60 resultados para boutique


Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

[Mazarinade. 1649]

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

En el presente trabajo se realizara la aplicación del modelo Análisis Estructural de los Sectores estratégicos y del análisis prospectivo para los hoteles que hacen parte del sector alojamiento en hoteles boutique en Bogotá en un periodo de cinco años. En estos modelos se tiene en cuenta la información financiera, interna y externa de la empresa y aspectos generales relacionados con la economía del sector. La investigación se desarrolló en dos etapas; la primera corresponde al desarrollo del AESE el cual se basa en cuatro herramientas (análisis de hacinamiento cuantitativo y cualitativo, levantamiento del panorama competitivo, análisis estructural de fuerzas del mercado y estudio de competidores) y el análisis prospectivo donde se aplica la metodología MICMAC, MACTOR y SMIC, en las cuales se determinan los escenarios alternativos teniendo presente la influencia que puedan tener los actores del sector y los aspectos sociales, políticos, tecnológicos y económicos en las definición de los escenarios.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Las denominadas “bodegas boutique" han denotado un fuerte crecimiento en los últimos años dado por el desarrollo experimentado por toda la vitivinicultura mendocina, como consecuencia del aumento del consumo de vinos finos, tanto a nivel nacional como internacional. Esta situación motiva la presente investigación, puesto que la “bodega boutique" se constituye en un segmento diferenciado que justifica su análisis. En los últimos años, debido a las variables macroeconómicas del país como a las condiciones ambientales que posee la provincia de Mendoza, capitales tanto nacionales como extranjeros se vieron tentados de entrar en el negocio de las bodegas boutique. En la presente investigación se muestra cómo las pequeñas bodegas se diferencian de las bodegas tradicionales en distintos aspectos, tales como: el precio y la alta calidad de sus productos, el porcentaje de producción que exporta, el target al que apuntan, los canales de distribución, entre otros. Es de suma relevancia destacar que el presente trabajo de investigación posee un carácter exploratorio basado principalmente en el análisis de información secundaria, con el fin primordial de caracterizar el sector denominado “bodegas boutique", realizando posteriormente un relevamiento de algunas bodegas mendocinas que cumplen con dichas características. A su vez, se analizarán algunas de las principales herramientas de gestión que pueden aplicar las empresas de manera de aumentar su competitividad. Finalmente, se estudiará un caso de análisis en el que se examinará si la Bodega Pulenta Estate se la puede encuadrar dentro del concepto de bodega boutique y dentro marco de referencia que se analizará a lo largo de este trabajo. Con la aplicación de todo el bagaje conceptual a este caso de aplicación práctica, es posible realizar una serie de consideraciones en cuanto a algunas recomendaciones y sugerencias que es posible aportar a esta bodega boutique, con el fin de contribuir a su gestión.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Mode of access: Internet.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Mode of access: Internet.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Dissertação para obtenção do grau de Mestre em Arquitectura com especialização em Arquitectura de Interiores, apresentada na Universidade de Lisboa - Faculdade de Arquitectura.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Industries demand a closer alignment of university learning curriculum to real work tasks to better meet the needs of organizations and learners. Both, industries and learners prefer the learning challenges to be based on the exigencies of work to precisely reflect real work circumstances that overtly add to business outcomes. However, such alignment is often complicated and challenging for academics and workplace managers alike. It demands partnerships between universities and industries, similar to arrangements forged for the vocational education and training sector. Such partnerships should allow active participation by learners, academics, workplaces and university administrators to move beyond a teaching orientation to a demonstrably effective learning arrangement through work integrated learning. This paper draws on a case study that negotiated a partnership between a non-government organization and an Australian university to design and facilitate a boutique curriculum that met the needs of learners and their workplace. Data were collected from interviews with participants, a focus group of the interviewees, and feedback from university staff involved in the course delivery. The paper presents a set of principles for universities and industries for partnership to enhance the alignment of academic curriculum to meet organizational and individual learning needs through work integrated learning.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

I am sure you’ve heard it too: Green is the new Black. While this was true back in the days when Henry Ford introduced process standardization with his assembly line for the Ford Model T (over 15 million of these were sold!), Green is also the color of choice for many business organizations, private and public. I am not talking about the actual color of their business shirts or their logo 2.0.; I am referring to the eco-aware movement that has pushed sustainability into the top ten list of business buzz-words. What used to be a boutique market for tourism and political activists has become the biggest business revolution since the e-commerce boom. Public and private organizations alike push towards “sustainable” solutions and practices. That push is partly triggered by the immense reputational gains associated with branding your organization as “green”, and partly by emerging societal, legal and constitutional regulations that force organizations to become more ecologically aware and sustainable. But the boom goes beyond organizational reality. Even in academia, sustainability has become a research “fashion wave” (see [1] if you are interested in research fashion waves) similar to the hype around Neuroscience that our colleagues in the natural sciences are witnessing these days. Mind you, I’m a fan. A big fan in fact. As academics, we are constantly searching for problem areas that are characterized by an opportunity to do rigorous research (studies that are executed to perfection) on relevant topics (studies that have applied practical value and provide impact to the community). What would be a better playground than exploring the options that Business Process Management provides for creating a sustainable, green future? I’m getting excited just writing about this! So, join me in exploring some of the current thoughts around how BPM can contribute to the sustainability fashion parade and let me introduce you to some of the works that scholars have produced recently in their attempts to identify solutions.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The ‘Fashion Tales’ Conference identifies three fashion discourses: that of making, that of media, and that of scholarship. We propose a fourth, which provides a foundational base for the others: the discourse of fashion pedagogy. We begin with the argument that to thrive in any of these discourses, all fashion graduates require the ability to navigate the complexities of the 21st century fashion industry. Fashion graduates emerge into a professional world which demands a range of high level capabilities above and beyond those traditionally acknowledged by the discipline. Professional education in fashion must transform itself to accommodate these imperatives. In this paper, we document a tale of fashion learning, teaching and scholarship – the tale of a highly successful future-orientated boutique university-based undergraduate fashion course in Queensland, Australia. The Discipline consistently maintains the highest student satisfaction and lowest attrition of any course in the university, achieves extremely competitive student satisfaction scores when compared with other courses nationally and internationally, and reports outstanding graduate employment outcomes. The core of the article addresses how the course effectively balances five key pedagogical tensions identified from the findings of in-depth focus groups with graduating students, and interviews with teaching staff. The pedagogical tensions are: high concept/ authenticity; high disciplinarity/ interdisciplinarity; high rigour/ play; high autonomy/ scaffolding; and high individuality/ community, where community can be further divided into high challenge and high support. We discuss each of these tensions and how they are characterised within the course, using rich descriptions given by the students. We also draw upon the wider andragogical and learning futures literatures to link the tensions with what is already known about excellence in 21st century higher and further education curriculum and pedagogic practice. We ask: as the fashion industry becomes truly globalised, virtualised, and diversified, and as initial professional training for the industry becomes increasingly massified and performatised, what are the best teaching approaches to produce autonomous, professionally capable, enterprising and responsible graduates into the future? Can the pedagogical balances described in this case study be maintained in the light of these powerful external forces, and if so, how?