India’s trade with other countries through sea route. It is the strategic importance of India on the Indian Ocean that has resulted in naming the ocean after India
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Blue Ocean Strategy August 21‚ 2014 University of Phoenix Blue ocean strategy is a concept written to question the standard five forces concept of marketing. The idea is to move out of the quote “red ocean” where there are sharks always competing into the “blue ocean” competition of your own where other competition is nonexistent. A red ocean is easily understood since it “represents all the industries in existence today” (Kim & Mauborgne‚ 2004). Blue ocean focuses on potential
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Blue Ocean Strategy The high growth and profits an organization can generate by creating new demand in an uncontested market space‚ or a "Blue Ocean"‚ than by competing head-to-head with other suppliers for known customers in an existing industry. The only way to beat the competition is to stop trying to beat the competition. To understand what Cirque du Soleil has achieved‚ imagine a market universe composed of two sorts of oceans: red oceans and blue oceans. Red oceans represent all the industries
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Section A : INDIAN OCEAN 1. The largest ocean in the world is A. Pacific Ocean B. Arctic Ocean C. Indian Ocean D. Antarctic Ocean 2. The line of latitude that divides the world into two is A. Tropic of Capricorn B. Tropic of Cancer C. Equator D. Greenwich Meridian 3. Which stretch of water is found between East Africa and Madagascar? A. Mozambique Channel B. Red Sea C. Arabian Sea D. Persian Gulf 4.
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Chapter Twenty-Two 1. Identify the most significant land and sea routes in the fourteenth century. What societies tended to control and profit from these routes? The most significant routes were the Silk Road & sea lanes in the Indian Ocean. With the silk road‚ Eurasia & west Africa profited while in the sealanes‚ southeast Asia‚ India‚ Arabia‚ Africa‚ China‚ Japan‚ & Africa profited. 2. What was the role of religion in the cultural interactions of this era? Which religion had the greater
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APWH Unit 4 COT essay: Commerce in the Indian Ocean In the Indian Ocean region from 650 C.E. to 1750 C.E.‚ commerce changed in that there was a shift in dominance over trade‚ and the demand of certain products changes‚ and a continuity was the Europeans’ demands for goods from Asia. A change in commerce from 650 C.E. to 1750 C.E. was the changing of control over trade. Around 650 C.E.‚ the Swahili dominated the trade‚ especially since there were so many coastal forts of the east side of Africa
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BOOK REVIEW BLUE OCEAN STRATEGY: How to Create Uncontested Market Space and make the Competition Irrelevant W. Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne‚ 2005. BLUE OCEAN STRATEGY : How to Create Uncontested Market Space and Make the Competition Irrelevant. Harvard Business School Publishing Corporation. ISBN 1-59139-619-0. I find this book‚ Blue Ocean Strategy: How to Create Uncontested market Space and Make the Competition Irrelevant‚ is very informative. The only thing that I am not very fond of
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Blue Ocean Strategy Paper Sarah Chambers MKT/421 09/21/2014 Norbert Gray JR. Blue Ocean Strategy Paper The marketing world is cut-throat and full of competition. Monopolies cut down all opposition until they are last and only ones standing. Oligopolies exist as multiple competitors work together to control the market and keep incoming competitors from entering the market. Perfect competition is a myriad of competitors constantly fighting with each other over their slice of the market. It
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REPORT ON THE ANALYSIS OF BLUE OCEAN STRATEGY AND ITS IMPLICATIONS CONDUCTED BY: NAME: MBURU ID: L0471ALAL0211 MODULE: STRATEGIC INFORMATION MANAGEMENT LECTURER: DAVID ACQUAYE COURSE: BA-BMS 4 DATE: 19TH APRIL‚ 2012 WORDS: 3‚776 SCHOOL: LONDON SCHOOL OF COMMERCE LONDON‚ UNITED KINGDOM Table of Contents Executive Summary3 Chapter One Definition of Blue Ocean Strategy4 The Authors6 Chapter Two Introduction7 Major Differences Between Blue Ocean and Red Ocean7 Conclusion7
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