Borders Group Essays

  • Borders Group Developing Strategy

    698 Words  | 2 Pages

    prospects and tasks facing in the Company. Precisely those challenges involve commodifying in the group main product types and an enormously competitive marketplace including both stores based and online competitors. Product arrangements those are already grown from material formats to digital format and borders own forfeiture of market share. These issues among others have subsidized to failures in borders equivalent store sales procedures and in their sales per geographical measures over the last few

  • Borders Group, A Failed Business

    1599 Words  | 4 Pages

    Choice The company I chose to do research on is Borders Group, Inc. “Borders Group, Inc. is now the second largest bookstore in the world” (Hoover's company profiles, 2011). This is a company that I just recently found out about. I love book stores and living in a town where the bookstores are very few that when I am out of town I am looking for a Barnes & Nobles or Books-A-Million to visit before returning home. On one of my last trips I discovered Borders. To me this place was another great book store

  • Critical Appraisal Of Amazon.Com Current E-Business Strategy And Activities

    1477 Words  | 3 Pages

    com Aug 10 2000 Press release Amazon.com and Toysrus.com Announce Strategic Alliance, Available from http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=97664&p=IROL-NewsText&t=Regular&id=229637& 4. Amazon.com Apr 11 2001 Press release Amazon.com and Borders Group Announce Strategic Alliance, Available from http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=97664&p=IROL-NewsText&t=Regular&id=165430& 5. InformIt.com E-Business 2.0 Emerging Business Models Available at http://www.informit.com/articles/article

  • The Significance of Amazon Kindle on the Online Book Industry

    844 Words  | 2 Pages

    According to the book industry experts there are various factors that have been accelerating the book sales (Jaworski et al., 2001). Most prominently a large number of books are being sold on stand-alone superstores at fully discounted prices such as Borders, Bookstar, Barnes & Nobles etc. An imperative need for the establishment of superstores was actually realized in the 1970s when some bookstores such as Tattered Cover in Denver started to develop the gathering places in their neighbourhood (Rangaswamy

  • The Borderlands: 1880 - 1940

    1596 Words  | 4 Pages

    rest of the world. In the past the region's economy was based on ranching and farming. As the region became more urbanized the economy changed. The economy did not change equally between the United States and Mexico, the United States' side of the border boomed while Mexico's side did not. The cities that did prosper in region were based on the actions of the United States. Actions that affected the cities in Mexico were Prohibition and the Great depression. Events in the United States were not the

  • Border Security and Transatlantic Counter-Terrorism Measures

    3075 Words  | 7 Pages

    Border Security and Transatlantic Counter-Terrorism Measures ABSTRACT: The United States and the European Union share common values, economic interests, and security challenges. The expansion of the European Union into the countries which were under the Soviet sphere of influence continues to complicate the internal border security of the European Union. Given the liberalization of trade within the EU and in turn into the US, the port and border security of each trading partner is connected

  • A Case for Open Borders

    1838 Words  | 4 Pages

    A Case for Open Borders In his address to a joint session of Congress on January 8, 1918, President Woodrow Wilson declared freedom of the seas in times of peace and war. Looking back, it seems ridiculous to think that anyone could challenge the right of individuals to navigate the oceans freely. However, fast-forward to the twenty-first century and we can see an analogous debate over the issue of immigration rights, with territorial borders being the main topic of discussion. The system of

  • Devil's Highway is Dangerous Stretch in Arizona

    820 Words  | 2 Pages

    illegally enter the United States. While attempting to cross this strip of land immigrants face discomfort from the elements on top of a fear being detected and apprehended by boarder control. Many Immigrants will do anything to avoid being discovered by border control. In their efforts to avoid being apprehend immigrants may run away from not only law enforcement, but also those traveling with them, including those leading them across the unfamiliar desert. These immigrants find themselves lost and alone

  • The Coming Anarchy, by Robert D. Kaplan

    1210 Words  | 3 Pages

    Robert D. Kaplan’s article “The Coming Anarchy," is best summarized by the following quote, which identifies the different factors that he evaluates throughout his article, “To understand the events of the next fifty years, then, one must understand environmental scarcity, cultural and racial clash, geographic destiny, and the transformation of war.” (Kaplan, 1994) This is the framework that he uses to make his supporting arguments and thus this summary will be broken down into these four main parts

  • Levinas on the Border(s)

    3874 Words  | 8 Pages

    Levinas on the Border(s) ABSTRACT: This essay explores my own situation of teaching philosophy in a more or less traditional undergraduate setting but in a way that is especially relevant to the theme of this Congress, namely, the theme of "philosophy educating humanity." In my case, I teach philosophy but from a perspective that is non-traditional and which undercuts the standard questions originating from and orienting around a "philosophia perennia." Specifically, I teach philosophy of religion

  • Life on the Border

    1312 Words  | 3 Pages

    Life on the Border I used to be a person who was hung up on material possessions. I was always wanting more, never satisfied with what I had. Whenever I would go to the mall, I would want everything that I saw. If I had money I would always spend it. I was constantly buying things that I didn’t need or only used once. I felt like I was unfortunate because I didn’t have a new outfit every week, and I couldn’t get a new pair of shoes every time I walked out the door, but that all changed the summer

  • Virtual Communities, Open Communication, and the End of Nationalism

    1233 Words  | 3 Pages

    People have boundaries that are constructed by them to keep unwanted intruders from penetrating. Similarly, countries have the same type of boundaries and borders, both serve as checkpoints and to identify what is trying to penetrate their borders. If we would be willing to create a stronger sense of tolerance and equality, rather than such a strong sense of nationalistic views that tend to separate people, using the technology of the 21st century, then we can actually harness the power, and break

  • Global Business

    1448 Words  | 3 Pages

    Essay 1 – CAGE Framework In the text Redefining Global Strategy, Pankaj Ghemawat discusses a method of indentifying the various differences that can exist between two countries, and that must be addressed when considering cross-border operations. This method is called the CAGE Framework. CAGE is an acronym used to describe the cultural, administrative, geographic, and economic distances that can exist between multiple countries. While methods of measuring physical and psychic distance have been

  • Hispanic Girls Growing up on the Border

    2371 Words  | 5 Pages

    Hispanic Girls Growing up on the Border The Southwest United States is an area of great diversity. It is located on the border between the US and Mexico. In this region there are four main ethnicities represented: Hispanics, African Americans, Anglo Americans, and Native Americans. These groups interact daily working in the same offices and going to school together. Youth of each ethnicity face risks as they grow up. By focusing on the Hispanic adolescent girl the extent of the possible

  • Cali Cartel vs. Tijuana Cartel

    959 Words  | 2 Pages

    The drug trade is a very large and complex system. There are many different organizations involved at different levels. There are groups that operate only in growing and selling the product, and only groups that buy and distribute the drugs. In this essay I will discuss the similarities and differences of two of the largest growers and sellers in the drug trade: The Cali Cartel of Columbia and the Tijuana Cartel of Mexico. The Cali Cartel is the largest, richest, and most complex producers and distributors

  • Promoting a Package For a Newly Formed Company

    924 Words  | 2 Pages

    that trade. My company will be world-wide, which will attract the young female group aged between 18-30, as the bags produced will be used as a fashion accessory. I will produce designs for: Ø A logo for the company Ø A suitable business card Ø A appropriate letter head Ø A introductory leaflet to show the client what services the company offers Logo research [IMAGE]This logo has not got a border around it, but it still looks Neatly presented. There is a bright colour used

  • The Debt-for-Nature Swap

    2033 Words  | 5 Pages

    developing nations has captured the attention of many environmental groups in the global North. Since the vast majority of the Earth's plant and animal life lies within the borders of developing nations, efforts to protect global biodiversity through the promotion of environmental conservation have largely been focused in the global South. Because of this regional focus, financial mechanisms have been seen as an effective way for groups in the industrialized North to promote their environmental interests

  • Jumping the Border

    2574 Words  | 6 Pages

    Jumping the Border Imagine this, living in a very small town, smaller than Kachina Village, with only one store where you could make and receive phone calls, there are no public phones, no residential phone lines, no electricity and no running water. The roads are not paved until you get to the main road where people travel the most. The next town is about thirty minutes away, and there is only one bus that comes to this small town once a week, so people can go shopping and do other things

  • The Habsburg Monarchy

    2987 Words  | 6 Pages

    relative autonomy was sustained. I will split this answer up into two sections; the Cisleithanian (Austrian) and the Hungarian parts of the empire. Both dealt with the nationalities within their borders differently and consequently were faced with varied political parties representing the demands of their group. The Habsburg Monarchy ruled over a nations of poor, more backward countries of Europe; and in an age where small countries tend to get absorbed by their more powerful neighbours, national minorities

  • Kashmir

    801 Words  | 2 Pages

    land, beautiful lakes, covered with thick green forests and produce verity of fruits. Area, 84471 sq.: miles; with boundaries with Pakistan, India, china and Afghanistan. Population, About 5 million consisting of 77% Muslim. Borders with Pakistan 902 miles and borders with India 307 miles. Brief History, The state of Kashmir came into existence in 1848 when Lord Lawrence the Governor General of British India sold the area to Gulab Singh a leader of Hindu dogra tribe for RS 7.5 million. Dogra