Management Structure And Human Resources Marketing Essay

NYTimes.com’s 3D Video news section is a new way to report information that needs to go beyond print, photography, and interactive flash graphics. Using 3D technology, the 3D Video news section will be a tab on the NYTimes.com website that will enable users to play 3D video of events like important speeches, natural catastrophes, and milestone events.

Formed as a venture by the New York Times Company, the 3D video section will be integrated into the existing managerial structure of NYTimes.com, and will be an integral part of the newsroom.

With the blockbuster success of 3D movies such as Avatar, and with 3D technology becoming increasingly ubiquitous, all that was needed to make 3D news a reality is fast Internet speeds. Ultrabroadband, which operates at 200 times current Internet speeds at about 1 gigabyte per second, is expected to hit the market by 2012 – giving customers unparalleled fast access to the Internet. To exploit this technology, news needs to move and adapt, and considering the dire state of traditional news media today – 3D news could be the answer.

This plan will equip the New York Times newsroom with 3D cameras and editing software, and train reporters in their usage. It will enable reporters to take their stories to the next level, and add a new dimension to digital news, which has now become the preferred way most consumers get their news.

3D video news will be the best generator of revenue for the New York Times to date, which has been suffering from lowered subscription costs leading to lower advertising rates. 3D video news will increase viewership, target advertising, and command larger than ever CPMs, making NYTimes.com the preferred way everybody gets their news. NYTimes.com will have the first mover advantage over all competitors, and can roll out content as soon as ultrabroadband hits the small business and consumer market.

It will also solve problems of unfaithful readership, by becoming the first news organization to provide news beyond print and photography. It will utilize existing journalistic skills to tell a story, but through an entirely new technology. Under the New York Times brand name, which is trusted and reputable, 3D video will keep customers faithful, and attract new ones.

The Company

The New York Times is a daily newspaper that began publishing in 1851. It is circulated nationwide through all 50 states, including the District of Columbia. It is also circulated worldwide  .

The Times has a website, NYTimes.com, that commands a large market. In 2009, NYTimes.com was attracting 17.9 million unique users per month. Content is also distributed through social media (Twitter, Facebook) and mobile applications available for most smart phones.

For NYTimes.com, the primary revenue source is advertising. Earlier this year, the company also announced that starting 2011, NYTimes.com would no longer be free to use. Using micropayments, where users pay for content piece by piece. The more somebody uses the site, the more he or she will be paying. According to Arthur O. Sulzberger Jr., the publisher of the New York Times, the company is relying on reader loyalty to ensure future success. However, no further details about how exactly the company will be implementing micropayments were offered. A few articles will be free to use, he said, till users hit a pay wall and have to begin shelling out money.

NYTimes.com’s primary competitors are other news sites like Yahoo! News and CNN.com. Internationally, its sister website, global.nytimes.com, which combines content from the New York Times and the International Herald Tribune, has to compete against news websites like Reuters and the BBC.

Digital News: A Summary

The Internet has had enormous impact on traditional news companies. In 2008, it surpassed all media except television as the preferred way that consumers get their news, according to the Pew Research Center  . The jump towards online news was enormous. In 2007, only 24 percent of Americans said they were getting news primarily from the Internet. In 2008, this number rose dramatically to 40 percent. 2008 was by and large considered the milestone, and just the beginning, of the dramatic shift towards digital news consumption. Delivery of news through digital methods had become the norm by 2009. According to the Project for Excellence in Journalism  , six out of 10 Americans were getting their news online by then.

What is interesting about the digital shift is that social media or blogs are not ready to take audiences away from traditional news organizations. Though more people are consuming news online, they are doing so using online versions of newspapers. The Project for Excellence in Journalism says that this trend could change, especially with the younger generation. In a survey by Nielsen, the younger demographics were likely to point to news aggregators like Google as being the primary way they get their news. They are more like to be “grazers” – get the headline, the author, and the first few sentences of the story, and then leave it at that. The challenge for traditional news organizations is to get users to the website, instead of letting them leave before stepping foot inside  .

Audience Behavior

How people perceive news, especially online, has changed dramatically. They are no longer passive consumers. Indeed, the news that is most read online is usually one that triggers some sort of participation. This has come about mostly due to social media sites like Facebook and Twitter that allow audience participation, and the increased portability of news due to users who get their news via cellphone or portable computers.

The problem for traditional news sites is that audiences are “grazers.” Though half of all audience traffic for news is tied to legacy news organizations like the New York Times and CNN, nobody is spending much time at those websites. According to Nielsen  , the average news user spends only 3 minutes and 4 seconds on a news website per session. But visitors to the New York Times website spends at least a minute longer there than on news aggregator sites like Google. The challenge is to keep people’s attention, and this business plan will do that.

Figure 1: Top 20 sites by sector (Source: PEJ’s State of the Media 2010)

According to Nielsen, NYTimes.com was the fifth most visited site in 2009, commanding 18.5 million unique visitors.

Economics

Advertising, as always, remains the problem in the digital shift. Though some companies experimented with pay walls, there were increased signs that consumers are not ready to pay for news.

However, the one place where news companies are trying to increase advertising is videos.

Figure 2: Online Ad Spending by format in 2009 (Source: eMarketer, “U.S. Ad Spending Turns a Corner”, December 11, 2009)

As shown in the figure above, the only category that grew other than search was video advertising, which reached $1.02 billion in 2009, up 40.2% from $732 million in 2008. Because advertising has shown that it alone will not be a sufficient source of revenue, news organizations are increasingly looking at alternative revenue streams. The most obvious one is charging users for content, either through a pay wall (made successful by the Wall Street Journal) or micropayments. As discussed above, The New York Times announced earlier this year that it will be charging users to read it online using micropayments.

How can traditional news companies make the shift to digital but still keep high revenue?

Opportunities

How to solve the “grazing” problem.

According to the PEJ report, consumers look at many different sites to get their news  . Establishing a brand and ensuring users remain loyal to that brand is one of the best ways a news site can ensure success. Users are discriminating to some degree: if NYTimes.com is able to gain loyalty for a specific “type” of news, and be the best at it, they can guarantee that people will return. Therefore, our proposal of using UBB to incorporate 3D videos of events will make NYTimes.com “the place to go” for a specific kind of news.

Ensuring interactivity is key to success.

News sites can no longer afford to keep information flowing uni-directionally. News is a social currency to most people. NYTimes.com needs to retain interactivity in order to keep customers. In our 3D video scheme, we would also have a real-time chat box in which users can submit comments, feedback, and carry on conversations about the content they are watching. At the same time, if they also have video footage or photos of the event in question, they can submit these. Their footage will also be available to those watch the content on NYTimes.

People don’t want to pay. What can we do?

Most of the research by PEJ indicates that there are a few situations in which people are willing to pay. As the Wall Street Journal model shows, people pay for news that is difficult to get through other means, like finance news. People will also pay for high quality, high value content, which is why iTunes is successful. Our 3D video plan will be high quality, and 3D – difficult to get through other means.

Advertising

Video advertising has shown enormous gains in the past year. Our plan utilizes video, which commands a higher CPM than other forms of advertising methods like banners or pop-ups.

Competitors/Threats

Currently, no news organization utilizes 3D news delivery. Because of the relative newness of the technology, our plan estimates that there will not be any competition from other news organizations. Of course, as 3D technology gains a foothold, other news organizations will seek to do what our plan does: to integrate the technology in the delivery of the news online.

Our biggest competitor in 3D video news will most likely be the Wall Street Journal, which also competes with the New York Times for consumers. However, at this time, WSJ.com has indicated no desire to go 3D.

The only other news organization which is experimenting with 3D technology is Sky News, based in the UK. Sky News debuted its “Second Life Newsroom”, which enables customers to “visit” the Sky News newsroom through Second Life – they can be presenters, create and anchor their own shows, and so on. Sky has also indicated that they are considering the possibility of presenting news and events through 3D. 7,000 people did the Hajj pilgrimage and “went” to Mecca via Second Life in 2007.

However, Sky News is not doing what our plan does: utilize the resources of the New York Times to give our reporters 3D capabilities through training and technology to bring consumers event coverage in 3D. Therefore, we do not see any competition in the short term. We will have the first mover’s advantage – and therefore build customer loyalty before other news organizations. We will also have the technological advantage – make our mistakes and learn from them – before everyone else.

Competitive Advantage

Not only are we moving first, we are also able to use the enormous clout of the New York Times Company to leverage our position. We can exploit the expertise of the current New York Times staff – both editorial and technological – and therefore gain a considerable advantage.

We can also enter into partnerships with pioneers in the 3D technology field, like Sony Corp., which produces 3D capable cameras (stereoscopic cameras). According to Sony’s Chief Technology Officer, Gary Podorowsky, Sony 3D cameras are the best in the market. If we combine the resources of the New York Times and Sony, we could benefit from huge economies of scale, putting us at an advantage over small companies that may try to produce 3D video.

Because 3D content is expensive to produce, we have a massive advantage over competitors because we are working with the New York Times. Financing will be easier, partnerships will be simpler, and we can benefit from the clout the organization has. Furthermore, we will be producing all content in-house – giving us full control over what we choose to produce and when.

One of the major weaknesses that ESPN has with reference to their plan of broadcasting the Soccer World Cup in 3D is that there are only 85 live sporting events over the entire time period. There will be plenty of “black space” on the channel when no games are being played. We do not have that problem – we produce as and when it is necessary to produce content, and we will only produce necessary content that consumers want.

Weaknesses

The biggest weakness of our product is the 3D glasses, which would have to be worn to watch the 3D videos on the website. However, we believe that with 3D technology becoming a little bit more mainstream, people will be willing to wear those glasses.

If you already will own a 3D television set, will be watching the 2010 soccer World Cup in 3D on ESPN  , or be watching the new 3D network that Sony and Discovery are planning to launch together, 3D glasses will be as much a fixture in the home as anything else.

The other problem is the massive reorganization of reporting and journalism that will be needed to make this plan a reality. The costs of retraining and equipment will be discussed more below, but at the outset, incorporating 3D video into NYTimes.com will need reporters to rethink the way they shoot and produce video.

Our plan operates under the umbrella of the New York Times, and specifically under NYTimes.com. The existing management structure of NYTimes.com will be kept the same, with an extra arm added to oversee the 3D video section on the website.

The extra arm will be divided between “editorial” and “technology” teams. The editorial team, comprised of 8-10 journalists with extensive digital media skills, will be responsible for organizing the video components. This includes deciding which events to cover, how best to create the video, and also working with NYTimes.com’s other reporters to create hybrid projects.

For example, if the New York City Marathon is being covered, there will be of course a print piece accompanying the video, along with photographs, and perhaps an interactive graphic showing the race route. Therefore, the Editorial team will be working closely with the NYTimes editors and reporters to create the project.

The technology team is focused more on training and the technical aspects of the video production. Comprised of 13-15 people, the team will be responsible for teaching camera work to both the video reporters and the regular reporters, producing the video, and will be working very closely with the editorial team.

Because this is a very creative enterprise, both teams would be acting mostly independently, but supervised by a manager who will co-ordinate between both teams and determine overall strategy. That manager will also be the main liaison to the web editor of NYTimes.com, as well as the managing editor for the New York Times.

Apart from this staff of about 26 people, resources for sales, marketing, distribution, and so on will be shared with the NYTimes.com’s existing pool of people.

Content Production

Content production in 3D technology is of course the biggest obstacle in this business plan. It is difficult to shoot in 3D, and requires expensive equipment and extensive training.

There is also not a lot of content out there. Since our plan relies exclusively on in-house content, production needs to be fast, and plentiful. Therefore, retraining in 3D technology and editorial decisions need to be fast – so content will be plentiful on the website. The entire point of digital news is that people constantly want to see fresh new content, and there is a grave danger that stale content will be left up for weeks without new videos coming in.

Eye Fatigue Problems

The issue of eye fatigue is definitely going to be a factor. Though this is not relevant to people who watch 3D movies, makers of 3D television sets are now grappling with the headaches, eye fatigue, and other health problems the technology brings up. Though this may not affect us as much – because we aim to have short, 5-10 minute videos, not 24-hours-a-day broadcasts – this is a technical issue that will be still factored in when creating the videos and deciding how long they will be.

The glasses

Many have questioned 3D technology because people will not want to wear 3D glasses all the time. This is another factor that will be considered when dealing with 3D videos on NYTimes.com. Though this is again more of an obstacle for longer, full-length broadcasts of 3D content, our plan needs to figure out how to get the glasses to subscribers.

Starting 2011, the New York Times website will no longer be free to use. Therefore, when consumers subscribe, a box of 3D glasses will be sent to them. Glasses are cheap to produce, and distribution costs will be negligible. As long as every household has a few pairs, the technical issues behind how people will access the videos will be solved.

Technology

Reporters will be equipped with a Sony 3D camera. Sony announced earlier this year it was building a range of consumer-friendly and easy-to-use cameras to film in 3D  . Though exact retail costs were not disclosed by Sony, a look at other similar technology by Panasonic indicates a possible price point of $21,000 per camera  . At the beginning, we can invest in 5 cameras, and as more reporters are comfortable with using the technology, buy more.

1

5

$105,000

2

8

$168,000

3

12

$252,000

Editing software can be bought at a one-time cost of about $50,000.

Training

Training in shooting 3D will require experts to be brought in to teach shooting and camera work. We estimate a one-time cost of $25,000 for this. Once the editorial and tech staff know how to use this, they can train other reporters.

Sources

At the outset, the financing will be done through the New York Times Company, which will pay all the costs associated with buying equipment and retraining.

After this, the 3D video arm will be largely independent, and use advertising to pay the rest of the costs. Online video advertising is clearly a better money spinner than traditional advertising. Video advertising commands a more profitable CPM than banner ads or other forms of online advertising. At the beginning of the video, an advertisement will be played. Throughout the video, advertisers will be able to put logos in the corner, with an option of interjecting advertisements in the middle of the video, depending on the length of the broadcast.

Recently, DoubleClick compared the effectiveness of video advertisements versus static advertisements. The study found that video ads received click-through-ratios between 4 and 7 times that of static banner ads  . With video ads, it is also easier to measure interaction rates with users, which means advertising can be targeted better.

The above figure shows the results of a survey by eMarketer and the Interactive Advertising Bureau that looked at CPMs commanded by different types of advertising. It showed a much higher CPM in video ads than any other ad format. The average CPM was $43. The CPM commanded by video ads range from $40 to $50. This is a huge lead over banner ads which are sold by publishers, which command only a $10 to $20 CPM.

The success of advertising on Hulu, which has advertisements at the beginning of clips, as well as between, is a good testament to how profitable this plan will be. Hulu sells ads at a slightly lower CPM, around $25 per 1,000 views. However, because Hulu’s content is not original, this is to be expected. Our plan has original content, which can certainly command a higher CPM.

It is also important to note the domino effect this will have on CPMs in other areas of NYTimes.com. The more people that view videos are also likely to stick around and look at other sections of the website, which means a higher traffic overall and more revenue overall. According to the New York Times’s most recent earnings report, digital advertising revenues grew 18 percent in the first quarter of the year, a positive sign that this is the right time to expand on the digital front.

The majority of the consumer base for NYTimes.com’s 3D video news sections will come largely from the people who use the web to get their news.

Online news users tend to be younger than print news readers, with 29 percent of them under 30 years old. 50 percent of them are employed full time. This data, gathered from an online news survey by PEJ and the Internet and American Life Project, is presented below.

According to Quantcast, NYTimes.com is evenly read by males and females, with a large proportion having a post-graduate degree. This means that our product is targeted towards the “young” and technologically savvier populations. They are also the ones more likely to be ready to experiment with the new technology, and more ads can be targeted to them as they have more disposable income.

Where to advertise?

This service needs to go viral. Word-of-mouth advertising has been shown to create “buzz” around a product. Therefore, advertisements on sites like Mashable, Facebook, and Twitter would be the best way to get the word out. YouTube is another good way to go viral. Videos with a fun, edgy feel about this new service will be put on YouTube and more likely to be viewed by the target demographic.

Of course, in house advertising would be a good way to get existing readers to try this out for themselves. Ads in the print edition of the newspaper and on the website would make this very effective. To target further, ads in the sections of the newspapers read by young adult would be most effective.

For the following projections, we are assuming an initial viewership of 20 percent of the current number of readers of NYTimes.com. For month 1, 3.5 million users will watch the video. There will be one video per month in months 1-5, and four videos per month for months 6-12. Every month, we are estimating viewership to rise slightly, by 100,000 per month. The CPM commanded is $43. There are two ads per video.

1

3.5

$0.30

2

3.6

$0.31

3

3.7

$0.32

4

3.8

$0.33

5

3.9

$0.34

6

4

$1.38

7

4.1

$1.41

8

4.2

$1.44

9

4.3

$1.48

10

4.4

$1.51

11

4.5

$1.55

12

4.6

$1.58

Costs in the first month are under $200,000. The service will be profitable right from its inception.

There is no doubt that news organizations need resuscitation. Small breakthroughs have been made possible by digital news. However, the problem is that companies like the New York Times do not offer anything vastly new on their website, save a few graphics and interactive designs.

This business plan solves that, making people want to pay (through micropayments) for a niche product that cannot be found anywhere else. The product is unique, but relatively easy to implement. It requires minimal investment in technology and retraining, but because it operates under the trusted and reputable brand name of the New York Times, has an existing consumer base that ensures its profitability.

It commands high CPMs from advertisers, and will both keep existing customers but also “steal” them away from competitors because we have something they do not: coverage of events and stories in an unprecedented way that transports you right to the scene. Whether it is a historic speech or a devastating earthquake, readers of the New York Times can be there and experience it themselves, knowing all the while that they can trust that they are looking at content that is produced with the highest journalistic standards in mind.



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Experience Working in the Community

Journal #3
07/03/2013
This week was my first endeavour working with the children from Rainbow Crèche. It was truly an eye opening experience as it highlighted the need for children, especially from disadvantaged communities, to be educated. Having come from a large family with children all around the ages of 4 and 5, I have an understanding of what a child should know at this age. It was absolutely heartbreaking to see that some of these kids, around the same ages, are unable to name basic farm animals or shapes or even colours.
It goes without saying that one community in which children spend a great deal of time is school/crèches. This crèche should be providing a more stimulating environment for these children.   From my observation I have noted that they spend a good portion of the day playing outside on the jungle gyms. Although we have learnt that a great deal of learning stems from play, if this play is constantly unstructured then it is less likely to be beneficial to the children. I think that it would be great to include the teachers at the school in our therapy programme. Although we are health professionals, we could provide the teachers at the school with the resources and knowledge about what the children can be taught to improve their abilities (vocabulary, pencil/crayon grip etc). We could even inform them about stimulating activities to use when the kids are playing on the playground.   I think that just bringing their attention to their surroundings (the colours they see, the sounds they hear) could improve their performance and ensure that they are better prepared for school. These are areas that the teachers may not be aware of thus educating them is important.
This week also highlighted the benefit of working in a transdisciplinary team. This was the first time that I had worked in conjunction with the OTs. I have an extrovert personality and consider myself to be outgoing and friendly. Although this is my nature of personality, I have to...

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Feacibility Study

A PROJECT REPORT   AND FEASIBILITY STUDY
OF

OLUSTELLA CHEESE

BY

RUFAI STELLA O.
07490006

NAME OF COMPANY:
OLUSTELLAR NIGERIA LIMITED

SUBMITTED TO:
ENGR. SOBOWALE S.S

MARCH 2013

SUMMARY
This report is based on the production of cheese from raw milk, the source of protein.
This report presents the processing of raw milk in another way to prevent wastage and making it available in another useful form.
The research conducted also shows the:
Technical feasibility
Economic feasibility
Financial feasibility
This report also entails the quantitative and combined flow sheet diagram. In conclusion cheese from raw milk may not be suitable for small scale business because of its requirements of expensive equipments. It can be produced on large scale and it is very beneficial.

TABLE OF CONTENT
Letter of transmittal i
Title page ii
Summary iii
Table of content iv
Introduction 1
Flow chart 2
Qualitative flow diagram 3
Qualitative flow diagram 4-5
Technical feasibility 6-7
Financial feasibility   7
Economical Evaluation         8-10
Estimated Income and Returns Statement 10
Conclusion and Reference 11

INTRODUCTION
The Project involves processing of raw milk into olustella cheese for human consumption. Raw milk is rich in protein and contains significant amount of calcium.
Raw milk is one of the most important protein sources used in production of different foods and industrial applications.
Cheese is one of the most important from milk, a ratable and almost unlimited resource. Cheese has many remarkable characteristics, including high paste viscosity, high paste clarity and high freeze thaw stability, which are advantageous to many industries. Cheese is produces primarily by coagulation of milk.

23, Jolaoso Street,
Sodubi, Onikolobo
Abeokuta,
Ogun State.

Food Technology Department,
Moshood Abiola Polytechnic,
Abeokuta, Ogun State....



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Conflict

“In times of conflict, ordinary people can act in extraordinary ways”
Expository piece - article
India Havers
In the late seventeenth century, the first groups of slaves were brought on a tremendous journey from their homeland to America. To the white Americans of the time, the slaves were little more than strong arms and sturdy backs. They were meant to work and generate money; they were certainly not to have a voice. Though many white Americans appreciated the slaves for their exertion, this appreciation typically did not overstep the bounds of their work relationship. Even after the slaves were freed, the tide of oppression did not pass immediately. Their newly decreed freedom could not command humanity for blacks in the eyes of whites. It did not give them a heart and soul. Blues music was cultivated for this purpose; to help the slaves cope with such adversity and to tame the conflict between whites and blacks.
The blues style of music originated in the work fields of the southern United States. In the nineteenth century, white Americans got their first taste of black music through blackface minstrel shows, which affected race relations in a positive and negative way. With the discovery and recording of blues in the twentieth century, this familiarity steadily intensified. Many historians assert that blues, the music created by blacks, vastly improved race relations in the United States since its recognition by whites. The music was a unique cultural offering that whites could not deny. It was something new and intriguing to whites that shed a new light on blacks and their place in American culture and society. It drew blacks to the same shows as it did whites. Stories tell of black musicians playing dances where a cord was used to divide the dance floor in half, one side for blacks and the other for whites. By the end of the evening, the cord would be on the floor and blacks and whites would be dancing together. They were not seeing color; they were...

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Reviewing The House Of The Spirits English Literature Essay

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The role of the siblings in the works ‘The House of the Spirits’ by Isabel Allende and ‘Like Water For Chocolate’ by Laura Esquivel.

Man being a social animal cannot remain in isolation, he needs to have people around him with whom he can share his both joys and sorrows. The people around him can be his friends , his relatives. One such relation which helps a person overcome various difficulties in his life is that of brother and sister or that shared between two sisters. Such a relation finds expression in Isabel Allende’s , ‘The House of Spirits’ and Laura Esquivel ‘Like Water for Chocolate’.Both the works have brought out the importance of brother- sisterhood in the story and in the life of the characters in the works. The works has many relationships of siblings which play important roles in making the plot an interesting one.

Isabel Allendes’ in ‘The House of Spirits’, revolves, around many relations one such is that shared between, Esteban Trueba (Clara’s husband) and his sister Ferula. These siblings share the same miserable childhood, have similar temperaments – an exaggerated capacity for anger and a hefty amount of pride – and even love the same woman. But while Esteban enjoys a "destiny that [is] bright, free, and full of promise," Férula has to stay locked up at home, tending to their sick mother. Esteban gets to get married and gets to sleep with Clara, while Férula can only spy on them from behind the bedroom door.

All this led to a relation that was slightly away from the ones shared by the siblings is that of Clara and Ferula, in which Ferula was misunderstood for her excessive fondness for Clara. She had a genuine sisterly love for Clara, and Clara also understood Ferula’s feelings but Esteban and the world didn’t. Ferula used to take care of the house while Clara used to meditate and used to be busy with the Mora sisters and her other spiritual group partners, and Ferula never used to mind to do all the house hold work because she used to handle everything when her mother was ill and take care of the household before her mother died.

“Clara was the one in whom she confided her most subtle feelings, and to her she consecrated her enormous capacity for the sacrifice and veneration. She once was bold enough to tell her how she felt, and Clara wrote in her notebook that ferula loved her far more deeply than she deserved or than she could ever hope to repay. Because of the excessive love, Ferula did not leave Tres Marias.”

Even when Ferula was dead, the spirit of ferula especially came to meet Clara at Tres Marias. These things prove that ferula had love of a sister for Clara. The narrator (Alba) tells the readers about the sisterly love for Clara of ferula in the work by writing

The next in line would be that shared between Blanca (Clara’s daughter) and her brothers who are James and Nicolas(Clara and Esteban’s children) but Blanca, the beautiful hypochondriac, is a complete romantic – her great accomplishment in life is her love for Pedro Tercero García, whom she finally manages to live with in Canadian matrimonial bliss. The twins Jaime and Nicolás have little in common with one another. Nicolás inherits the nomadic and entrepreneurial tendencies of his Great Uncle Marcos, while gentle Jaime displays a fierce intellectual idealism that is all his own. So nothing is common in these siblings born of the same mother, Clara .one thing that was common between both the brothers was their love for Amanda. Jaime secretly also loves Amanda but never says it for the sake of his brother’s love for her. Blanca was more close to Jaime as he was more sensible and focused in life and was always around in town. He was totally opposite to who was an adventurer. But the thing which these brothers and Blanca had in common was that they hated their father Esteban Trueba, because he never did any good to his children.

Amanda (Nicolas’s girlfriend) also had a brother named Miguel who grows up to become the lover of Blanca’s daughter Alba. Amanda and Miguel were orphans, but Amanda used to take care of Miguel as a mother and took him everywhere with her. She never let him out of her sight. A quote which can be example of this loving relationship is: -

“Amanda and Miguel embraced tearfully in the doorway of the school, the teacher was unable to loosen the little boy from her sister’s skirt to which he clung tooth and nail, shrieking and kicking anyone who came near him.”

This quote surely expresses the deep love and affection which these siblings shared with each other.

The other work Like Water for Chocolate, which is a very easy flowing and lighter work. But at the same time it is full of emotions and family issues and talks of relationships between sisters. The tragedy in the novel is that Rosaura (second daughter) gets married to Tita’s (youngest) love of life (Pedro) because Mama Elena doesn’t allow Tita to marry him. The youngest daughter is not supposed to marry until the mother dies. Tita was deeply in love with Pedro. But Mama Elena being a strong personality and Tita being scared, lets Rosaura and Pedro to get married. However, the only reason Pedro marries Rosaura is because he could then be closer to Tita.

Rosaura was supposedly the next generation of Mama Elena. She used to follow all the family traditions which Mama Elena also followed. This was one reason why she never had good relations with anyone, especially her sisters. Tita and Rosaura never had a very healthy relationship, Rosaura knew that Tita was madly in love with Pedro but she still went ahead and married him because of which there was a cold war between them. When Rosaura had her first child Robert, Tita breast fed him because Rosaura didn’t have mother’s milk to feed her child. Tita also fed Rosaura’s second child Esperanza. One of the conversations which Rosaura and Tita had which shows the hatred for each other was when

Rosaura says “From now on, I don’t want you feeding her again; never again……All she can get from you is a bad example and a bad advice.”

Tita replies “I’m not going to allow you to poison your daughter with those sick ideas you have in your head. I’m not going to let you ruin her life either, forcing her to follow some stupid tradition”

Whereas, Tita had very healthy and a loving relationship with her other sister Gertrudis. Gertrudis understood Tita’s pain and love for Pedro so she was always there for Tita whenever she needed her. She was the one who took the step to force Tita to tell Pedro that he was going to become the father of her child which Tita was reluctant to tell.

Whereas, Gertrudis and Rosaura had no bonding with each other, because Gertrudis was always more close to Tita. Even when Gertrudis came back after a long time when she ran naked in the fields to quench her heat of love and lust after eating Tita’s rose petal dish, Rosaura welcomed her very casually which showed that they were never very bonded mentally with each other.

The following quote proves that, Gertrudis and Rosaura did not have a very healthy sisterly relationship whereas, it also shows the love and affection which Gertrudis has for Tita. The following extract is conversation in between Tita and Gertrudis when Tita tells her that she is pregnant with the baby of Pedro.

Gertrudis says “the truth, the truth! Tita, the simple truth is that truth does not exist; , it all depends on a person’s point of view. For example, in your case, truth could be that rosaura married Pedro, showing no loyalty, not caring a damn that you really loved him, that’s the truth, isn’t it?”

In the end I would I like to say that, in both the works elaboration has been done on the importance of siblings. Each of the relations above are very important for the work’s story and the flow of it. The nature and the role of the characters make the work more exciting to read and As a reader there is an over flow of emotions. These authors of these works kept the readers attached with the story because there was an excitement in reading what was going to happen next.



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Sutherland Global Services Is A Financial Corporation Marketing Essay

For any business excellent customer service is the income. Bringing back the customers is the best customer service. And in relation send them away pleased – happy enough to pass encouraging criticism about the business alongside others, who may perhaps then attempt the merchandise or service you recommend for them and in turn into repeat clients. You can offer advancement and cut prices to bring in as many fresh customers as you want, but unless you can search out some of those customers to come back, there will no profit for a long time in your business. If the firm truly wish for having good customer service, all you have to do is make sure that your business constantly does these things:

Respond to the customers’ phone call.

Don’t give the customer promises unless you will fulfil the promise.

Listen to your customers patiently while they are talking and make appropriate responses to show the customers that we are listening.

After listening to the customers’ issue, we have an idea how to deal with complaints.

Be helpful towards the customers even if there are no instant financial gains in it.

If you have any staff, give training to be always supportive or helpful, knowledgeable, and chivalrous.

By taking the extra steps does not mean that you have to tell the customer to search for it, you have to guide them to the right path and wait if they have any queries.

Throw in some additional information about the product that the customer buys.

Following these eight steps, ones business will be known for their good and excellent customer service. The irony of the excellent customer service is that this will increase the number of new customers is the best part. (Ward 2010)

For dealing with the customer service, I have opted Sutherland Global Services for doing the research, as the firm is widely known and personally I was a member of the customer service team in this BPO firm.

Sutherland Global Services is a financial corporation headquartered in Rochester, New York. There are 22,000 employees employed in this business process outsourcing firm and operations in seven countries including India, the Philippines, Canada, Mexico and Bulgaria. Sutherland cherishes their customers or clients as their business companions. They are enthusiastic and keen to provide the highest quality service to the customers and will treat their target and objectives as company’s own. The firm will boost their aggressive benefit by constantly higher than the expectations.

Globalization, expertise promotion, lesser telecommunications expenses, and the adulthood of outsourcing facility providers are motivating companies to influence business process outsourcing (BPO) as a tactical move towards the enhancement of efficiency and taken as a whole functional efficiency. Industries that serve a large number of customers are the most important beneficiaries of a BPO. Because of the physical scenery of the business processes that are mandatory to attain, sustain and retain their customers, companies in these industries are outsourcing a variety of customer-facing and back-office operation.

For more than two decades, Sutherland Global Services has built and managed outsourced operations for 1000 companies’ crossways numerous industries. Over the course of 20 years of experience, Sutherland has urbanized a demonstrated method for supervising outsourced operations that is applied to BPO whereabouts athwart any industry. By sternly clinging to this evolution on each commitment, the company is able to trim down start-up and changeover endangers, accomplish beleaguered objectives more rapidly, and run a more reliable steady-state operation on the clients’ behalf.

Sutherland offers specialized BPO services for the following industries: (i) Retail/e-Retail (ii) Insurance (iii) Mortgage

(iv) Banking/Financial services (v) Healthcare (vi) Telecommunication

(vii) Technology (viii) Energy/Utilities and (ix) Travel and hospitality.

Retail/e-Retail: Retailers function in a globe of tremendous market volatility, cost pressure and supply-chain intricacy. Sutherland supplies incorporated customer-facing and significant back-office support services to a high-speed increasing roll of key leaders in the vend space. Sutherland’s services are geared in the direction of conventional trade, online/e-commerce and direct to customer oriented companies looking for an incorporated resolution. For each client or customer, the firm designed a personalized explanation built just about their explicit needs - together with safety, skill and equipment, procedure, quality and exposure. Leveraging the firm’s field knows how, expertise, processes, and infrastructure, Sutherland helps worldwide retail firms concentrate on end-to-end dare.

Insurance: Sutherland furnishes public and private Insurance companies an end- to-end scheme to perk up their functioning efficiencies and enables them to vie more capably which in turn facilitate them to innovate and generate a eternal aggressive benefit. In particular, Sutherland delivers:

cost lessening and a changeable cost replica

income increases through various allocation channels

go around time upgrading for field force and members/consumers

the aptitude to bring a steady customer skill

Mortgage: Mortgage originators must productively deal with outlay in the phizog of altering technological, operational, and personnel demands. Sutherland’s Mortgage Origination services drastically lesser the risks and expenses linked with a multiplicity of business processes rise above the entire instigation sequence. Sutherland can considerably improve a lender’s output, customer satisfaction, and income generating occasion.

Banking/Financial services: Financial or Banking services companies in each section are beneath strong stress to stay on beneficial. Customer expectations keep on increasing as business leaders features expenditure challenges. Sutherland Global Services suggests a BPO model for contact centre and back-office processes. Delivery options comprise North American aground, work at home, offshore service delivery via the facilities in the Bulgaria, Canada, India, Mexico, Nicaragua, Philippines, United Kingdom and United States.

Healthcare: Generally in customer-focused industries, Health Insurance companies are appraising tactical sourcing alternatives that will consent to them to improved control costs, diminish resource expenditures and get better level of overhaul they deliver to their customers. One way, Health Insurance companies can achieve these objectives is to deem choosy Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) for definite sales, customer service, claims organizational and back-office processing functions.

Technology: Sutherland has about two decades of experience with building and controlling sales, advertising and customer support operations for the technology industry. Sutherland Global is branded and recognized in the industry for knowledge, realm skill and track-record of grades working with some of the most flourishing names in the hi-tech industry.

Energy/Utilities:

Travel and Hospitality: Sutherland understands that travel and hospitality companies’ functions multifaceted organizations with many global business units overseeing separate P&L responsibilities. As business and individual journey experience stable quantity increases, every company faces passionate rivalry to supply astonishing customer service while controlling outlay. Companies must swiftly take action to varying consumer demands, which requires litheness and flexibility in operations, customer relationship management and back office processes.

Telecommunication: It habitually seems hard to locate a business with the aim of more competitive than telecommunications. Service providers are quickly escalating an innovative service skill and insistently entering fresh markets, blurring the lines connecting voice, data, cable, IP and wireless. Exceptional cost and rigid pressure is making it trickier for providers to nurture market share and deal with a healthy profit image.

For numerous telecommunications service providers, outsourcing definite client contact centre and back-office procedure is a reasonable and significant way to stay competitive and nurture their industry. That is why the top telecommunications companies have trusted on Sutherland for more than a decade to experience a variety of aspects of their customer lifecycle management errands.

Sutherland’s has formed for the following types of service providers for outsourcing services for the telecommunications industry. Those are as follows:

• Traditional wire line

• Wireless/mobile

• Cable

• Satellite

• Data network operators

• Internet & online service providers (Sutherland Global Services 2009)

Why Sutherland Global succeeds?

How others make benefit?

How does Sutherland Global make impact on various sectors?

It is very essential for a company to make a good relationship with the customer and the company. This should be the main motto of the company to make a customer happy after getting solved all the issues of the customer. The important factor to set up nonstop or long term achievement is by giving importance to the customers. The main advantage of the company is to deliver quality services to customers and will certainly increase the selling opportunities for a happy customer. By this the company will grow autonomously. Some companies only focus getting new customers and ignore the value of the old customers. They forget that these old customers has helped them the chance to grow. They knew that getting new clients instead of the old ones will be more profitable. But they forget that generating new clients will be more expensive than they are already in the asset. (Customer Service BPO 2008)

Customer service always helps to make an industry more profitable. By keeping the old customers and gaining new ones, brilliant customer service is crucial to any business replica. Human resources professionals must be able to give explanation for the importance of customer service teaching and extract from organization broad support for a complete programme. (Reheer 1999)

The researcher establishes assumption, examines and analyzes the active facts and synthesizes the substantiation into a feasible hypothetical sculpt. Nuisance dealing with objectives, syllabus, course content, desires and style are but a small number of the vital issues that can be determined only through the theoretical or philosophical mode of crisis solving.

Even though a few authors give emphasis to the distinction among science and philosophy, the philosophic process of study follows fundamentally the similar steps as other methods of technical means of solving. The philosophic approach uses systematic facts as the foundation for formulating and test to do research suggestion. (Jerry R. Thomas 2005)

Business process outsourcing or else recognized as BPO is the procedure of leveraging skill vendors in a variety of third worlds or developing countries for doing a career which was on one occasion the dependability of the venture. Or in simple thoughts, it is the method of shifting an internal occupation practice to an outside or external corporation which might have an entirely dissimilar ecological locality. The reassigning of internal business processes, for instance, customer relationship organization, investment & secretarial, human resources and acquisition , to an external service source that improves these processes and administers these functions to an approved service criterion and, classically, at a abridged expenditure.

In general, the processes being outsourcing as division of BPO are backend works like call centres, medical transcription, billing, payroll processing, and data entry and so on. Most of these jobs are outsourced by first world nations like USA and UK to third world nations like India, Philippines, China, Malaysia and some eastern European countries. These nations have a good number of English speaking youth who are given accent and job related training before they are inducted at a salary which is much lesser than what their counterparts in first world nations would require. This allows first world organizations to get advanced profits and offer improved services by lowering the prices and by recruiting more work than they could possibly do. In addition to promoting the first world nations’ economic standard, business process outsourcing has also benefited third world nations by generating much needed jobs.

In the early days, BPO typically consisted of outsourcing processes such as payroll. Then it grew to take in employee reimbursement management. Now it includes a number of functions that are measured "non-core" to the primary business strategy. Now it is common for organizations to outsource fiscal and management processes, human resources functions, accounting and payroll and call centre and customer service performance. These outsourcing deals commonly engross multi-year contracts that can run into hundreds of millions of dollars. Frequently, the people performing the work within for the client firm are transferred and have converted into employees for the service provider. Leading outsourcing service providers in the BPO fields include US companies are Sutherland Global Services, IBM, Accenture, and Hewitt Associates, as well as European and Asian companies Capgemini, Genpact, TCS, Wipro, Infosys and many more and some of which also dominate the IT outsourcing business. (Ritu Thapar. 2010)

Business ethics is fairly ancient as a subject of personage and social apprehension, but it is comparatively newly fangled as an area of social logical analysis. The late 20th century was a deafening instance for business ethics. (Treviño and Weaver 2003)

No access to information: As doing the research, there was any access to information while browsing because of the company policy. The firm will only give access to their company policy only if t helps their employees, agents and trusted third party service providers. (Privacy Policy, 2010)

Lack of knowledge: It could be difficult completing the coursework with no knowledge about the sector or subject you have chosen.

Resistance in companies and people for sharing knowledge



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Swot Analysis

STRENGHTS |
* Leading brand recognition: Toyota is one of the leading automotive brands in the world.     * Strong financial performance   * Global organization, with a strong international position in 170 countries worldwide.   * Uses marketing techniques to identify and satisfy customer needs, and as emphasized by the case video, on customer relationships.   * Toyota continues to work for improving the quality of the product, creating diversified product range, the manufacturing system, or relationships between suppliers   * Deep-roated historical , loyalty , brand image and reliable technology |   WEAKNESSES |
* Production capacity. Toyota produces most of its cars in US and Japan whereas competitors may be more strategically located worldwide to take advantage of global efficiency gains.   * Movements in exchange rates could see the already narrow margins in the car market being reduced.   * The Production of car represents a huge investment in expensive fixed costs, as well as the high costs of training and retaining labor.   * Japanese car manufacturer - seen as a foreign importer |
OPPORTUNITIES |
* Hybrid electric vehicles: The increasing energy costs and stringent emission regulations enhance the demand of the hybrid electric vehicles because of its high fuel efficiency.     * Toyota has also sold on especially its technology of hybrid to other motor manufacturers .   * Opportunities in Asian market: The Asian automotive market became the main increasing point   .Thus, the automotive corporations should concentrate on the Asian markets, such as China, and India.   * Toyota is to target the 'urban youth' market. . The launch of Aygo model is intended to take market share in youth market.   * New models |   THREATS |
* As with any car manufacturer, Toyota faces tremendous competitive rivalry in the car market. Competition is increasing almost daily.   * The tightening emission standards cause additional costs for product development, testing

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