Corporate stakeholders and their roles A corporate stakeholder is a party that affects or can be affected by the actions of the business as a whole. Corporate stakeholders can also refer to those groups without whose support the organization would cease to exist. The following are some of corporate stakeholders and their roles: Employees An employee is a person in the service of another under any contract of hire‚ express or implied‚ oral or written‚ where the employer has the power
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Assignment # 1 Stakeholder analysis on the British Petroleum oil spill disaster Stakeholder: UK and USA Government The British Petroleum (BP) oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico flowed unabated for three months in 2010. It is the largest accidental marine oil spill in the history of the petroleum industry. This event affected individuals and groups‚ know as stakeholders‚ in different ways according to the impact that the catastrophe meant to their situation. The stakeholders treated in this case are
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Google Strategic Plan - Report Name: Institution: Abstract The paper aims to examine the strategic plan by Google and the company’s dominance on the internet. The report will leverage my earlier reporting information by synthesizing the information into an informed strategic plan. Scholarly articles and scientific literatures will also be used as a backdrop for the report. The findings from the report indicate that Google is sweeping the world and is currently a threat to
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Stakeholders Stakeholders can be defined as “anyone who has an interest in what an organisation does” (Wright‚ 2001). These stakeholders can include governments‚ investors‚ political groups‚ customers‚ communities‚ employees and suppliers. It is important to keep stakeholders satisfied and gain their support in order to run a successful event. This will be further developed in this essay‚ with further recommendations in distinguishing and managing stakeholders. Stakeholder management is the process
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‘internal’ and ‘external’ stakeholders. Internal stakeholders of a business are members of an organisation. They consist of the employees‚ shareholders (who own the business)‚ managers and directors of the organisation. External stakeholders do not form part of the business (such as customers‚ suppliers and the government)‚ but have a direct interest or involvement in the actions of the business. 2. What is the difference between ‘stakeholders’ and ‘shareholders’? A stakeholder refers to any person
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scholarly theory that other stakeholders should have some duties— towards the firm‚ in particular—should be a pleasant relief. However‚ key lessons for managers are that responsibilities towards the firm require that managers first conduct themselves morally; and that other stakeholder responsibilities often involve moral and citizenship duties requiring collective action‚ for which business leadership may be crucial. Mutual and joint responsibilities of stakeholders separate into four general
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Stakeholders can be defined as all entities that are impacted through a business running its operations and conducting other activities related to its existence. The impact can be direct in the case of the business’s customers and suppliers or indirect in the case of the communities in which the business chooses to place its locations. Businesses must consider the needs and expectations of its stakeholders‚ though it need not consider them to be of equal importance. Certain stakeholders such as owners
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The Shareholders vs. Stakeholders Debate T he stakeholder theorists smell blood. Scandals at Enron‚ Global Crossing‚ ImClone‚ Tyco International and WorldCom‚ concerns about the independence of accountants who are charged with auditing financial statements‚ and questions about the incentive schema and investor recommendations at Credit Suisse First Boston and iMerrill Lynch have all provided rich fodder for those who question the premise of shareholder supremacy. Many observers have claimed that
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Organization Culture of Google -Contents- Ⅰ. Introduction Ⅱ. Forming a culture A. External Adaptation and Survival 1 Mission and strategy 2 Goals 3 Means 4 Measurement B. Internal integration 1 Language and concepts 2 Group and Team Boundaries 3 Power and status 4 Reward and punishment Ⅲ. Sustaining a culture A. Methods of Maintaining Organizational Culture B. Organizational rites C. Example ‘Google’ 1 Criteria for rewards 2 Selection and promotion 3 Organizational
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Analysis of Google. Name Institution Date An Analysis of Google. “I’ll google it‚” says somebody somewhere. Google’s name is becoming the eponym for searching anything on the internet. This recent habit can be attributed to the company’s growth into an internationally known brand since its inception in 7th September 1998 by Sergey Brin and Larry Page. Google is an international technology firm based in California with a broad range of products such as Google Glass and services like Google Wallet
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