In the following table, the profits from a duopoly model of competition are shown. Firms 1 and 2 simultaneously choose the quantity of outputs to produce. Each firm is restricted to producing 25, 35, 50 or 100 units of output. Is there a Nash equilibrium? What is it? Briefly explain.
Firm 2
|
Q2 = 25 |
35 |
50 |
100 |
||
|
Q1 = 25 |
125, 125 |
100, 140 |
63, 125 |
-63, -250 |
|
|
Firm 1 |
35 |
140, 100 |
105, 105 |
53, 75 |
-123, -350 |
|
50 |
125, 63 |
75, 53 |
0, 0 |
-250, -500 |
|
|
100 |
-250, -63 |
-350, -130 |
-500,-250 |
-900, -900 |
In: Economics
Given the production possibility schedule, answer the following questions.
Production Possibility Schedule
Product A B C D E F
Tanks 0 1 2 3 4 5
Automobiles 1,000 950 850 650 350 0
(a) Graph the PPF for this schedule. What happens to the opportunity cost of each additional tank in terms of automobiles as one moves from A to F? What accounts for this?
(b) Given the production possibility schedule, what can be said about a combination of four (4) tanks and 650 automobiles?
(c) Given the production possibility schedule, what can be said about a combination of three (3) tanks and 350 automobiles?
In: Economics
In approximately 350 words, please answer the following question(s):
What is the primary difference between a moral theory and a moral code? Have your personal, everyday ethical decisions been based upon a particular moral code or moral theory? If so, what code or theory? And finally, what reasons/factors led to your adoption of that particular moral code or moral theory?
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
In approximately 350 words, please answer the following question(s):
Would you describe your personal approach to morality as primarily consequentialist, nonconsequentialist, or some combination of both? What reasons do you have for adopting this particular approach? Please explain.
In: Psychology
2) Decide whether the following statements are true or false. Explain your reasoning.
a) For a given standard error, lower confidence levels produce wider confidence intervals.
b) If you increase sample size, the width of confidence intervals will increase.
c) The statement, "the 95% confidence interval for the population mean is (350, 400)", is equivalent to the statement, "there is a 95% probability that the population mean is between 350 and 400".
d) To reduce the width of a confidence interval by a factor of two (i.e., in half), you have to quadruple the sample size.
e) Assuming the central limit theorem applies, confidence intervals are always valid.
f) The statement, "the 95% confidence interval for the population mean is (350, 400)" means that 95% of the population values are between 350 and 400.
g) If you take large random samples over and over again from the same population, and make 95% confidence intervals for the population average, about 95% of the intervals should contain the population average.
h) If you take large random samples over and over again from the same population, and make 95% confidence intervals for the population average, about 95% of the intervals should contain the sample average.
i) It is necessary that the distribution of the variable of interest follows a normal curve.
j) A 95% confidence interval obtained from a random sample of 1000 people has a better chance of containing the population percentage than a 95% confidence interval obtained from a random sample of 500 people.
k) If you make go through life making 99% confidence intervals for all sorts of population means, about 1% of the time the intervals won't cover their respective population means.
In: Statistics and Probability
Sweet leaf tea
In March 2010, Clayton Christopher announced to his employees and all of the fans of sweet Leaf tea that he was leaving the company and handing leadership to an outsider, Dan Costello. Clayton’s final act was to send an email to his employees praising their performance and integrity, which helped grow sweet leaf tea to the number one ready to drink tea at whole foods. In his email, he wrote that after his departure he hoped: We will not sacrifice the magic of this brand and thus jeopardize the love affair we have created with our consumers in order to save a few dollars on our path up the mountain.
Tea Drinkers Heaven
The ready to drink tea market was consistently ranked as one of
the fastest growing new product entries in the early twenty- first
century. In 2007 total sales if tea equaled $6.85 billion, almost a
third od which were ready to drink ( RTD) or bottled tea. Tea is
high in antioxidants, has health boosting properties and is either
all natural or organic which might be the reason more people were
move from traditional carbonate drinks to healthy options like
Sweet Leaf Tea . between 2003-and 2008 the RTD category grew by 65
%. In the southern United States, tea has long been a popular
beverage choice. It is usually served cold and sweetened. It can be
found in any restaurant, mom and pop store or at a road- side stop.
From moonshine to big time Clayton Christopher and David Smith were
always fans of sweet tea and loved their Grandma’s recipe. But they
couldn’t find any good bottled tea that tasted as good as what
Grandma made. Their grandma made sweet tea by brewing teabags
for3-4 minutes. Then she would pour that freshly brewed tea over
ice and add natural sugarcane to make it sweet. In 1997 they
founded Sweet Leaf Tea ( SLT) to fill this void, and hoped that
others would enjoy their Grandma’s recipe as much as they did.
Initially their production and marketing more closely resembled
that of a moonshine producer than that of the multi Million- dollar
brand it today. They used giant crawfish pans to boil the water and
pillowcase as giant tea bags to brew the tea. To distribution the
bottled beverages they had an old fun down van. Clayton and David
moved Sweet leaf Tea from Beaumont to Austin, Texas after a couple
of years and started using an automated system to make the tea.
But, they always remained true to their grandma’s recipe. Sweet
Leaf Tea’s only competitive advantage was its superior flavor
compared to other ready to drink teas like Arizona, Snapple,
Lipton, and Nestea. In 2008 SLT had $12 million in revenue and was
available in 30 percent of the US market. In March 2009, Nestle
Waters purchase as third of Sweet Leaf Tea for $16.5 Million. With
large investment from Nestle waters also came a new president, Dan
Costello a former executive at Nestle Waters North America. Growing
their brand Beverages tend to be low-involvement products, but also
a unique in that everyone has a favorite drink, which make it very
personal Sweet Leaf Tea had to find ways to develop a following of
customers
without a big advertising budget. They focused on sampling at music
Festivals, products placement on shows like MTV’s Real World and
CBS’s big Brother as well as Making sure they had a clear brand
personality. Clayton and David worked with Lyon Advertising to
create a brand personality that would represent who they were, laid
back and fun, but did not forget Clayton’s Grandma Mimi. SLT could
build a large fun base they needed people to try their product. In
an interview conducted by Inc. Magazine Clayton stated “ Sampling
is the best form of marketing You’ve got to get the product past
people’s lips. In 2002 they started partnering with music festivals
like Austin City Limit ( ACL ) lollapalooza, South by south West
(SXSW) and country Thunder. The folks attending the festivals were
thirsty and willing to try new drinks. This also allowed then to
target their core target audience – young (25-45) laid back hip,
and health conscious beverage drinkers. Initially, ninety percent
of their advertising budget went to sampling (Inc). Focusing their
sampling program during music festivals allowed them to target
masses of people at a time when they were thirsty such as the dead
of summer in Texas, Chicago and Arizona. SLT realized very early,
however , that they needed to be on store shelves if they wanted
their customers to find and buy the product. Selling their product
at a few music festivals a year wouldn’t be enough to keep them in
business. Their first major store partnership was with whole foods
(WF) in 2002, which launched them on store shelves in the greater
Texas market. Adi Wilk, the former marketing manager at SLT stated
that the Whole Food Partnership “lifted the brand” in 2006 whole
food expanded the SLT market to all of their stores in the US.
Along with the Whole Foods partnership they also found distribution
through partnerships with 7-11 stores, placement in Texas school
vending machines, and at army bases. This allowed fans that may
have tried SLT at lollapalooza to find it in Chicago, or people
that traveled to Austin for ACL or SXSW to find it in New York at
their local whole Foods stores. SLT’s communication strategy had
traditionally focused on connecting to their customers their
partnership with WF, however, helped them grow the brand by being
on the shelves of national chain store and also helped them connect
to other distributors. But more importantly was that SLT the built
a strong connection with their customers, with most of them willing
to search far and wide for a bottle for SLT. This truly helped them
become a successful company. In 2008, with an infusion of money
from Catterton partner, a Connecticut - based private equity firm,
and Nestle Waters North America Inc, SLT had expanded their
marketing beyond sampling and store partnerships. In 2009 they had
three major advertising updates- 1) they launched a new website (2)
hired a dedicated Twitter Write (3) and added a team of Facebook
managers for the fan page. SLT empowered every employee to be a
spokesperson for the brand- with even their receptionist talking a
core part in their Twitter and Facebook posts.
Communications Role
Initially the core communication for Sweet Leaf Tea, was through
direct to customer marketing at music festivals. The owners,
Clayton and David, were at the Music Festivals handing out their
product. This allowed customers to meet the people behind the
beverage and link friendly faces to a good beverage. Also the
association with music festivals may have helped the brand develop
the Cool and Fun image they were pushing. Once SLT had expanded
beyond the central Texas market they needed to find a way to stay
connected to their customers and keep that direct to customer
communication active. The infusion of money from
both Catterton partners and Nestle waters allowed them to expand
their communication strategy beyond music festivals and their core
website. Their Facebook fans matched the same target audience they
first had a t music festivals. Their blog, Facebook, and Twitter
pages allowed them to continue that face to face communication
Clayton and David started at the music festivals, but in the
digital world. Their Facebook and Twitter communication reflected
the brand and the Culture of the Company. At the time, these two
sites were used for announcement about the brand or to communicate
special evet taking place during music festivals. As an example
during 2009 SXSW they also used Twitter to announce a free concert
and used Facebook to get people to RSVP to the event. In one week
they had 4,500 people registered on Facebook for the free concert.
Another advertising advance SLT made in 2009 was using mobile
technology to get consumers to search for their product and receive
free sample. SLT was one of the first companies to give away real
samples using Gowalla Gowalla was a location game that encouraged
people to find a virtual item in a real-world place. Gowalla
allowed then to use virtual sampling of a product and connect it to
real world sampling.
Questions :
1- What are the strength and weakness of SLT’s corporate Culture in the terms id communications, as described in the case ? 2- Considering the relationship the brand had with its audience, should Clayton have reached out to customers to announce he was leaving ? 3- What challenges do you see for SLT’s new management ? 4- What role should corporate communication paly at SLT to help the company advance its strategic goals? 5- As clayton’s replacement would you change the way SLT communicated with its customers, or who was allowed to ? why or why not ?
In: Operations Management
What are the importance of a strong Co-operative Board of Directors in bringing cooperative success and addressing the economic and social problems of co-operative members?
In: Economics
What are the key elements of World Co.’s supply chain strategy? (From "Supply Chain Management at World Co." Case Study)
In: Operations Management
Apple Corporation issued $360,000 of 6%,10-year bonds on January 1,2021,for $311,076. This price provided a yield of 8%on the bonds. Interest is payable semiannually on June 30 and December 31. If Apple uses the effective-interest method and the fiscal year-end is on October 31, the amount of interest expense reported on the income statement for the year ended October 31,
2021 should be:
In: Finance
In: Finance
Bolka Corporation, a merchandising company, reported the following results for October:
| Sales | $ 418,000 |
|---|---|
| Cost of goods sold (all variable) | $ 175,500 |
| Total variable selling expense | $ 23,700 |
| Total fixed selling expense | $ 21,800 |
| Total variable administrative expense | $ 16,200 |
| Total fixed administrative expense | $ 34,300 |
The contribution margin for October is:
Multiple Choice
$202,600
$361,900
$146,500
In: Accounting