Viviane Macias Fall 2015 MKTG2201 Cinthia Satornino In my class of Introduction to Marketing with Prof. Satornino all the students had to participate individually in the simulation on Market Place. The simulation was divided in six stages and each week we had to work on them. Before starting the class I already knew that there was going to be a simulation that was going to be graded. I knew that in the other classes of introduction to marketing the simulation was in groups, so when I learned…
perspectives are customer, financial, internal business process and learning and growth. All related factors affecting strategy are recorded in these perspectives. Perspectives help create a balance between the long and short term objectives and also links the the performance drivers to the desired outcomes. For that reason, perspectives are the BSC basic architecture. Objectives The factors…
information is available, the directors within the organization can examine the outcomes of the processes and strategies and track the results. When the organization measure results based on their metric system, they will be able to see the company status clearly and be able to make improvements and changes that will assist the…
the many new up and coming, and present telecommunications and broadcasting industries. Cox Communications is focusing their balance scorecard on their customer service to strengthen their brand (Temkin, 2010); they can be successful by developing strategies that will keep consumers coming…
In the article entitled “Map It Then Write It!” by Kimberly Lott and Sylvia Read, I learned a lot about how beneficial mapping can be before a student begins to write about a certain topic. “Primary students have many options for graphic organizers to help develop writing skills in science” (Lott and Read, 46). This quote from the article really seems to sum up what the article was about because children have so many opportunities to use mapping to make their writing better, especially since…
discovered. In 1506, two men by the names of Matthias Ringmann and Martin Waldseemüller, collaborated together on a magnificent map that depicted something no one had ever seen before. Through the descriptive letters from a Florentine merchant, Amerigo Vespucci, Ringmann and Waldseemüller were able to formulate a textbook titled, Introduction to Cosmography, as well as create a massive map, which revealed a missing piece of the known world. These works were largely known to be extinct, yet one…
The main focus of education in Flatland is polygon recognition. When looking at another polygon in Flatland, they all look like lines. However, in early childhood, everyone learns how to feel one another’s angles in order to determine what type of polygon one is. Yet, with further education, it is possible to detect the type of polygon through sight recognition. In Flatland, there are two main variables that determine the route of one’s education; gender and social status. If one is male, they…
1___Scale is a geographic tool for creating and interpreting maps. Scale also has a broader meaning for geographers, as the relationship between any phenomenon and Earth as a whole. 2___A region is an area characterized by a unique combination of features. 3___A formal region is an area within which everyone has one or more distinctive characteristics in common, whereas A functional region is an area organized around a node or focal point. 4___An example of a functional region is the…
Introduction There are many situations where maps come in handy because there are many forms of maps. There are maps that express ideas, maps that explain how to complete a task and maps that are small-scale representations of a large area or location that is difficult to navigate. This small representation is to help the user find their way around the area or location. This document proposes a reevaluation of the usefulness and accessibility of the maps that are on the University of Houston…
geography and explores why maps have always been so interesting to him and to fellow fans everywhere. Jennings takes readers on a world tour of geogeeks from the London Map Fair to the bowels of the Library of Congress, from the prepubescent geniuses at the National Geographic Bee to the computer programmers at Google Earth. Each chapter delves into a different aspect of map culture: highpointing, geocaching, road atlas rallying, even the "unreal estate" charted on the maps of fiction and…