New York City Energy Case Study

New York City Energy Case Study .
Study the case and summarize how New York is  addressing energy and pollution challenges (1,800 words).

Team Performance Dynamics – Everest Case Study

Team Performance Dynamics – Everest Case Study
This essay is based on a case study about what went wrong on an expedition to climb Mount Everest. Two conceptual areas will be talked about, Team Psychological Safety and Sunk Cost Fallacy. The essay will be about what those are and how they contributed to the disaster of the expedition. Examples and useful material provided. Read writer instructions file.

Leadership and Organizational Performance (Case Study of Krispy Kreme Doughnuts)

Instructions
This is a leadership paper. Read the case and discuss how leadership contributed to the successful performance and rapid growth of Krispy Kreme Doughnuts (1,200 words). APA style.

Managerial Economics and Strategic Analysis (Case study of Starbucks)

Managerial Economics and Strategic Analysis (Case study of Starbucks),  Requirements:
Address the following in your case study (2,200 words, APA style)

  • Organizational success and strategies
  • Efective leadership
  • Organization structure
  • Ethical organization
  • Types of risks and risk management
  • Strategic control
  • Organizational structure
  • motivational strategies

Innovation and Change

Innovation and Change  & Corporate Governance and Communications
CASE STUDY
THE BINGHAMS AND THE LOUISVILLE COURIER-JOURNAL COMPANIES
On January 9, 1986, Barry Bingham, Sr., chairman of the Courier-Journal and Louisville Times, abruptly decided that the Bingham family, which had owned the newspapers for nearly 70 years, would sell the business. Barry Sr., about to turn 80, hoped that his decision would bring a measure of family peace. Instead, it brought further blaming, family discord, chaos, and agony.1
 
In 1918, Judge Bingham, Barry Sr.’s father, had bought a majority interest in the Courier-Journal and the Louisville Times, Kentucky’s preeminent newspapers, for $1 million. When Judge Bingham died in 1937, Barry Sr. was 32 and actively involved in the family business, which by then included a radio station and a printing company in addition to the newspapers.
 
The business grew as the Louisville postwar economy prospered. Barry Sr. married Mary Caperton and had five children: Worth, Barry Jr., Sallie, Eleanor, and Jonathan. Jonathan, the youngest, died at the age of 22, when he was electrocuted stringing wires for an outdoor party. Just two years later, Worth, the eldest, who had seemed destined by his charm, smarts, and primogeniture to be the successor, died in a bizarre car accident: A surfboard sticking out of his car’s window hit a parked car; as it broke, it ricocheted and decapitated Worth.
 
Barry Jr., a year younger than worth, had always been more interested in the radio business than in the print media, but he agreed to serve as president of the Louisville Courier-Journal Companies in the early 1970s. Sallie, who was five years younger than Barry, had set out on a career as a fiction writer in New York City. She had some success, getting some of her early works published. She returned to Louisville in 1977, after suffering several major setbacks in her writing career. Eleanor, eight years younger than Sallie, had worked professionally on a series of video documentaries, some financed by the dividends of her Courier-Journal stock. But her work never landed her the network job she had hoped for, so in 1978 she also returned home from California to work at WHAS, the company radio station. Barry Jr. and his sisters had never been close. In fact, they had barely seen each other in more than 20 years because the difference in their ages and early careers had taken them in separate directions.
 
Soon after Sallie and Eleanor returned, Barry Sr. named them to the company’s board of directors. They would have both voice and vote in matters of the enterprise. Barry Jr.’s perspective on what happened then reads like a classic tale of sibling rivalry and backroom politics. According to Barry, his sisters knew little about the business. Barry, on the other hand, had been working in the family business for almost 20 years and running it for a decade. But the fact that they did not understand the business did not keep them from second-guessing his every move through memos, through letters to the editor and op-ed pieces published in the company newspapers, and through persistent questioning of Barry Jr. during board meetings. Even his mother, Mary, on more than one occasion expressed on the editorial page, without warning, opinions contrary to Barry Jr.’s. In a rather familiar pattern for the Bingham family, Barry Jr. would learn about these opinions by reading the paper or stopping by the employee bulletin board, where sometimes surprising memos from other members of the family would be posted.
 
To the outside world the family appeared rife with conflict. Seemingly, it was capable of communicating about what ailed it and its businesses only in print, neverface to face. In the early 1980s, as broadcast news and other channels of information gained favor, the demand for newspapers slumped. Evening newspapers in particular—the Bingham’s other newspaper, the Louisville Times was an evening daily—began to close their doors. Both the family and the business had problems to address and no way to address them.
 
The board became paralyzed by the sibling dynamics. Finally, Barry Jr. gave Barry Sr. an ultimatum: Either Sallie and Eleanor had to leave the board or he would resign as president of the enterprises. Eleanor resigned. Sallie, however, would not, and when she was not reelected by her own family, the war began. Sallie fired the first shot by announcing to the family that she wanted to sell all of her interests in the companies. Lehman Brothers valued Sallie’s shares at between$22 million and $26.3 million, but her own appraiser valued her holdings at  $80 million. Despite the huge gap, negotiations began. Sallie ultimately lowered her asking price to $32 million, but Barry Jr. would never agree to anything higher than $26.3 million, and the negotiations stalled. In the meantime, Eleanor decided that she, too, wanted to sell or swap her newspaper shares for WHAS (the radio station) shares. In a final attempt to pressure his children into a compromise, BarrySr. Issued an edict, nicknamed the 13th commandment, that if Barry Jr. and Eleanor could not come to an agreement, the companies would be sold.
Soon thereafter, Barry Sr. issued a memo announcing that the company would be sold. Barry Jr. saw the memo posted at the employees’ bulletin board. At the age of 80, Barry Sr. still controlled 95 percent of the stock through a voting trust, so the decision to sell was clearly his to make.
Unable to communicate and resolve their differences, family members cashed out. All emerged cash-rich, but those who cared about the legacy were heartbroken. The newspapers had won eight Pulitzer prizes and were bastions of quality journalism in the South. Barry Jr. called a companywide meeting after the announcement to express his disagreement with his father’s decision to sell the company and to tell employees how much their collective past meant to him. Employees wept as Barry Jr. spoke; they knew this speech marked the end of an era.
The Bingham papers were taken over by the Gannett Company, which proceeded to close down the evening newspaper, reduce personnel by a third, and cut news staff, by 10 percent. Advertising and circulation for the morning paper increased, as did profits. The Louisville Courier-Journal had an impressive financial turnaround. But editorial standards changed, and Pulitzer prizes proved elusive.                               
Answer all the questions.                             

  1. Taking the example of the case discuss in detail the importance of innovation and change to family owned business organization.
  2. Analyze the importance of corporate governance and communications highlighted in the case to family owned business.

 
Note: The assignment should be in a form of a comprehensive report and it must include;

  • Proper introduction
  • Body of the report equipped with relevant knowledge and discussion
  • Conclusion of the report relevant to the discussion
  • Proper references.

Ethical Values (Case Study Patagonia)

Case Patagonia 
From the video interview with Patagonia founder and the company website (see hyperlinks below), identify the ethical values of the company founder.
Using appropriate cultural dimensions, discuss how you would implement these values in a factory that the company plans to open in Thailand and staff with local workers.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O3TwULu-Wjw
http://www.patagonia.com/culture.html
NOTE: Contrary to previous cases analysed in class, the Patagonia case does not solve existing problems but prevents them from happening through careful planning how the factory will be set up (organizational structure, systems, leadership, team design, etc.). This case requires that you use your cultural knowledge to foresee and prevent future problems.

Google’s Acquisitions (Case Study Analysis)

Google’s Acquisitions (Case Study Analysis) . In the case, answer the following:

  • Briefly, explain what the case is about? (you can use bullet points for this question)
  • Briefly, explain the management issue(s)? (you can use bullet points for this question)
  • Link the management issue to the model/theory of the week and briefly explain the connection.

Case Study Uber Success Brings Uber Public Relations Problems

Case Study Uber Success Brings Uber Public Relations Problems
Behold the phenomenon that is Uber.
The 21st century personal taxi cab service, headquartered in San Francisco, is worth approximately $50 billion and isn’t even public. It is a staple in 300 cities in 58 countries, employs 300,000 drivers and generates annual revenues of $10 billion.
Uber Impactful
Uber was founded in 2009 by Travis Kalanick and Garrett Camp as a transportation network company that uses an app to allow consumer to submit a trip request then routed to Uber’s nexus of drivers. Uber lore suggests that Kalanick and Camp hatched the idea one snowy night in Paris when they couldn’t find a cab.
Almost immediately, the concept disrupted taxi companies and governments around the world.
Meanwhile, private investors piled on to finance the upstart company, assuring it of one of history’s most monumental public offerings—if and when it decides to go public.
Uber’s impactful growth appeared unstoppable. In the summer of 2015, CEO Kalanick announced plans to invest $1 billion in China, increasing to 65 the number of Chinese cities served by Uber. Despite challenges from entrenched taxi companies and the Chinese government, Kalanick predicted that China might turn out to be a more important market for Uber even than the U.S.
Uber Arrogant
Despite Uber’s roaring success, it suffered public relations problems from its start.
One primary reason was its not-yet-40-year-old CEO Kalanick. While any Silicon Valley “disruptor” must be a feisty competitor by nature, the Uber founder found himself in more hot water virtually every time he opened his mouth.

  • On the long-standing industry he wished to dethrone, CEO Kalanick immediately enraged taxi drivers and local governments when he declared, “It’s not Pinterest where people are putting up pins. You’re changing the way cities work, and that’s fundamentally a third rail. We’re in a political campaign, and the candidate is Uber and the opponent is an a—hole named Taxi.”
  • On the upstart competitor Lyft raising money to challenge Uber, Kalanick made a veiled threat to investors, “Just so you know, we’re going to be fund-raising after this, so before you decide whether you want to invest in them, just make sure you know that we are going to be fund-raising immediately after.”
  • When asked by an interviewer about his skyrocketing “desirability” as young CEO of a multi-billion company, he responded, “Yeah, we call that ‘Boob-er.’”And if that didn’t reflect enough public relations tone deafness, Kalanick followed the comment up by blaming the media for reporting a claim by a political organizer that she was choked by an Uber driver; dismissing the accusation that Uber was somehow liable “for these incidents that aren’t even real in the first place.”

Unfortunately for the CEO and his company, Uber’s public ­relations “incidents” kept on coming.
Uber Crises
Kalanick’s “take no prisoners” attitude permeated his company and antagonized taxi drivers and governments throughout the world.
In cities from Paris to London, from Shanghai to Mexico City, taxi companies and unions protested against Uber alleging that its use of unlicensed drivers was unsafe and illegal (Figure 5-6). Joining the protests were city governments and their taxi commissions that regulated taxis and depended on cab revenues. In New York and other cities, governments proposed regulations that would rein in car-service apps.
Figure 5-6 Not so jolly Old London.
London taxi drivers blocked the streets with a go-slow protest outside the Transport for London offices to protest Uber’s invasion in the spring of 2015.
Photo: Guy Bell/REX Shutterstock/Newscom
Then there were mounting safety issues stemming from allegations against Uber drivers.

  • A woman in New Delhi accused an Uber driver of raping her, and in response, the Indian capital banned the taxi-booking service.
  • In Chicago and London, female passengers accused Uber drivers of sexually assaulting them.
  • In Los Angeles, an Uber driver was arrested and charged with kidnapping a drunk woman and taking her to a hotel to sexually assault her.

Then on top of all the other public relations challenges being thrown at it, an Uber executive acknowledged in the winter of 2014 of telling reporters at what he thought was an off-the-record gathering that he proposed spending $1 million to dig up damaging information that would discredit journalists critical of the company. According to BuzzFeed, he singled out one technology reporter, saying he wanted to prove a “particular and very specific claim” about her personal life. When BuzzFeed exposed the story and the company was engulfed in a social media firestorm, even the pugnacious Kalanick unreservedly apologized for his subordinate’s stupefying stupidity.
And even as the revenues rolled in, the public relations ­problems just kept on coming, from criticisms for aggressively poaching drivers and using dirty tricks to undermine rival services to offering rides to “hot chicks” to promote Uber in France to allegedly pushing subprime auto loans on drivers to not doing enough to address female passengers receiving unwanted sexual attention.
No wonder that in 2015, Kalanick, according to TechCrunch, had embarked on a public relations campaign to convey a “kinder, gentler Uber.”
And not a moment too soon.*
Questions

  1. Were you Uber’s public relations director, what strategy would you recommend the company adopt relative to the taxi industry and competitors?
  2. How would you attempt to “clean up” the image of Uber’s CEO?
  3. What public relations response would you recommend Uber adopt relative to the claims of sexual harassment by drivers?
  4. What public relations strategies would you use to prepare the company for going public?

 
For further information, see Kevin Allen, “The Continuing Saga of Uber PR,” Ragan PR Daily (December 20, 2014); Johana Bhuivan, “Uber’s Travis Kalanick: Takes ‘Charm Offensive’ to New York City,” BuzzFeed (November 14, 2014); Jessica Guynn and Elizabeth Weise, “Uber’s Plot to Spy on Reporter Is Latest Controversy,” USA Today (November 18, 2014); Neil Irwin, “Uber Scandals Highlight Silicon Valley’s Grown Up Problem,” The New York Times (November 19, 2014); Mickey Rapkin, “Uber’s Cab Confessions,” Gentlemen’s Quarterly (March 2014); Veronica Rocher, “Uber Driver Accused of Kidnapping Clubgoer, Taking Her to Motel,” Los Angeles Times (June 3, 2014); and Kara Swisher, “Man and Uber Man,” Vanity Fair (December 2014).

Accounting Ethics (Case Study)

Instructions 

  • Accounting Problem Faced by Linbarger Company
  • Ethical considerations in the case

History and Treatment Plan of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) – Case Study

History and Treatment Plan of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) – Case Study 
Required 
Read the case and recommend the treatment procedure apropriate for Jared (1,500 words).