Corporate Fraud I. Introductions a. Fraud in the accounting environment is on the increase. b. Fraud takes place in different forms in the accounting environment. II. The growing risk of fraud and corruption a. Local problems‚ global pain b. Awareness is crucial c. Tailoring efforts to avert damage III. Preventing Fraud a. Background checks and enhanced due diligence b. Monitoring and evaluating preventive controls c. Continuous controls monitoring IV. Can we eliminate fraud and corruption
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Strategic Human Resource Management Case Nokia Case Nokia 1 Strategic Human Resource Management Case Nokia Vision and Mission .................................................................................................................3 History ...................................................................................................................................3 Nokia key data.......................................................................................
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SUBJECT Corporate Strategy LECTURER Brian Jones COURSE Master of Business Administration TITLE Assignment 2–Individual–LG BATCH CODE MBWD5 1229A Submitted on Due Date? YES (Date submitted: 04/10/2012) Submitted soft copy? YES (Date submitted: 04/10/2012) Word limit observed? YES (No of words:) Table of Contents INTRODUCTION 3 BUSINESS LEVEL STRATEGIES 4 Market
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In a commercial organisation‚ the board of directors is typically charged with the key responsibility for corporate governance – protecting the rights of shareholders and creditors‚ ensuring contractual obligations and regulatory compliance. In the public sector‚ the elected government is typically responsible for corporate governance‚ and in semi-government and statutory bodies like State Rail‚ Sydney Water‚ the Australian Broadcasting Authority‚ the University of NSW‚ etc – and in not-
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Working Paper Series British Airways and Balmer’s AC3ID Test of Corporate Brand Management Professor John M T Balmer Dr Helen Stuart Working Paper No 04/26 July 2004 The working papers are produced by the Bradford University School of Management and are to be circulated for discussion purposes only. Their contents should be considered to be preliminary. The papers are expected to be published in due course‚ in a revised form and should not be quoted without the author’s permission. W O R
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Nokia CEO ’s letter to his employees Hello there‚ There is a pertinent story about a man who was working on an oil platform in the North Sea. He woke up one night from a loud explosion‚ which suddenly set his entire oil platform on fire. In mere moments‚ he was surrounded by flames. Through the smoke and heat‚ he barely made his way out of the chaos to the platform ’s edge. When he looked down over the edge‚ all he could see were the dark‚ cold‚ foreboding Atlantic waters. As the fire approached
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TABLE OF CONTENTS GOOD CORPORATE GOVERNANCE 2 • OBSERVANCE OF GOOD CORPORATE GOVERNANCE 3 • FAILURES OF CORPORATE GOVERNANCE 5 CORRUPTION 5 • BENEFITS OF AVOIDING CORRUPT PRACTICES 6 CONCLUSION 8 REFERENCES 9 GOOD CORPORATE GOVERNANCE Governance in the Oxford dictionary is defined as “control or influence”‚ while corporate is defined as “shared by all members of the group”. Therefore corporate governance refers to the structures and processes for the direction and control of members
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Corporate Communication and the Corporate Brand Peggy Simcic Brønn (From: Corporate Communication: A Strategic Approach to Building Reputation (2002)‚ Brønn‚ P.S. and R. Wiig (eds.)‚ Oslo: Gyldendal.) The first years of the 21st century have been hard on companies and their brands. It is predicted that Firestone is dead as a brand as a result of its defective tires used on Ford SUVs‚ which tipped over causing loss of lives. Arthur Anderson is feverishly trying to find partners for its many
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Corporate Inversion is defined as a company’s reincorporation overseas enabling reduction in tax burden on income earned abroad. When a significant portion of a company’s income is from foreign sources‚ then corporate inversion is the ideal strategy to implement; that is because such income is taxed both abroad and in the company where it is incorporated. The winning corporate inversion strategy would be for a company which has selected a country with lower tax rates and less intricate corporate
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054VJ CORPORATE ENTREPRENEURSHIP – A FRAMEWORK FOR COMPETITIVENESS Dr. Vinnie Jauhari Associate Dean Institute for International Management & Technology Udyog Vihar Phase IV Gurgaon 122 001 E mail : vinnieverma@hotmail.com Ph. : 98 100 32324 Fax : (0124) 6397784 ________________________________________________________________________ ABSTRACT Corporate Entrepreneurship has of late evoked interest from practitioners of management and academicians. It refers to entrepreneurship in established firms
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