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Corporation
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A corporation is a legally recognized business entity that operates as a distinct body separate from its owners, and it sits at the center of business education across undergraduate and graduate programs alike. Courses in business law, management, finance, accounting, and organizational behavior all treat the corporation as a foundational subject because it raises interconnected questions about structure, accountability, ethics, and strategy. What makes it academically rich is the range of obligations a corporation carries — to shareholders, employees, regulators, and the public — and the tensions that arise when those obligations compete. Topics like governance, taxation, compliance, mergers, and public offerings each open different dimensions of how corporations function and why they sometimes fail.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide variety of approaches. Case-study analysis appears prominently, with papers examining specific companies such as Proctor and Gamble and crisis scenarios like the Tylenol cyanide case to draw practical lessons about corporate decision-making. Other papers take a policy and regulatory angle, covering business entities, laws, and tax research. Some focus on internal organizational issues such as diversity auditing, employee privacy, and management challenges in small businesses, while others address financial events like initial public offerings and the responsibilities that come with them.

A strong essay on corporations begins with a clearly scoped thesis — rather than describing a corporation broadly, it argues a specific point about governance, ethics, law, or strategy. Evidence drawn from financial reports, legal frameworks, or documented case outcomes carries the most weight. A common pitfall is treating corporations as a uniform category; strong essays acknowledge meaningful differences between company types, sizes, and industries rather than generalizing across all corporate entities.

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Paper Undergraduate
Inventory Management the Raw Materials,
The raw materials, goods in process, and finished products represent different forms of inventory. An efficient inventory management involves watching over constant flow of units in and out of already existing inventory. A competent management of inventory also aims at controlling the costs that are associated with the inventory from the perspective of total value of the commodities Minimization of inventory investment while still meeting the functional requirements is the primary goal of inventory. The analysis is a management tool for categorizing inventory. ABC analysis provides the materials manager with opportunity to exercise selective control. Economic order quantity (EOQ) is the order quantity used to minimize the total holding and ordering costs annually.
Paper Doctorate
1999 Movie Office Space, Written
The 1999 movie Office Space illustrates a number of key principles of the science of organizational behavior. This paper analyzes the movie in terms of group dynamics, ethics, corporate culture and the various philosophies regarding employee motivation. Office space, although it is a comedy, contains many valuable insights with regard to employer and employee behavior in the real world.
Paper Undergraduate
Aeronautics Lockheed Martin Lockheed Martin,
Lockheed Martin, a Maryland-based company is the world's #1 military contractor as well as the world's largest arms exporter. In the past Lockheed Martin has built the U-2 and the SR-71 Blackbird spy planes.
Paper Doctorate
Self-Development and Coaching Theories for Effective Management
As a future business strategic consultant, one will require a fore mentioned coaching and self-development techniques so as to be a better and more effective manager. The experiential learning techniques that have been discussed and outlined before are quite applicable work based scenarios. There is no single mode of learning technique or coaching theory that is comprehensible for all working conditions especially in the business consultancy field.
Paper Undergraduate
Environmental issues and risk management
Can the construction of hazardous material/waste Contamination storage facilities survive tornadoes at their current protection levels?
Paper Undergraduate
Global Corporate Strategy of Fedex
In a world in which change became the only constant, all individuals and groups of individuals must find means to survive. As dramatic as the statement might sound, it is in fact very true.
Paper Undergraduate
Childcare and its effects on productivity
Using Gelso (2006), Harlow (2009), Stam, (2007, 2010), Wacker (1999), and five additional peer-reviewed articles from your specialization, discuss scholarly views on the nature and types of theory.
Paper Undergraduate
Sarbanes-Oxley Act overview and implementation
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 was intended to help investors be more certain of the steps they take while relying on a particular organization. There has been mixed reviews on how the act has impacted different corporations.
Essay Doctorate
Ian Teford. My Assumptions of His Motivations.
The essay analyzes the entrepreneurial genius of Telford: Telford teaches me to ‘take the bull by the horn' and not to fear possible failure of the project or not to be intimidated by the novelty of my idea that – because it is new and different may be likely to fail. Telford's motto seems to be: Just do it. And this is wise advice, as long as it is accompanied by careful planning and thorough preparation. Telford also focused on the customer's needs rather than on the organizations' desires. He recognized that customers wanted a cheaper product. Fully in tune with the circumstances of his time, Telford connected this need with topical opportunity and was able to succeed particularly because he was not only able to think out of the box but was attuned to customers' desires all the time. Telford too persevered in working for acceptance of his product, and also important was the fact that Telford realized that both creativity and firmness had to be merged. In this way, Telford was no idealist: he was aware of social psychology and the way people functioned and used that in devising and implementing his ideas. Most importantly, what Telford teaches me is that having an idea is not the main thing. It has to be accompanied with implementation. Many people have ideas: it is implementation that actually makes inventions successful and it needs both to make an effective entrepreneur. Telford made and enforced business rules for the site, but at the same time he also knew his target market and promoted his products and advertising directly to them (and this is another lesson that Telford can teach me: to structure the invention with the target market in mind). Finally, Telford surrendered his other job to focus exclusively on implementing this one. Total absorption in the project is another important lesson.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Money laundering in illegal drug trade and gambling
Money Laundering: An Overview of the Use of Money Laundering in the Drug and Gaming Industries