LAET UGC

WELCOME TO MY HOMEWORKS ENGLISH

lunes, 11 de julio de 2011

Abstract

La desnutricionen niños desde el nacimiento hasta los 5 años en cabo san lucas periodo 2008-2010

 Esta investigacion se titula la dsesnutricion en niños desde el nacimiento hasta los 5 años en cabo san lucas periodo 2008-2010 de tipo basica realizada por la investigadora Luz Maria Aniceto Hernandez en ciencia medica sector nutricion y ciencias de los alimentos en la Universisdad del Golfo de California, Cabo San Lucas, Los Cabos, Baja California Sur, Mexico con un costo de $9720 M.N del 9 de mayo al 8 de agosto 2011.

Esta investigación tenia por objetivo conocer la desnutrición de niños menores de 5 años en Cabo San Lucas, Los Cabos, Baja California Sur, México periodo 2008-2010, sin embargo debido a que no existe información disponible sobre el tema anterior, una alternativa de investigación seria acerca de la desnutrición en el estado de Baja California Sur.
This research is titled dsesnutricion in children from birth to 5 years in Cabo San Lucas for 2008-2010 type basic research conducted by Maria Luz Hernandez Aniceto medical science and nutrition sector, food science in the Gulf Universisdad California, Cabo San Lucas, Los Cabos, Baja California Sur, Mexico at a cost of $ 9,720 MN 9 May to August 8, 2011.

This research is aimed to know about  the malnutrition of children under 5 years in Baja California Sur, Mexico 2008-2011


lunes, 27 de junio de 2011

16. CONVERSATION

 16. CONVERSATION
TEAM:
IGNACIO
ARMANDO
KAMITZU
STARBUCK’S HISTORY:
  The story of Starbucks Coffee History begins in Seattle in 1971, when three friends with a passion for fresh coffee, Jerry Baldwin, Zev Siegl and Gordon Bowker, opened a small shop and began selling fresh-roasted, gourmet coffee beans and roasting accessories.
  STARBUCK’S PRODUCTS:
  Starbucks sells drip brewed coffee, espresso-based hot drinks, other hot and cold drinks, coffee beans, salads, hot and cold sandwiches and Panini, pastries, snacks, and items such as mugs and tumblers.
STARBUCK’S COMPANY:
Traded as: NASQAD.
Starbucks corporation is an international coffee and coffeehouse chain based in seattle, Washington.
  Starbucks is the largest coffeehouse company in the world with 17009 stores in 50 countries, and 137,000 employees in 2010.

STARBUCK’S MARKETING STRATEGY:
SLOGAN:
Feeding the human spirit person to person, cup
a cup, and community to community.

The most of the time starbucks coffeehouse is localized in geographic small areas.
STARBUCK’S LOGO:
     In 2006, Valerie O'Neil, a Starbucks spokeswoman, said that the logo is an image of a "twin-tailed siren". The logo has been significantly streamlined over the years. In the first version, which was based on a 17th-century "Norse" woodcut, the Starbucks siren was topless and had a fully visible double fish tail.

 STARBUCK’S MARKETING:
      The Starbucks Corporation and its successful marketing strategies are definitely something that anyone interested in business can learn about:
1.Perfect Cup of Coffee”.
2.Customer Satisfaction
3.Innovation”.
4.Brand Marketing”

15. HIRING PROCEDURES

Hiring Procedures

By:
Alfredo Pacheco Espinoza.
Luz María Aniceto Hernández.
Rosa Danya Cárdenas Quiñones.

Introduction
         This presentation provides you with the tools you need to increase your efficiency in hiring and retaining employees. We will discuss writing a detailed job description, provide a guide for developing an employment application form. Taking the steps outlined here will help increase your odds of attracting, hiring, and retaining good employees; and it will reduce the likelihood of low morale, low productivity, and staff turnover.

 Hiring was never meant to be easy...
Selecting job applicants to interview, drafting good interview questions, and ultimately deciding which person to hire can be a daunting challenge. An effective and efficient hiring process is essential to your personal and business success.
The Cost of Hiring
Consider what it costs to hire a new employee, from the time the position opens until the employee becomes productive.
  Take the Time to Hire
Why take the time?
Consider the following:
•Make the right decision the first time.
•Hire someone who has the same goals and work ethic.
•Hire the best person for the job.
•Determine if any of the job candidates have the skills to exceed core job functions.
•Hire a qualified individual who will work and interact well with others. 
The steps to Hiring
The hiring process includes recruiting, processing, eliminating, and selecting.
Step I: Create a job description
A good job description provides a summary of the tasks to be performed and states specific position requirements.  


Step II: Develop an application for employment
A well-designed employment application form is a critical management tool. It generates a detailed overview of a candidate’s work history, skills, interests, and education; and it organizes all applicants’ biographical data to facilitate comparison. 
 
Step III: Interview the candidates
The interview is an opportunity for you and a prospective employee to learn more about each other; it allows you to go over information disclosed on the application and to ask questions and assess the applicant’s personality, character, verbal skills, and ability to reason through tough questions.
The personal interview allows you to get a feel for the person, which is impossible by simply reading an employment application.

 
Step IV: Gather data…
Write down your opinions as you progress through the hiring process. Sometimes the top candidate on paper is less impressive in person. 

 
Step V: Make the offer
         Once you have made your choice for the job, call the applicant immediately and make a verbal offer.
  Step VI: Notify rejected applicants
Rejection letters should always be sent to candidates who were interviewed either on the telephone or in person. It helps portray the company as a fair employer; you want to maintain a good reputation and be respectful of all applicants. 


Step VII: Define the Introductory Employment Period
If you designate a period of time immediately after hiring for determining if the new hire is right for the job, use the term “introductory” period, not “probationary” or “trial” period. 

 Completing the Hiring Process
Retention of interview files.
•Establishing a filing system:
–Employee and Personnel files.
–Filing by individual.
–Filing by position.
 

14. WORKING CONDITIONS

  TEAM:
DENISE
DALIA
JAZ

14. WORKING CONDITIONS
What working conditions are ?
          It refers to the working environment and to the non-pay aspects of an employee’s. It covers such matters as the organization of work and work activities; training, skills and employability; health, safety and well-being; and working time and work-life balance




          Working hours and holidays are now subject to a raft of legislation aimed at making sure that workers get a reasonable work-life balance that will reduce stress and increase performance. Working hours are restricted to minimum levels although there are some exceptions and loopholes. There are a number of different types of leave as well; annual holiday allowances, compassionate leave, maternity and parental leave to name just a few. 


          Health and safety in the workplace is an area that has some of the strongest rules that embody workers' rights in law. The Working Conditions category looks at rules and regulations surrounding health and safety and also at family commitments, pay issues, employment contracts and much more. 



13. DIFFICULT COLLEGUES

 Difficult Colleagues

TEAM: BY

TANIA, IVON, XITLALY








12. PROMOTIONAL TOOLS

Promotional Tools


The correct use of promotional Tools 


By:
Jocelyn Del Valle
Vianey Ruiz
Carlos Alejandro Rascon




In marketing companies can use different kind of techniques to improve the sales work this techniques are also known Tools. This tools are :

1.Websites :


2.Direct mail


3.Brochures


4. Press Releases


5. Case studies


6.Referrals


7. Expertise



8. Newsletters


9. Affiliate programs


10. Voice mail



Thats all

10. WHY SHOULD MANAGERS TAKE TIME MANAGEMENT MORE SERIOUSLY

TEAM:
BRIAN
DENISE
EDER

PLAN TIME

Make sure your collegues
priopities
  • the plan has to be flexible.
  • the schedule available
MANAGER:
1. Who waste a lot of time (death time)
2.the relation between the employees
sucess of the company $$$
coustomer service.

8. PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE


TEAM:
ROSA IRIS PEREZ 
LUZ MARIA 

Product life cycle management 
is the succession of strategies used by business management as a product goes through its life cycle. The conditions in which a product is sold (advertising, saturation) changes over time and must be managed as it moves through its succession of stages.

TO SAY THAT A PRODUCT HAS A LIFE CYCLE IS TO ASSERT THREE THINGS:
Ø  Products have a limited life.
Ø  Product sales pass through distinct stages, each posing different challenges, opportunities, and problems to the seller.
Ø  Products require different marketing, financing, manufacturing, purchasing, and human resource strategies in each life cycle stage.
The four main stages of a product's life cycle and the accompanying characteristics are: 
1.MARKET INTRODUCTION STAGE
Ø  Coats are very high
Ø  slow sales volumes to start
Ø  little or no competition
Ø  demand has to be created
Ø  customers have to be prompted to try the product makes no money at this stage
2.GROWTH STAGE
  
v  costs reduced due to economies of scale
v  sales volumen increases significantly
v  profitability begins to rise
v  public awareness increases
v  competition begins to increase with a  few newplayers in establishing market
v  increased competition leads to price decrease.
3.Maturity stage
  • costs are lowered as a result of production volumes increasing and experience curve effects
  • sales volume peaks and market saturation is reached
  • increase in competitors entering the market
  • prices tend to drop due to the proliferation of competing products
  • brand differentiation and feature diversification is emphasized to maintain or increase market share Industrial profits go down
4.Saturation and decline stage
Ø  costs bécame counter-optimal
Ø  sales volume decline or stabilize
Ø  prices, profitability diminish
Ø  profit becomes more a challenge of  production/distribution efficiency than  increased sales

7. BANK ORGANIZATION

Bank Organization



The structure in a bank


By:
Jocelyn Del Valle
Dalia Ortiz
Yahaira Alcala
Reynaldo Perez


In this section you will find some information about how is conforom a bank:





Definition: An organization, usually a corporation ,chartered by a state or federal goverment.


Functions:Receives demand deposits and time deposits,honors instruments drawn on them, and pays interest on them;discount notes, makes loans, and invests in securities;collects cheks,drafts, and notes;certifies depositor's checks; and issuesdrafts and cashier's checks.



Size of bank:


The Benefits:




The basic organization :


Principal deparmets in a bank:

1. Banking Division:


2. Administration division:


3.Dealing division:


4. Corporate finance division:


5. Investment management division: 


All this areas are in charge of one CEO in every deparment  they are the people that supervise all the development and the differents works of every worker.



Finally here is an chart structure of one of the most important banks in Mexico and the world:



¡ Thats all !