CM9002 Organizational Communication Case Study: Coca Cola Company [pic] Hugo Zwier – 335216 Justin Verhulst – 335279 Geert van den Hoek – 321047 Spencer Bates – Table of Contents Page 2 – Concept: ’organizational identity’ Page 5 – Data: Coca Cola Company Concept In this case study of the Coca Cola corporation Coca Cola’s corporate identity will be analyzed. This will be done through analysis of a few advertising campaigns. In this way‚ Coca Cola’s external identification attempts can be understood
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Report Marketing Plan On (Product Coca-Cola) Prepared by Umair Kamran BS27-2158 Mehmood Khan Id#0220063 Zulqarnain Id # 0220013 Hamza ashfaq Id # : 0000000 Group- 7 Principles of Marketing Submitted to Mrs. Raeda Hashim Lecturer Greenwich university‚ Karachi 16th October‚ 2011 16th October 2011 Table of Contents Page number Acknowledgement --------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 Executive
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F A L L 2012 08 The Coca-Cola Company Kim Connors Hillary Edwards James Howell Sulki Jang Alex Williamson East Tennessee State University 1. ASSOCIATIONS WITH COCA-COLA 3 1.1 SPORTS 3 1.2 HEALTH 3 1.3 THE CHRISTMAS HOLIDAYS 4 2. Brand positioning versus Pepsi Co. 4 3. Competitors 5 4. Images Associated with coca-Cola 6 4.1 Santa Clause 7 4.2 The Polar bears 7 4.3 The Secret Formula 8 4.4 The Olympics
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References: 1. http://www.thecoca-colacompany.com/citizenship/index.html 2. Coca-Cola India‚ Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth‚ 2004-1-0085‚ Jennifer Kaye‚ T’05‚ under the direction of Professor Paul A. Argenti 3. Coca-Cola India Corporate Social Responsibility Strategy‚ Hadiya Faheem‚ 2009
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the iceberg of what is required in transformation. It is now time to move beyond change management into change leadership‚ now time to develop the advanced change strategies that support this new type of change. ‚‚‚‚ .... .... Case in Point: Coca-Cola’s Transformation
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2.6 SAMPLING PLAN CHAPTER-3 INDUSTRY PROFILE & ORGANIZATIONAL PROFILE 3.1 BEVERAGE AND ITS CONCEPTUAL ANALYSES 3.2 BEVERAGE INDUSTRY PROFILE 3.3COCA-COLA COMPANY PROFILE CHAPTER-4 ANALYSES OF DATA CHAPTER-5 FINDINGSSUGGESTIONSLIMITATIONS &CONCLUSION 5.1 FINDINGS
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organisations which are Coca Cola Company (Coca Cola) and Kellogg Company (Corn Flakes) for selected product or services. Coca-Cola is an American company for soft drinks such as coca cola‚ sprite‚ Fanta etc. The most famous product is the drink of Coca-Cola‚ while the company produces more than 3‚500 drink .It distributes its products in more than 200 countries around the world‚ and consumption is about 50 billion of the company’s products a day around the world. The company was founded in 1892
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The Marketing Review‚ 2003‚ 3‚ 289-309 www.themarketingreview.com Demetris Vrontis1 and Iain Sharp2 Manchester Metropolitan University Business School and Legal and General The Strategic Positioning of Coca-Cola in their Global Marketing Operation Examines how Coca-Cola has strategically positioned it self within the world’s soft drinks market. Given that they operate in over 200 countries‚ they are faced with a clear choice of whether to standardise their product offerings globally
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ETHICS AND GOVERNANCE The Coca-Cola Company TABLE OF CONTENTS Pages 1. Executive Summary 3 2. Main Issues 4 3. Ethics Policy and its Development 5 3.1. Proposed Ethics Policy 5 3.2. Rationale of Ethics Policy 6 3.3. Policy Development 6 3.3.1. Virtue Ethic 7 3.3.2. Utilitarianism Ethic 7 3.3.3. Kantianism Ethic
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Coca-Cola May 17‚ 2013 I. Introduction Corporate Social Responsibility is the corporate initiative to assess and take responsibility for the company ’s effects on the environment and impact on social welfare. The term generally applies to company efforts that go beyond what may be required by regulators or environmental protection groups. Corporate social responsibility may also be referred to as "corporate citizenship" and can involve incurring short-term costs that do not provide an
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