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Showing posts with the label Analysis

Analysis and Tutorial of Corona Platform Development

Today I’m going to talk about a perfect platform for developers who wish to build games, apps and e-books for mobile devices. The Corona platform is backed by more than 200,000 developers who have created games, e-books or business applications using this platform. Corona is one of the world’s most advanced development platforms and is rapidly becoming the choice of hundreds of developers. No matter if you’re a foodie or a small professional team- with Corona you can quickly and easily create cross-platform applications. What is Corona? Founded in 2008, Corona Labs Inc. is a company based in Palo Alto with extensive technical and commercial experience across several platforms; mobile ecosystem, software platforms, authoring tools , runtimes and cloud services. His previous experience includes leadership positions at companies such as Adobe, Apple, Macromedia and Microsoft. Notably Corona Lua is developed using an easy to learn programming language, along with the API, ...

Script Analysis - Where the Wild Things Are - Archetypes and Emotional-Symbolic Screenplay Structure

Script Analysis: WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE SPOILER ALERT: If you haven’t yet seen “Where The Wild Things Are,” you may want to check it out before you read this article. Let’s set aside the question right now of whether or not Where The Wild Things Are is a good movie. Let’s set aside the question of whether you liked it or not (or were a little bit embarrassed for liking it as much as you did). And if you feel like you wasted your twelve bucks on a movie in which essentially nothing happens, let’s set that aside too. Love it or hate it, Wild Things is a movie worth studying, because of the bold and unique ways it is structured to reflect its authors’ premise, both in its most wonderful, and its most problematic elements. PREMISE? WHAT PREMISE? Wild things is governed by a simple idea– or at least a strong suggestion– that we are seeing the whole world through the perspective of a young boy– as he works out his rage over his is...

Financial Analysis Tools for Managing Your Business

Financial analysis is the financial statement analysis of a particular company. It refers to assessing the stability of cash flowing in to the organization or the enterprise. Professionals perform financial analysis by making use of ratios by way of reports. The management may decide to continue or stop the business, make certain input materials, issue stocks and bonds, and implement other decisions related to investment. Stock picking software is also very useful to choose the best stocks for making profit. Tools of financial analysis help in assessment of the profitability of the company, its solvency, the liquidity, and the stability of the business. Financial ratios are compared by the appropriate tools which depend on the past, future and the comparative performance. Uses of Financial analysis tools They provide you with valuable information about analysis of the finances which can give you better insights into management of your business and the improvement of the profitability. ...

Dynamic Job Analysis

It seems that every time two or more training types get together, the words job/task analysis are eventually spoken. With the current emphasis on quality, training and education have been receiving a great deal more attention. As with any other focus area in business, accountability and value added quickly becomes important to the effort. This increased awareness is leading to a growing commitment to “do training right.” Training professionals have been trained for years in the methodology required to “do training right.” When asked what that is, they will produce some model of Instructional System Design. Any of these will have variations of the Job/Task Analysis (J/TA). The J/TA is a time tested and proven method of deriving instructional objectives and curriculum from a complex set of behaviors. Its utility was proven in the military and has been used successfully in all aspects of developing training programs from existing work. It is easy to fixate on a sing...

Strengths - The First Step in Your SWOT Analysis

Here are the 4 steps to your analysis plan. Can you guess the first step in your competitive analysis? Strengths? Weaknesses? Opportunities? Threats? If you picked “threats,” you picked correctly. You can beat your competitors at their own game. Here’s how: Step 1: Find blogs like yours, in your niche with your DA. To do this, I go to Alexa.com. Scroll down to Browse Top Sites and put in your URL. Scroll down to Which Sites are Related To [Your Blog Name]. Copy the URL of the first site. Step 2: Go to semrush.com/dashboard/. If you don’t have an account, make one. Paste the URL of the competing blog where it says All Reports, Input Domain, Keyword, or… Make sure the drop-down says Domain Overview Scroll down to Top Organic Keywords. This is what I found: triberr 11(6) 880 One of my competitors ranks for the keyword Triberr. He is at position 11 with 880 searches per month. I actually have a draft started about Triberr. Suppose I wanted to beat his position ...

Sample Strategic Planning and Analysis For Panera Bread Company

Panera Bread has an opportunity for growth within a challenging industry in two key areas – increased sales of specialty drinks and opening international locations – that will enable the company to spread its mission of fresh bread for everyone while increasing the bottom line for shareholders. By utilizing many frameworks for thought and projecting the estimated financials of the company, we are able to empirically show that these two strategies will be beneficial to the customer. Utilize Historically High Margins on Specialty Drinks to Drive Bottom Line Growth While Panera’s core business revolves around fresh bread, the style of the locations suggests that there is substantial revenue in selling coffee and related drinks, similar to Starbucks. Looking at the coffee market, estimated real growth is 2.7% or roughly 5.7% given a 3% inflation rate while the number of establishments, the actual coffee shops, is expected to grow only 1.6%, meaning that each shop on averag...

The Most Excellent Method for Strategic Analysis

Reviewing your business performance is a must and definitely a great requirement. This is a sign that you are really giving the attention that your business needs. Aside from that, this also means that you are well aware of how your company works and you are willing to bring your efforts to a much higher level. There are many ways to evaluate your business performance and one of them is to select the right kind of method for strategic analysis for your organization. Strategic planning or analysis is when you plan for the future. You review what you have today and you can make a forecast about what will happen in the coming years. One method for strategic analysis is the SWOT analysis. This stands for strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats in your business and this is often used by many companies nowadays. This is where you will need to look into those four aspects and then later on, you will be able to identify what you need to do in order to maintain or enhance your business...