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Social Penetration Theory
Educate the class on it
Dramatize, illustrate and/or explain your theories through an informative original presentation enhanced by (a) multimedia aid(s) such as a YouTube video, Pinterest or other inspiration board, podcast, vlog, Animoto, Prezi, music, animation, PPT, interactive game, or other multimedia presentation technology, skit, game, etc. The presentation should be designed to help the rest of the class understand interpersonal communication principles, so it can entertain while it explains. Demonstrate what you have learned!
Rubric Name: Final Project Presentation
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NUR 4327 Rasmussen Orthopedics Financial Forecasting Memo & Revenue Budget Sheet
APA FORMAT ACTIVE VOICE TIMES ROMAN 12 FREE OF GRAMMATICAL SPELLING SENTENCE STRUCTURE ERRORS FIRM GRASP OF ENGLISH LANGUA ...
NUR 4327 Rasmussen Orthopedics Financial Forecasting Memo & Revenue Budget Sheet
APA FORMAT ACTIVE VOICE TIMES ROMAN 12 FREE OF GRAMMATICAL SPELLING SENTENCE STRUCTURE ERRORS FIRM GRASP OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE ZERO USE OF CONVERSATIONAL ENGLISH IN TEXT CITATIONS REFERENCE PAGE Grading Rubric A=4=Mastery Completed financial forecasting model with correct calculations and comparisons. Exemplary explanation of how the change in payer mix will impact the overall projected revenue of the unit with comprehensive supporting details. Exemplary description of the financial impact of a changing payer mix with comprehensive example(s). Exemplary recommendations for the manager to consider in expenses, so that the budget will balance as neutral with comprehensive example(s). Provided stated ideas with professional language and attribution for credible sources with correct APA citation, spelling, and grammar in the memo.CompetencyApply the principles of economics as they relate to nursing and healthcare.ScenarioThe nurse manager in orthopedics has asked for your assistance with a finance project. She is being asked to estimate revenue for the next fiscal year based on the projected number of hip replacements increasing from 300 this year to 340 next year.The nurse manager must also factor in the expected changes in sources of revenue by payer. It is estimated that the hospital will lose some contracted insurers due to local competition, and see an increase in Medicare and Medicaid patients due to area demographics and economic conditions. She has provided you with the numbers from this year’s budget and the projections on numbers and payment amounts for next year.InstructionsPrepare a financial forecasting memo to your nurse manager that:Part One – Financial Forecasting ModelContains a completed financial forecasting model by downloading the Financial Forecasting Model to:Calculate the income projected from each payer source and total for the year to compare next year’s revenue to this year’s revenue.Provide your nurse manager with your estimates on the increase/ decrease in revenue for next year’s budgeting.Part Two – Financial Forecasting MemoExplains how the change in payer mix will impact the overall projected revenue of the unit.Describes the financial impact of a changing payer mix.Lists recommendations for the manager to consider in expenses, so that the budget will balance as neutral.Provides stated ideas with professional language and attribution for credible sources with correct APA citation, spelling, and grammar in the memo.
University of San Diego Business Project and Microsoft Case Study
Hello,I have attached a report that my group and me have started and I only need a few resources and information to back i ...
University of San Diego Business Project and Microsoft Case Study
Hello,I have attached a report that my group and me have started and I only need a few resources and information to back it up from the book. Can you please help me with this? I can guide you through the book.
Complete 2 mass communications discussion posts
Week 5 DiscussionsTopicThreadsPostsLast PostRespond: Week 5, Topic 1 - Ad Analysis (Req'd.)Contains unread postsView Topic ...
Complete 2 mass communications discussion posts
Week 5 DiscussionsTopicThreadsPostsLast PostRespond: Week 5, Topic 1 - Ad Analysis (Req'd.)Contains unread postsView TopicView Topic in Grid ViewSubscribe Let’s do some pondering. Why is the following commercial effective?Take a look at the American Research Group's "10 Rules for More Effective Advertising." Does the commercial use emotional appeals? Iconic images? Celebrity endorsements? Does it show rather than "tell"? What about this commercial:What is it about this one that's the same / different from the previous ad?So, it this ad effective? Why / why not?Baran and Davis (2009) explain advertisers generally use these tactics:Name calling – giving an idea a bad label to deter message recipients from examining the item or issue more closely.Glittering generality – associating something with a virtue word to win approval without the recipient examining the evidence.Transfer – associating an item or claim to someone or something of authority or prestige to in effect create admiration by association.Testimonial – having a respected or hated person say that a given idea or item is good or bad.Plain Folks – having an idea or item be associated with a person who is “of the people.”Bandwagon – convincing others some idea or item is acceptable because “everyone” thinks so.Card Stacking – careful selection of facts or falsehoods, illustrations or distractions, and logical or illogical statements in order to give the best or worst possible case for an idea or item; for example, selecting arguments or evidence that supports a position and ignoring those that do not support the position. These techniques are not unlike those of propaganda:Propaganda – no-holds-barred use of communication to propagate specific beliefs and expectations.White propaganda – Intentional suppression of potentially harmful information and ideas, combined with deliberate promotion of positive information or ideas to distract attention from problematic events.Black propaganda – Deliberate and strategic transmission of lies.Gray propaganda – Transmission of information or ideas that might or might not be false. No effort is made to determine their validity.Disinformation – False information spread about the opposition to discredit it.Engineered consent – Official use of communication campaigns to reach “good” ends. (Baran and Davis, 2009)20th century propagandists believed that people’s ideas were malleable and could be influenced through adroit information manipulation. In this sense, propaganda is identical to persuasion. Only when it is perceived that an act benefits the source, but not the receiver, can the act or message be called propaganda. To use Brown’s definition (1958), persuasion is “symbol manipulation designed to produce action in others” (p. 299). Persuasive efforts become propaganda “when someone judges that the action which is the goal of the persuasive effort will be advantageous to the persuader but not in the best interests of the persuadee” (p. 300). By this thinking, propaganda includes much of advertising (where the aim is not the good of the receiver but greater sales for the advertiser), most political campaigning (where the aim is not the good of the receiver directly but the candidate’s election), and much of public relations (where the aim is often not the good of the receiver but the most favorable image of the message’s sponsor. Lasswell (1977) defined the major purposes of propaganda as:to mobilize hatred against some enemyto preserve friendshipsto procure cooperationto demoralize opponents In one way or another, all propaganda devices represent faulty arguments. Knowledge of the devices can make people better consumers of information. (For more on how to detect propaganda, you might take a look at this classic article.)Before you tackle the following activity, please make sure you have read the materials at all of the links in this discussion question.(To deepen your understanding, you might also review the advertising theories in the Encyclopedia of Communication Theory and Tony Purvis's essay, "Advertising - A Way of Life" (Chapter 1) in Advertising As Culture.) Let's look at what makes an advertisement successful. Please select and complete one of the following activities.Activity #1:Scan the Internet or the resources in our university library's periodical databases, such as Adflip or this one from Duke University, for an advertisement (in any medium--print, radio, TV, the Internet, etc., so long as you will be able to share it in class). Analyze the ad using those "10 Rules for More Effective Advertising" or the questions in the media literacy lecture. Present your conclusions.You can present your conclusions as a text response to this discussion prompt, or try your hand at a multimedia presentation, such as a narrated PowerPoint, unnarrated PowerPoint with Speaker’s Notes, infographic, Animoto, video, or Prezi. (Please check with your instructor on the preferred format for responses in your class.)Make sure to include the advertisement in your presentation or a link to it, so that we can look at it, too.Activity #2:Alternatively, explain why we need to understand the role that advertising plays in our media and society. For example, what are some of the implications of the ubiquity of advertising in today’s media environment? You can present your conclusions as a text response to this discussion prompt or try your hand at a multimedia presentation, such as a narrated PowerPoint, unnarrated PowerPoint with Speaker’s Notes, infographic, Animoto, video, or Prezi. (Please check with your instructor on the preferred format for responses in your class.) Please post your initial response to this prompt by 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on Thursday; respond to the initial posts of at least two other students by 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on Sunday. (Response required.)References Baran, S. J., and Dennis, D. K. (2009). Mass communication theory: Foundations, ferment, and future. Boston: Wadsworth.Brown, R. (1958). Words and things. New York: Free Press.Lasswell, H.D. (1927). Propaganda technique in the World War. New York: Peter Smith.©2017 University of Maryland University College58Unread for topic Respond: Week 5, Topic 1 - Ad Analysis (Req'd.): (8)View profile card for Loubna IdrissiLoubna Idrissi6 hours agoRespond: Week 5, Topic 2 - PR Ethics (Req'd.)Contains unread posts The public relations field is a kind of stepchild to communications studies. The lines between hucksterism and marketing, advertising, public relations, and propaganda theory are sometimes quite blurred. Also, with the use of cognitive science to learn how to develop successful public relations and advertising campaigns, there are some theorists who argue we may have moved into a “brave new world” of mind control and manipulation.The term “brave new world” comes from social satirist/novelist Aldous Huxley’s science fiction book of the same name, published in 1931. In it, he expresses his horror of American culture (he was British), “particularly the fear of losing individual identity in the fast-paced world of the future. An early trip to the United States gave Brave New World much of its character. . . Huxley [was] outraged by the culture of youth, commercial cheeriness, sexual promiscuity and the inward-looking nature of many Americans” (Commentary from the Vintage Classics edition of Brave New World). This is a fear Apple leveraged successfully in its famous 1984 commercial introducing the Macintosh:Many Hollywood movies, such as “Minority Report,” have explored the kinds of privacy invasions that have come to pass since Huxley and Orwell's musings. Some say these changes are inevitable because the technological developments are responses to consumer trends. For example:Consider these public relations stunts. Think about it; is getting attention in any way possible an appropriate strategy in a long-range plan to manage stakeholder impressions of a brand? Fortunately, many public relations professionals take their jobs very seriously to communicate effectively both within their companies and to the public. Although a public relations “press release” will never have information that disconfirms its main claims or that questions the quality of the person or product being promoted, most PR professionals are good communicators who want to develop good relationships with the public and the media for their clients. Many PR professionals follow the code of ethics developed by the Public Relations Society of America. Before you tackle one the following activities, please make sure you have read the assigned materials for this week. To recap they included pages 544-558 on the history of advertising, public relations and consumerism in Saylor's Understanding Media and Culture, and the information on the advertising and public opinion theories in the Encyclopedia of Communication Theory. Then, select and respond to the questions associated with one of the following two activities. Activity #1:Think about any times when you thought certain ads or public relations initiatives were not being completely straightforward. Then, watch these YouTube two commercials about natural gas extraction through fracking and the BP Oil Spill in the Gulf of Mexico:Exxon-Mobil on fracking:BP Oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico:Select and respond to at least one of the following questions:1. Do you think the “real” Fracking and BP oil spill ads follow the PRSA Code of Ethics? 2. How do the advertisements make it seem as if their positions are fair and reasonable? Do they present opposing points of view?3. Do the mainstream news media regularly cover the potential environmental dangers of fracking? What about the BP spill? Why do you think commercial media, such as NBC, FOX, CNN, and other major networks do not cover environmental issues very much?Activity #2:Alternatively, consider completing this activity. Another important issue is whether the businesses that can purchase commercials on TV, magazines, and billboards drown out the voices of people and organizations with less money but valid messages. Select and respond to at least one of the following questions:1. When we think about “commercial” media – and its most specifically targeted messages through PR or advertising – whose viewpoints get heard and who is ignored? 2. If a democracy relies upon the competition of ideas, whose ideas are being heard? 3. And with the purchase of Internet providers by large corporations, will a wide range of voices be able to be heard on the Internet, or just those that benefit the corporations?Please post your initial response to this prompt by 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on Thursday; respond to the initial posts of at least two other students by 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on Sunday. (Response required.) ReferenceHuxley, A. (1960). Brave new world. (5th ed.) New York: Penguin Vintage Classics.
FAU IKEA Tries to Provide a Living Wage and Taking Responsibility Essay
Read TAKING RESPONSIBILITY – IKEA TRIES TO PROVIDE A LIVING WAGE on page 398 in your textbook.What are some risks and ch ...
FAU IKEA Tries to Provide a Living Wage and Taking Responsibility Essay
Read TAKING RESPONSIBILITY – IKEA TRIES TO PROVIDE A LIVING WAGE on page 398 in your textbook.What are some risks and challenges that IKEA is likely to face as a result of basing its minimum pay on the living-wage formula, rather than just legal requirements and the market rate?Given that IKEA’s management considers the living wage to be consistent with the company’s mission, what advice would you give the company for implementing it successfully?Write an essay of at least 300 words in APA style, with a reference page and cover page. APA requires double space. Your essay will be automatically submitted to Safe Assign so it can be checked for originality. There is not a target for matching but your instructor will be assessing that you have used your own words with proper in-text citations and quotation marks for direct quotes.
5 pages
Np Ex16 1b Ghufranalmutaliq 2
Note: Do not edit this sheet. If your name does not appear in cell B6, please download a new copy of the file from t
Np Ex16 1b Ghufranalmutaliq 2
Note: Do not edit this sheet. If your name does not appear in cell B6, please download a new copy of the file from t
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NUR 4327 Rasmussen Orthopedics Financial Forecasting Memo & Revenue Budget Sheet
APA FORMAT ACTIVE VOICE TIMES ROMAN 12 FREE OF GRAMMATICAL SPELLING SENTENCE STRUCTURE ERRORS FIRM GRASP OF ENGLISH LANGUA ...
NUR 4327 Rasmussen Orthopedics Financial Forecasting Memo & Revenue Budget Sheet
APA FORMAT ACTIVE VOICE TIMES ROMAN 12 FREE OF GRAMMATICAL SPELLING SENTENCE STRUCTURE ERRORS FIRM GRASP OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE ZERO USE OF CONVERSATIONAL ENGLISH IN TEXT CITATIONS REFERENCE PAGE Grading Rubric A=4=Mastery Completed financial forecasting model with correct calculations and comparisons. Exemplary explanation of how the change in payer mix will impact the overall projected revenue of the unit with comprehensive supporting details. Exemplary description of the financial impact of a changing payer mix with comprehensive example(s). Exemplary recommendations for the manager to consider in expenses, so that the budget will balance as neutral with comprehensive example(s). Provided stated ideas with professional language and attribution for credible sources with correct APA citation, spelling, and grammar in the memo.CompetencyApply the principles of economics as they relate to nursing and healthcare.ScenarioThe nurse manager in orthopedics has asked for your assistance with a finance project. She is being asked to estimate revenue for the next fiscal year based on the projected number of hip replacements increasing from 300 this year to 340 next year.The nurse manager must also factor in the expected changes in sources of revenue by payer. It is estimated that the hospital will lose some contracted insurers due to local competition, and see an increase in Medicare and Medicaid patients due to area demographics and economic conditions. She has provided you with the numbers from this year’s budget and the projections on numbers and payment amounts for next year.InstructionsPrepare a financial forecasting memo to your nurse manager that:Part One – Financial Forecasting ModelContains a completed financial forecasting model by downloading the Financial Forecasting Model to:Calculate the income projected from each payer source and total for the year to compare next year’s revenue to this year’s revenue.Provide your nurse manager with your estimates on the increase/ decrease in revenue for next year’s budgeting.Part Two – Financial Forecasting MemoExplains how the change in payer mix will impact the overall projected revenue of the unit.Describes the financial impact of a changing payer mix.Lists recommendations for the manager to consider in expenses, so that the budget will balance as neutral.Provides stated ideas with professional language and attribution for credible sources with correct APA citation, spelling, and grammar in the memo.
University of San Diego Business Project and Microsoft Case Study
Hello,I have attached a report that my group and me have started and I only need a few resources and information to back i ...
University of San Diego Business Project and Microsoft Case Study
Hello,I have attached a report that my group and me have started and I only need a few resources and information to back it up from the book. Can you please help me with this? I can guide you through the book.
Complete 2 mass communications discussion posts
Week 5 DiscussionsTopicThreadsPostsLast PostRespond: Week 5, Topic 1 - Ad Analysis (Req'd.)Contains unread postsView Topic ...
Complete 2 mass communications discussion posts
Week 5 DiscussionsTopicThreadsPostsLast PostRespond: Week 5, Topic 1 - Ad Analysis (Req'd.)Contains unread postsView TopicView Topic in Grid ViewSubscribe Let’s do some pondering. Why is the following commercial effective?Take a look at the American Research Group's "10 Rules for More Effective Advertising." Does the commercial use emotional appeals? Iconic images? Celebrity endorsements? Does it show rather than "tell"? What about this commercial:What is it about this one that's the same / different from the previous ad?So, it this ad effective? Why / why not?Baran and Davis (2009) explain advertisers generally use these tactics:Name calling – giving an idea a bad label to deter message recipients from examining the item or issue more closely.Glittering generality – associating something with a virtue word to win approval without the recipient examining the evidence.Transfer – associating an item or claim to someone or something of authority or prestige to in effect create admiration by association.Testimonial – having a respected or hated person say that a given idea or item is good or bad.Plain Folks – having an idea or item be associated with a person who is “of the people.”Bandwagon – convincing others some idea or item is acceptable because “everyone” thinks so.Card Stacking – careful selection of facts or falsehoods, illustrations or distractions, and logical or illogical statements in order to give the best or worst possible case for an idea or item; for example, selecting arguments or evidence that supports a position and ignoring those that do not support the position. These techniques are not unlike those of propaganda:Propaganda – no-holds-barred use of communication to propagate specific beliefs and expectations.White propaganda – Intentional suppression of potentially harmful information and ideas, combined with deliberate promotion of positive information or ideas to distract attention from problematic events.Black propaganda – Deliberate and strategic transmission of lies.Gray propaganda – Transmission of information or ideas that might or might not be false. No effort is made to determine their validity.Disinformation – False information spread about the opposition to discredit it.Engineered consent – Official use of communication campaigns to reach “good” ends. (Baran and Davis, 2009)20th century propagandists believed that people’s ideas were malleable and could be influenced through adroit information manipulation. In this sense, propaganda is identical to persuasion. Only when it is perceived that an act benefits the source, but not the receiver, can the act or message be called propaganda. To use Brown’s definition (1958), persuasion is “symbol manipulation designed to produce action in others” (p. 299). Persuasive efforts become propaganda “when someone judges that the action which is the goal of the persuasive effort will be advantageous to the persuader but not in the best interests of the persuadee” (p. 300). By this thinking, propaganda includes much of advertising (where the aim is not the good of the receiver but greater sales for the advertiser), most political campaigning (where the aim is not the good of the receiver directly but the candidate’s election), and much of public relations (where the aim is often not the good of the receiver but the most favorable image of the message’s sponsor. Lasswell (1977) defined the major purposes of propaganda as:to mobilize hatred against some enemyto preserve friendshipsto procure cooperationto demoralize opponents In one way or another, all propaganda devices represent faulty arguments. Knowledge of the devices can make people better consumers of information. (For more on how to detect propaganda, you might take a look at this classic article.)Before you tackle the following activity, please make sure you have read the materials at all of the links in this discussion question.(To deepen your understanding, you might also review the advertising theories in the Encyclopedia of Communication Theory and Tony Purvis's essay, "Advertising - A Way of Life" (Chapter 1) in Advertising As Culture.) Let's look at what makes an advertisement successful. Please select and complete one of the following activities.Activity #1:Scan the Internet or the resources in our university library's periodical databases, such as Adflip or this one from Duke University, for an advertisement (in any medium--print, radio, TV, the Internet, etc., so long as you will be able to share it in class). Analyze the ad using those "10 Rules for More Effective Advertising" or the questions in the media literacy lecture. Present your conclusions.You can present your conclusions as a text response to this discussion prompt, or try your hand at a multimedia presentation, such as a narrated PowerPoint, unnarrated PowerPoint with Speaker’s Notes, infographic, Animoto, video, or Prezi. (Please check with your instructor on the preferred format for responses in your class.)Make sure to include the advertisement in your presentation or a link to it, so that we can look at it, too.Activity #2:Alternatively, explain why we need to understand the role that advertising plays in our media and society. For example, what are some of the implications of the ubiquity of advertising in today’s media environment? You can present your conclusions as a text response to this discussion prompt or try your hand at a multimedia presentation, such as a narrated PowerPoint, unnarrated PowerPoint with Speaker’s Notes, infographic, Animoto, video, or Prezi. (Please check with your instructor on the preferred format for responses in your class.) Please post your initial response to this prompt by 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on Thursday; respond to the initial posts of at least two other students by 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on Sunday. (Response required.)References Baran, S. J., and Dennis, D. K. (2009). Mass communication theory: Foundations, ferment, and future. Boston: Wadsworth.Brown, R. (1958). Words and things. New York: Free Press.Lasswell, H.D. (1927). Propaganda technique in the World War. New York: Peter Smith.©2017 University of Maryland University College58Unread for topic Respond: Week 5, Topic 1 - Ad Analysis (Req'd.): (8)View profile card for Loubna IdrissiLoubna Idrissi6 hours agoRespond: Week 5, Topic 2 - PR Ethics (Req'd.)Contains unread posts The public relations field is a kind of stepchild to communications studies. The lines between hucksterism and marketing, advertising, public relations, and propaganda theory are sometimes quite blurred. Also, with the use of cognitive science to learn how to develop successful public relations and advertising campaigns, there are some theorists who argue we may have moved into a “brave new world” of mind control and manipulation.The term “brave new world” comes from social satirist/novelist Aldous Huxley’s science fiction book of the same name, published in 1931. In it, he expresses his horror of American culture (he was British), “particularly the fear of losing individual identity in the fast-paced world of the future. An early trip to the United States gave Brave New World much of its character. . . Huxley [was] outraged by the culture of youth, commercial cheeriness, sexual promiscuity and the inward-looking nature of many Americans” (Commentary from the Vintage Classics edition of Brave New World). This is a fear Apple leveraged successfully in its famous 1984 commercial introducing the Macintosh:Many Hollywood movies, such as “Minority Report,” have explored the kinds of privacy invasions that have come to pass since Huxley and Orwell's musings. Some say these changes are inevitable because the technological developments are responses to consumer trends. For example:Consider these public relations stunts. Think about it; is getting attention in any way possible an appropriate strategy in a long-range plan to manage stakeholder impressions of a brand? Fortunately, many public relations professionals take their jobs very seriously to communicate effectively both within their companies and to the public. Although a public relations “press release” will never have information that disconfirms its main claims or that questions the quality of the person or product being promoted, most PR professionals are good communicators who want to develop good relationships with the public and the media for their clients. Many PR professionals follow the code of ethics developed by the Public Relations Society of America. Before you tackle one the following activities, please make sure you have read the assigned materials for this week. To recap they included pages 544-558 on the history of advertising, public relations and consumerism in Saylor's Understanding Media and Culture, and the information on the advertising and public opinion theories in the Encyclopedia of Communication Theory. Then, select and respond to the questions associated with one of the following two activities. Activity #1:Think about any times when you thought certain ads or public relations initiatives were not being completely straightforward. Then, watch these YouTube two commercials about natural gas extraction through fracking and the BP Oil Spill in the Gulf of Mexico:Exxon-Mobil on fracking:BP Oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico:Select and respond to at least one of the following questions:1. Do you think the “real” Fracking and BP oil spill ads follow the PRSA Code of Ethics? 2. How do the advertisements make it seem as if their positions are fair and reasonable? Do they present opposing points of view?3. Do the mainstream news media regularly cover the potential environmental dangers of fracking? What about the BP spill? Why do you think commercial media, such as NBC, FOX, CNN, and other major networks do not cover environmental issues very much?Activity #2:Alternatively, consider completing this activity. Another important issue is whether the businesses that can purchase commercials on TV, magazines, and billboards drown out the voices of people and organizations with less money but valid messages. Select and respond to at least one of the following questions:1. When we think about “commercial” media – and its most specifically targeted messages through PR or advertising – whose viewpoints get heard and who is ignored? 2. If a democracy relies upon the competition of ideas, whose ideas are being heard? 3. And with the purchase of Internet providers by large corporations, will a wide range of voices be able to be heard on the Internet, or just those that benefit the corporations?Please post your initial response to this prompt by 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on Thursday; respond to the initial posts of at least two other students by 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on Sunday. (Response required.) ReferenceHuxley, A. (1960). Brave new world. (5th ed.) New York: Penguin Vintage Classics.
FAU IKEA Tries to Provide a Living Wage and Taking Responsibility Essay
Read TAKING RESPONSIBILITY – IKEA TRIES TO PROVIDE A LIVING WAGE on page 398 in your textbook.What are some risks and ch ...
FAU IKEA Tries to Provide a Living Wage and Taking Responsibility Essay
Read TAKING RESPONSIBILITY – IKEA TRIES TO PROVIDE A LIVING WAGE on page 398 in your textbook.What are some risks and challenges that IKEA is likely to face as a result of basing its minimum pay on the living-wage formula, rather than just legal requirements and the market rate?Given that IKEA’s management considers the living wage to be consistent with the company’s mission, what advice would you give the company for implementing it successfully?Write an essay of at least 300 words in APA style, with a reference page and cover page. APA requires double space. Your essay will be automatically submitted to Safe Assign so it can be checked for originality. There is not a target for matching but your instructor will be assessing that you have used your own words with proper in-text citations and quotation marks for direct quotes.
5 pages
Np Ex16 1b Ghufranalmutaliq 2
Note: Do not edit this sheet. If your name does not appear in cell B6, please download a new copy of the file from t
Np Ex16 1b Ghufranalmutaliq 2
Note: Do not edit this sheet. If your name does not appear in cell B6, please download a new copy of the file from t
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