Essay Topic Hub

Seattle
Essays

605+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

605 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

Seattle, Washington serves as a subject across a wide range of academic disciplines, from business and management to geography, sociology, and criminal justice. As one of the most economically dynamic cities in the United States, it attracts academic attention for its distinctive corporate culture, entrepreneurial history, and demographic complexity. Students writing about Seattle often use the city as a lens through which to examine broader questions about business ethics, community identity, consumer culture, and regional industry, making it a productive site for applied academic inquiry.

The papers archived on this topic reflect considerable variety in approach. Some take a case-study format, examining specific companies, organizations, or local institutions — including well-known Seattle-based businesses — to analyze strategy, operations, customer relations, and employee management. Others approach Seattle through descriptive or ethnographic writing, focusing on landmark locations like Pike Place Market to explore place and culture. Additional papers address social issues such as race within a community context, while others engage with geographic subjects like volcanic activity in the broader Washington region.

A strong essay focused on Seattle benefits from a clearly scoped thesis that connects the city's specific context — its coffee industry, corporate landscape, or social fabric — to a transferable argument rather than a simple description. Evidence drawn from organizational data, business financials, or credible regional reporting tends to carry the most weight. A common pitfall is treating Seattle as mere backdrop rather than as an active variable; the strongest essays explain why place matters to the argument being made.

Sort by:
Paper Doctorate
Business portfolio assessment and coaching practices
The company 'Coach' founded in 1941 as a family-run workshop is claimed to be original keeper of American heritage of fine leather goods and custom fabrics. It is a producer and marketer of accessories and gifts for…
Paper High School
Electronic Health Records (EHR) --
Electronic Health Records (EHR) -- Pharmacy
Paper High School
Bank of America's leadership in the banking industry
Bank of America is a bank and financial holding company and one of the largest financial institutions in the United States. The company's history dates to 1904 when it was founded as the Bank of Italy in San Francisco…
Paper Doctorate
Electronic Health Records (EHR) --
Electronic Health Records (EHR) -- Pharmacy
Paper Doctorate
Management concepts and principles
Starbucks is one of the success stories of the decades before the economic crisis came about in 2008-2009. Under Howard Schultz's tenure as CEO, the company innovated and transformed the concept of drinking coffee in an entirely new experience, one that made Starbucks location a place between home and work. The company also expanded globally, in line with Schultz's vision of an accelerated expansion process that would take his vision around the world.
Essay Undergraduate
Fortune 500 Co. The Company That I
This paper is about Starbucks, and its strategy. The paper contains an analysis of the external environment through parts of a PEST. There is a quickie SWOT. There is a discussion of the company's history and its recent financial performance. There is also a discussion of the factors that Starbucks needs to consider in the future.
Essay Doctorate
New Work Reward Systems New, Improved, Innovative:
This compare / contrast article looks at traditional incentives and reward systems for employees versus the less conventional types of rewards seen most frequently in high tech companies. The fit between reward systems and workers is important, and the article articulates ways that knowledge workers particularly want certain types of rewards. Integral to this discussion is the role of the manager in understanding what improves employee morale and motivation.
Essay Doctorate
Human Resources Management (HRM) Strategy at Nestle
The Nestlé Corporation as we know it today was formed in 1905, when a merger combined two preexisting companies which were originally formed in 1866. The Anglo-Swiss Milk Company was created by brothers George Page and Charles Page, while Farine Lactée Henri Nestlé was the brainchild of Henri Nestlé. By combining the assets and expertise of two established, successful companies, the newly formed Nestlé S.A. positioned itself for immediate growth within the European continent, but the advent of two World Wars within a span of four decades forced the company’s upper management to explore expansion to markets in North and South America, Asia and Africa. A series of major mergers and acquisitions followed the conclusion of WWII, and Nestlé soon expanded through its purchase of competing firms like Crosse and Blackwell (1950), Findus (1963), Stouffer’s (1973), Carnation (1984), San Pellegrino (1997), and Ralston Purina (2002). What had begun as a simple purveyor of milk chocolate and condensed milk in the 19th century had flourished into one of the world’s true multinational conglomerates, with Nestlé know holding vested interests in markets such as bottled water, pet food, makeup and cosmetics, candy bars, ice cream, breakfast cereals, and dozens of other product lines (Rapoport, 1994, p. 3).
Paper Doctorate
Fan Fiction Annotated Bibliography Baron, N. Always
Fan fiction is its own world in which fans create stories using characters, setting and events from their favorite books, comics, movies, television or other media. Anything is possible, combining characters like Harry Potter and Luke Skywalker, and more. Sometimes it is dismissed as being poorly written and simply plagiarizing other authors’ ideas. However, as a teaching and learning tool it can be quite valuable for students and budding writers.
Essay Doctorate
Proposal development with abstract and introduction sections
This research proposal looks at the success that Boeing had with their 737, aiming to better understand how technological innovations improved the aircraft's business capacities. The introduction will follow a brief historical outline of the model, while the program outcomes will expand in many of the areas where this paper is planning to bring a contribution.