a. Explain what trade control is. What are the instruments of trade control? Discuss the pros and co

a. Explain what trade control is. What are the instruments of trade control? Discuss the pros and cons of using trade control. Support your answers with examples. (300 Words) b. Go to the USDA’s page on NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement). Explore the insights into NAFTA and discuss the impact of NAFTA on its members.

Four different environments that affect business were described Four different environments that…

Four different environments that affect business were described
Four different environments that affect business were described in Chapter 1. Choose one of the environments and explain how it affects a small electronics manufacturer located in Oregon.

Four different environments that affect business were described

discussion question 1854

Hello everyone.

I need someone to help me with my discussion.

It is an easy question just a few sentences.

Initial Post*

Choose ONE of the questions below and respond to it in 1-2 short paragraphs (between five and seven sentences each). Be sure to support your answer with examples from the book, as well as share your own perspective and personal experience. Also, write the Question # you are responding to so your classmates can reference it when writing a follow-up post.

*You must do your initial post in order to participate in the follow-up discussion

Tuesdays with Morrie (pp. 80-141) Discussion Questions

1. Morrie thinks people are confused by what they WANT and what they NEED. What does he mean? Can you think of an example from your own life when you confused these two?

2. Morrie says it’s important to be fully present in the moment, especially when you are with other people. What does this mean? Are you able to be “fully present” when you are with people? Why or why not?



please write a 1 2 page paper of the following 1 3 questions quality over quantity read below

The following is a summary of the history of Sears:

Sears Holdings Corporation (SHLD)
A Corporation in Decline

In 1893, Richard Sears and Alvah Roebuck formed Sears, Roebuck & Company in Chicago, Illinois, from a previously established company that started out offering a limited selection of items by catalog. The first Sears catalog was published in 1888, and shortly afterward, Sears began to diversify its business by providing a wider variety of products including sewing machines, bicycles, sporting goods, and automobiles. By 1895, the company was producing a 532-page catalog. Sales were higher than $400,000 in 1893 and more than $750,000 two years later. By 1896, dolls, stoves and groceries had been added to the catalog, and the business grew quickly.

From 1895 to 1907, annual sales of the company climbed from $750,000 to upwards of $50 million.

The prosperity of the company and its vision for greater expansion led Sears to take the company public in 1906, with a $40 million stock offering.

In 1906, Sears opened its catalog plant and the Sears Merchandise Building Tower in Chicago. In 1933, Sears issued the first of its famous Christmas catalogs known as the “Sears Wishbook,” a catalog featuring toys and gifts, separate from the annual Christmas Catalog.

The company was badly hurt during 1919–21 as a severe depression hit the nation’s farms after farmers had over-expanded their holdings. To bail out the company, Rosenwald, Sear’s CEO, pledged $21 million of his wealth to keep the company solvent.

By 1922, Sears had regained financial stability. Rosenwald oversaw the design and construction of the company’s first department store within Sears & Roebuck’s massive 40-acre headquarters complex of offices, laboratories and mail-order operations on Chicago’s West Side. The store opened in 1925.

As the demographics of the U.S. changed from rural to urban, Sears shifted emphasis to urban America and from catalog sales to store sales. Sears was a pioneer in creating department stores that catered to men as well as women, especially with lines of hardware and building materials. Its stores were oriented to motorists, had ample, free, off-street parking; and communicated a clear corporate identity. In the 1930s, the company designed fully air-conditioned, “windowless” stores whose layout was driven wholly by merchandising concerns.

From the 1920s to the 1950s, Sears built many urban department stores. Starting in the 1950s, the company expanded into suburban markets and malls in the 1960s and 1970s. Sears began to diversify in the 1930s, adding Allstate Insurance Company in 1931 and placing Allstate representatives in its stores in 1934. Over the decades, it established major national brands, such as Kenmore, Craftsman, DieHard, Silvertone, Supertone, and Toughskins. The company became a conglomerate during the mid-20th century, adding Dean Witter and Coldwell Banker real estate in 1981, starting Prodigy as a joint venture with IBM in 1984, and introducing the Discover credit card in 1985. In March 2009, Sears purchased the social search engine Delver.

In 1974, Sears completed the 110-story Sears Tower in Chicago, becoming the world’s tallest building. Sears moved to the new Prairie Stone Business Park in Hoffman Estates, Illinois, between 1993 and 1995.

In the 1990s, the company began divesting itself of many non-retail entities, which were detrimental to the company’s bottom line. Sears spun off its financial services arm, which included brokerage business Dean Witter Reynolds and Discover Card. It sold its mall building subsidiary Homart.

In 1993, Sears terminated its famous general merchandise catalog because of sinking sales and profits. Sears sold its retail credit card operation to Citibank. The remaining card operations were sold to JPMorgan Chase in August 2005. In 2003, Sears opened a new concept store called Sears Grand. Sears Grand stores carry everything that a regular Sears carry and more. Sears Grand stores are about 175,000 to 225,000 square feet.

On November 17, 2004, Sears announced Kmart was acquiring it. As a part of the acquisition, Kmart Holdings Corporation changed its name to Sears Holdings. The new corporation announced that it would continue to operate stores under both the Sears and Kmart brands. In 2005, the company began renovating some Kmart stores.

Sears has spent much of 2014 and 2015 selling off portions of its balance sheet, namely Lands’ End and its stake in Sears Canada. Sears Canada is one of the most prominent e-commerce players in Canada, with CAN$505 million in sales in 2015—more than Walmart and others who have begun pushing aggressively into online sales. Sears’ CEO and top shareholder, Edward Lampert, said the sell-off of critical assets in the last year had given the retailer the money it needs to speed up its transformation. Sears Holdings has lost a total of $7 billion over the previous four years. In part, the retailer is trying to curb losses by using a loyalty program called Shop Your Way. Sears believes the membership scheme will be a long-term play for the company, and it will enhance repeat business and customer loyalty.

In late 2016 and early 2017, some significant steps were taken by Edward Lampert, president, chief executive officer and top shareholder of Sears Holding Corp. Lampert, with personal assets estimated at $2 billion, is also the founder and manager of the hedge fund ESL Investments Inc. He provided an additional loan of $500 million to the company and said he would provide letters of credit to Sears for additional amounts, reportedly totaling $200 million and possibly increasing to a half-billion dollars in the future.

Lampert also concluded an arrangement that sold the Craftsman brand to Stanley Black & Decker Inc. for approximately $900 million. During this period, the company also announced that it would close 150 stores (109 Kmart and 41 Sears outlets), in an attempt to cut its losses after a decline in sales of 12 to 13 percent during the holiday shopping season and the largest quarterly loss since 2013.

In February 2017, Sears announced a restructuring plan that is hoped to cut costs by $1 billion via selling more stores, cutting jobs and selling brands. During the second quarter of 2017, 42 Sear’s stores in 40 states will close. Later on, Sears announced that it would close an additional 12 stores. In July 2017, Sears announced it would close another 43 stores (8 Sears and 35 Kmart stores). Those closures are in addition to the previously announced closures.

Since 2010, Sears has gone from more than 3,500 physical stores to 695 US stores. Sales at Sear’s stores dropped 10.3 percent in the final quarter of 2016 when compared to the same period in 2015.

Annual revenues have declined from $31.2 billion in fiscal 2015 to $22.1 billion in fiscal 2017, and annual losses have gone from -$1.68 billion in 2015 to -$2.22 billion in 2017.

Sears has recently come out of bankruptcy with Ed Lambert’s company buying some of the assets, including around 400 stores that he is now in the process of restructuring to focus on a much narrower product line in the hope to keep the Sears name alive and return to some level of profitability. Many investors and business analysists are skeptical.

Several factors contributed to the downfall of Sears, as is often the case with business failures. In this Discussion Board, examine three factors. Use the information presented in this Discussion Board (above) as well as additional outside research.

Your analysis should address the following three issues:

  1. What were the General Environmental Trendsthat contributed to the decline of Sears Holdings (review each of the six categories in the PESTEL analysis), and how does each one affect Sears (positive or negative and to what extent)? How has Sears responded to these trends? Has there their response been effective? Why or why not? What prevented Sears from an effective response to the changing conditions?
  2. Describe the changes in Competitive Environmentthat were and are occurring in the brick-and-mortar retail industry that Sears and K-Mart compete in? What prevented Sears from responding to these changes?
  3. How has the leadershipof Edward Lampert as CEO and major shareholder, contributed to Sears’ downfall? Explain how and why.

educate and advocate powerpoint presentation

Step 4:

Disseminate and Communicate your Findings to your Population

  • Now you are ready to create your power point.Please use the following outline below.The focus on your presentation should be on advocacy…the goal is to help your population be able to advocate for themselves and others who may “interact” with your chosen health issue (research question). Remember, you want to imagine actually using this presentation at some point in your career; include graphics; embed a video, for example….be creative with your presentation.
    • Slide 1:Title slide.
    • Slide 2:State your research question and area of health / dimension of wellness.
    • Slide 3:Why this question is important to the health of the people you are presenting to.
      • Make sure you include the specific population that you have developed your presentation for.
    • Slides 4-6:A summary of the research you reviewed to prepare this presentation.
    • Slide 7:How the research findings inform your population.
    • Slides 8-9: What does your population need to be thinking about based on your research findings…prevention?Management of the issue? Heightened awareness?
    • Slide 10: Focus on awareness:provide three final thoughts for your population that will ensure they are more aware of the specific health issue.
    • Slides 11-12:References

com 201 the power of effective speaking

Today, you received an invitation from the president of the school board asking you to deliver an informative speech at Everytown High School. Because students at Everytown High School are currently studying Global Warming, the president of the school board would like for you to address this topic as well.

Review the sources listed below and choose the one you would use in your informative speech. Thoroughly explain why the source is a good choice.

  1. A book entitled The Guide to Global Warming (published in 2015)
  2. A pre-recorded interview with an employee at the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center
  3. A documentary film explaining Global Warming

Why is this separation so critical to the understanding of how businesses are structured and led?

Why is this separation so critical to the understanding of how businesses are structured and led?

WebQuest

see in the attachment the guidelines and student sample.
Do not copy and paste from the sample.

Enumerate the principal methods of entry into international business. Explain the advantages and…

Enumerate the principal methods of entry into international business. Explain the advantages and disadvantages of each. Which would you use if you were running a small firm with few resources but a product that had potentially broad international appeal? Would you use a different approach if you were running a large company with considerable available funds? Give your reasons.

mill s utilitarianism 2

Prompt

A number of the texts that we have read so far agree that being happy is important for a good human life, and that pleasure plays an important role in our happiness. These insights are also reflected in various ethical theories. A particularly influential ethical theory of this kind is John Stuart Mill’s version of utilitarianism. (Utilitarianism, or, as it is also know, consequentialism, is one of the leading moral theories in contemporary ethics. Mill is one of the founding fathers of utilitarianism; another founding father is Jeremy Bentham, who was mentioned when we talked about The Picture of Dorian Gray, and who greatly influenced Mill.) Mill provides an account of his version of utilitarianism in his widely read book Utilitarianism (1863). This paper is about the first two chapters of Mill’s Utilitarianism in which he presents and defends the basic principle of his utilitarian theory. Your first task in this paper is to carefully state and explain the fundamental principle of Mill’s utilitarianism. Mill provides a (controversial) positive argument for his fundamental principle later on in his book. But he starts out his defense of utilitarianism by rebutting a number of popular objections that have been, or could be, raised against it. (It is also in the course of this discussion of popular objections that we learn more about the particular flavor of Mill’s version of utilitarianism, in contrast to Bentham’s version). Your second task in this paper is to examine two of the objections that Mill considers as well as Mill’s replies to these objections. The first objection that you should discuss is the one that Mill also addresses first under the heading ‘Higher and Lower Pleasures’, namely, the ‘swine/pig’ objection, in response to which he develops his famous theory of higher and lower pleasures. The choice of the second objection to be discussed is up to you. Are Mill’s replies convincing? Can you think of any replies to Mill’s replies?

Paper should be around 5 pages double spaced, size 12 font