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Company Failure or Company Health?—Techniques for Measuring Company Health
Long Range Planning, 1988Abstract This paper describes some of the problems which confront the practitioner and researcher when trying to use a company failure prediction model. It shows that the strict mathematical standards required by the methodology offer little chance of a model being applied consistently in practice.
John Robertson, Roger W. Mills
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The Bat'a Company in Zlín: a shoe company or a school company?
History of Education, 2018The first part of the study focuses on the characteristics and analysis of Zlin as an example of a company town.
Tomáš Kasper, Dana Kasperová
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2020
The remains of Dutch East India Company forts are scattered throughout littoral Asia and Africa. But how important were the specific characteristics of European bastion-trace fortifications to Early-Modern European expansion? Was European fortification design as important for Early-Modern expansion as has been argued? This book takes on these questions
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The remains of Dutch East India Company forts are scattered throughout littoral Asia and Africa. But how important were the specific characteristics of European bastion-trace fortifications to Early-Modern European expansion? Was European fortification design as important for Early-Modern expansion as has been argued? This book takes on these questions
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The best companies are generous companies
Business Horizons, 2007Abstract Corporate generosity is a critical input to business success. Effective generosity is a strategic business decision: it is purposeful, channeled, integrated, and results-oriented. In effectively generous firms, the relationship between social and financial performance is mutually reinforcing, creating a “virtuous circle” that benefits not ...
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The Company of Strangers in the Company of Books
Dutch Crossing, 1997ABSTRACTIn 1936, Edgar du Perron and his family escaped the threat of war in Europe, when they boarded the Danish vessel Alsia, bound for the Dutch East Indies. He described the voyage in Scheepsjournaal van Arthur Ducroo (1943; ‘Arthur Ducroo's Logbook’).
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The traditional theories of the firm leave no room for love in business organizations, perhaps because it is thought that love is only an emotion or feeling, not a virtue, or because economic efficiency and profit making are considered to be incompatible with the practice of charity or love.
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