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Quaker Oats, 2002. A business profile of the Quaker Oats Company. 2,855 words (approx. 11.4 pages), 10 sources, MLA, $ 84.95 »
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Abstract This paper provides an insight into the Quaker Oats Company, a manufacturer and marketer of packaged food and sports beverage products. It shows how the company manufactures hot and ready-to-eat cereals, pancake syrups, grain-based snacks, cornmeal, hominy grits and flavored rice products and how it owns numerous trademarks such as Quaker, Cap'n Crunch, Life, Quaker Toasted Oatmeal and Gatorade products. It examines the history of the company from its foundation in 1901, when several American pioneers in oat milling joined together to incorporate under the name the Quaker Oats Company to the multi million company it is today. It looks at some of its marketing techniques and some of the manufacturing processes.
From the Paper "The Quaker Oats Company markets many of its products to children. Perhaps one of its best examples is what it has done with its breakfast cereal, Cap?n Crunch. Created in 1963, Cap'n Horatio Crunch is a fun-loving sea captain cartoon character. According to Quaker Oats and its marketing department, he was born and raised on Crunch Island, which is located in the Milk Sea. He wears a blue captain's uniform, and a large blue captain's hat. His ship is the S.S. Guppy, which he sails with his first mate, Seadog (1963), and his crew of four kids. Their mission is to keep the cargo hold of cereal from falling into the hands of Jean La Foote the Barefoot Pirate (1968). Competition for the market share will continue to be fierce among major U.S. food companies. Kellogg?s, Post, and General Mills. Relying on heavy advertisement support, the companies ? including Quaker Oats ? will continue to fight for market share.""
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The Quaker Oats Case, 1998. An in-depth look at the failed merger between Quaker Oats and Snapple Beverages. 4,304 words (approx. 17.2 pages), 22 sources, MLA, $ 113.95 »
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Abstract This paper discusses why the hyped-up merger of food giants, Quaker Oats and Snapple Beverages, was doomed to fail from the start. It identifies the three major reasons for the failure as distribution problems, stagnant industries, and rival wars.
Introduction
Abstract
Issues
Issue #1: Distribution
Issue #1: Alternatives and Recommendations
Issue # 2: Stagnant or Declining Industries
Strategy Options in Stagnant or Declining Industries
Issue #3: Rivals War
Strategy Option in Rivals War
Financial Calculations and Situations
Current Situation
Bibliographies
From the Paper "In 1996, more than 10,000 mergers took place. Merging has become a trendy activity but only a few mergers have succeeded. Mergers offer several advantages some of them are to maximize profits, to increase market share, to offer a quick growth, to strengthen market position and to unify sales. Are they guaranteed to succeed? It is difficult to predict and yet companies keep on merging."
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Quaker Oats Acquisition of Snapple, 1997. Background of both firms and the reasons for the merger & poor performance. Compared to Gatorade and looks at short & long-term effects, leadership and their outlook. 1,800 words (approx. 7.2 pages), 11 sources, $ 63.95 »
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From the Paper "Introduction
Business acquisitions can happen for a number of reasons. In some cases, companies buy their competition in order to gain larger market share and entrance to markets which are otherwise blocked to them. In other cases, companies buy companies in order to dismantle them and sell the assets, increasing the value of the acquiring company. In still other cases, acquisitions are seen as a way of keeping both companies continuing as ongoing concerns, with the acquiring company gaining synergy in a market or industry which has synergies with the core business of the acquiring company. This was apparently the reasoning behind the acquisition of Snapple Beverage by Quaker Oats in late 1994: the acquisition was synergistic to the core business (food products) of Quaker Oats, and Quaker already owned one beverage company (Gatorade) which did not .."
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Quaker Oats, 1997. Financial analysis. Company analyzed in terms of balance, income, strategy, cash flow, ratios and stocks. Includes tables & chart. 2,250 words (approx. 9.0 pages), 5 sources, $ 79.95 »
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From the Paper "Introduction
Quaker Oats, despite its name, is a diversified food and beverage company which provides not only the namesake breakfast cereal, but a variety of products (including Gatorade) on a worldwide basis. The company has used a growth through acquisition strategy throughout much of the early 1990s, but it has also sold off those businesses which are not part of its core market. As a result, the company is much less diversified than it was at the beginning of the decade. The sell-offs and restructurings which accompanied them have taken their toll on the company's financial performance, and the stock price has varied little until recent months, when it began turning upward and has seen nearly a 20 percent increase since mid-1996. This research examines the financial performance of the company and considers where the .."
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Wild Oats--A Marketing Analysis, 2007. This paper discusses the marketing strategy of the natural, organic chain of supermarkets known as "Wild Oats." 860 words (approx. 3.4 pages), 4 sources, APA, $ 30.95 »
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Abstract This paper analyzes the marketing strategy of "Wild Oats," a chain of natural supermarket, through an examination of their promotional techniques. The author describes the different advertising approaches found on the chain's homepage. Although the tone of the marketing is not overtly persuasive, it subtly uses persuasive informative and reminder-type techniques. The author finds that "Wild Oats" successfully employs an integrated marketing communication strategy that appeals to middle class consumers.
From the Paper "Wild Oats thus deploys a mass advertising promotional strategy through its web page, which gives consumers information about the product, and uses Amazon.com to increase the sales as well as the visibility of its product on a national level through the web. However, within the local stores themselves, Wild Oats makes use of community outreach through schools, by selling and promoting local products, and by engaging in other efforts through the stores themselves to increase local visibility, such as advertising the farms from where its products were purchased. Finally, by offering purely informational material on its Internet site, it draws additional traffic from web-surfers who may be looking for information regarding the benefits of 'going organic,' and after becoming persuaded about the general superiority of such produce, decide to make their next grocery store trip at Wild Oats."
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Oats, 2002.
650 words (approx. 2.6 pages), 3 sources, $ 26.95 »
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Abstract This paper discusses the history and uses of the crop known as oat. It looks briefly at the problems that can be caused if not properly taken care of and also the description of the crop.
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Inequalities In the Workplace, 1999. Discusses gender and racial issues, glass ceiling, sexual harassment, an example ("Quaker Oats"), the white- vs. blue-collar aspect and the role of the government. 2,025 words (approx. 8.1 pages), 14 sources, $ 71.95 »
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From the Paper "INEQUALITIES IN THE WORK PLACE
Introduction
This research examines the issue of inequalities in the work place in the United States. In this examination, inequalities are considered within the contexts of (1) the "glass ceiling," (2) sexual harassment, (3) white-collar vs. blue-collar, and (4) discrimination on the basis of race and ethnicity."
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Joyce Carol Oates, 2006. This paper discusses the work of author Joyce Carol Oates, as a stylistic move from the journalistic to the literary. 1,313 words (approx. 5.3 pages), 9 sources, MLA, $ 44.95 »
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Abstract In this article, the writer describes how the American fiction writer Joyce Carol Oates has not simply tackled issues of national importance in her novels. She also has a substantial critical body of literary essays and works of nonfiction. The writer discusses that over the course of her career, as Oates' has grown more prolific as a writer of fiction, Oates' nonfiction essays and writing have had an increasingly literary rather than a journalistic quality in the tone of Oates' prose, even while their subject matter has tackled issues of national importance. Referring to examples of Oates' literary works, the writer examines the author's concerns and style of writing.
From the Paper "The review of McCarthy precedes a flight of philosophical fancy, as Oates muses not simply about this novel, but about the style of the author and why his work compels her, and compels other readers, time and time again, despite the violent nature of McCarthy's prose. "No one would mistake Cormac McCarthy's worlds as "real" except in the way that fever dreams are 'real,' a heightened and distilled gloss upon the human condition." (Oates, 2005) Oates shows evident familiarity with the entire span of McCarthy's works, and the reader might have difficulty fully comprehending the review, had the reader not read Blood Meridian and All the Pretty Horses, books that Oates has read and refers to as common knowledge in her analysis of how the masculine and bloody world of the author she is reviewing speaks to the extreme nature of the human life, not just in the Wild Wild West McCarthy chronicles, but in modern times. Her essay on Lear, in contrast, wrestles more with what Shakespearean critics such as Norman Lear have written about the Bard's use of narrative structure."
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Joyce Carol Oates, 2007. An analysis of two of Joyce Carol Oates' stories; 'Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been' and 'Heat'. 2,581 words (approx. 10.3 pages), 9 sources, MLA, $ 78.95 »
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Abstract The paper examines Joyce Carol Oates' short stories that deal with children or adolescents and unexpected threats and peril: 'Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been' and 'Heat'. The paper discusses Joyce Carol Oates' own experiences and her social and political viewpoints and concerns. The paper shows how her narrative style is authentic-sounding and fully convincing. The paper demonstrates how Oates is a feminist and how her feminist concerns are apparent within both stories. The paper also analyzes how Oates is both a nostalgic and a realistic writer.
From the Paper "For the narrator of "Heat" herself, life after the twins' violent death has simply gone on, with relative non-eventfulness and, ironically, what now triggers her distant memories of the twins and their horrible deaths is when she herself now goes to the area of the icehouse in order to make love. Violence and death was once, the narrator knows, literally "right around the corner" from where she now enjoys the ecstasy of lovemaking, but at the same time the memory of the Kunkel twins' fateful afternoon nearby, so long ago, though it remains sharp and vivid is also, somehow, at the same time, distant and surreal."
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James and Oates, 2002. A comparison of Henry James's novella "The Turn of the Screw" and Joyce Carol Oates? short story ?The Accursed Inhabitants of the House of Bly?. 1,400 words (approx. 5.6 pages), 0 sources, $ 46.95 »
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Abstract This paper discusses how Oates' story is a compressed version of "Turn of the Screw". It explains how the setting and the names (or lack thereof) of the characters in question are the same. However, despite this initial sense of familiarity, the reader emerges with a very different ghost story when reading Oates? vision of James? world. It shows that Oates? story is comic in tone, rather than intent upon creating a sense of horror. Yet Oates? story also has far more subtlety than her predecessor James? story in its understanding of supposed female sexual repression.
From the Paper "Re-envisioning James? story was an ambitious project upon Oates? part. James? story initially seems to completely depend upon its gothic environment and setting to generate its sense of suspense. The governess is anonymous. This is true both from the reader?s point of view but also in terms of the way the other characters, except the children, envision her. She is alone. She is unable to articulate her most basic physical desires in her environment. The passions of the dead servants become articulated in the children in her charge. It is as if her own desires have now, against her will, become voiced in the innocent faces of Miles and Flora, whose characters gradually become twisted with an adult sexual awareness. The remoteness of the local and the woman?s isolation cause the reader to question her sanity until the very end of the tale. How could someone not go mad in such an environment, in such circumstances? The sexual repression inherent in the narrative?s setting seems to be necessary to believe in the ignorant character of the unnamed narrating governess. How could a modern reader believe in a woman who was so innocent to her own sense of sexual knowing and her charges' developing sexualized, alien personas?"
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Joyce Carol Oates's Victimization of Women, 2004. This paper deals with the victimization of women in three of Joyce Carol Oates's short stories: "Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?"; "Heat"; and "The Molesters." 2,434 words (approx. 9.7 pages), 11 sources, MLA, $ 74.95 »
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Abstract This paper examines how Joyce Carol Oates is known for writing about violence towards women. It looks at how the situations she writes about are everyday situations that women face all over the world all the time and how Oates is excellent in bringing out fear through these situations. In particular, it focuses on ?Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been??, ?Heat?, and ?The Molesters? as typical Oates?s stories where women are victimized by men.
From the Paper "The villain in this story is Arnold Friend. Oates created a very frightening character here through his appearance and speech. Arnold wears dark sunglasses that do not let anyone see where his eyes are looking. This is quite creepy since he is probably staring her up and down, like a lion checking out his next meal. It is revealed that Arnold is not the young guy that he first claims to be, and is in fact around thirty years old, adding to his villainous nature. Another very disturbing part of Arnold is his friend that is waiting in the car the whole time Arnold is talking with Connie. This man ?wasn?t a kid either?he had?the face of a forty year old baby? (?Where?? 502). This adds to the fearful appearance of Arnold, since a forty year old man has no place there."
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Quaker Women, 2004. Examines the history of the role of women in the Quaker movement. 3,391 words (approx. 13.6 pages), 12 sources, MLA, $ 96.95 »
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Abstract The old saying, ?The branch doesn?t fall too far from the tree,? might be one way to characterize Quakerism in England and in colonial America. This paper explains why this saying is relevant to Quaker women and the activities of women in the world beyond the sect. The paper shows why Quakers were considered, unlike the Papists and Protestants, to be of another stripe entirely, not only in their relationship to the concept of God, but in the relationships between their men and their women, and, more to the point for this examination, of their women toward the world.
Paper Outline
Introduction
The Nurturing Mother
Speaking out Unconventionally
Committing it to Paper
Rhode Island Got the Point
Back to the Mother
From the Paper "Some historians believe the Quaker hangings, especially of women, actually marked a turning point in New England?s tolerance of different religions. The Friends had practiced gentle stoicism, which the magistrates were vicious and brutal by contrast and even other Puritans were bothered by it. By the later 1660s, the value of crushing dissent at any cost was no longer clear, either in the colonies or England. (Bonomi 29)"
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Joyce Carol Oates, 2002. A paper which introduces author Joyce Carol Oates and her novel, "Them". 2,390 words (approx. 9.6 pages), 12 sources, MLA, $ 73.95 »
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Abstract The paper studies American author, Joyce Carol Oates, her childhood and writing history. The paper discusses Oates' third book, "Them" about an American family in the 60's, as well as other books by her including "Do With Me What You Will" and "Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?".
From the Paper "She loves to write, and can be very compulsive in her habits. When she is not working on a book manuscript, she "relaxes" by working on short fiction and essays. When she first began writing, she worried that some of her more gothic and horrifying fiction would not be taken well if readers knew she was a woman. "In fact, Oates was known to disguise some of her work. Early in her career, she sometimes masculinized her name with such variations as J.C. Oates" (Horne E15). She has also written several suspense novels under the name "Rosamond Smith.""
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Quakerism in the 17th and 18th Centuries, 1994. An examination of Quakerism and assimilation into American society. 1,340 words (approx. 5.4 pages), 2 sources, $ 45.95 »
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Abstract A look at the colonization of Quakers in the Northern Midlands during the 17th and 18th centuries. The author examines Fischer's Albion's Seed that reflects characteristics of Quakerism. A look at their society.
From the Paper "In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, America saw a colonization of Quakers emerging in the northern midlands. During that time a man named John Woolman was born in Northampton, West Jersey. In his Journal, he showed characteristics of Quakerism which are described in Fischer's Albion's Seed.These aspects are such things as wealth ways, dress ways, death ways, and freedom ways."
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The Quakers, 2002. A history of the Quakers and their impact on the American Revolution. 1,400 words (approx. 5.6 pages), 6 sources, $ 53.95 »
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Abstract This paper will illustrate and define the plight of the Quakers and their impact on the American Revolution. Through documented research, this paper will also examine the history and existence of the Quakers during this revolutionary period.
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