Essays about: "What a celebration"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 15 essays containing the words What a celebration.
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1. Office Rig
University essay from KTH/ArkitekturAbstract : This project is a celebration of an office building in Stockholm from the 1960s, by proposing to preserve the existing and make an addition, to enhance what is already there. A premise of the project was to look upon the extension as a parasite. The existing building is a result of a formulated bureaucratic ideal, a piece of text. READ MORE
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2. A Celebration of Communication: A qualitative case study on the importance of communication in an agile organization
University essay from Lunds universitet/Institutionen för strategisk kommunikationAbstract : In a world colored by change, being agile is considered one of the most important traits for communication professionals in a modern corporate landscape. However, research concludes that the concept of agility stills lacks clarity to the profession and what being agile actually implies to the profession. READ MORE
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3. Customer Experience and its Implication for Value Creation within the Night-Time Economy
University essay from KTH/Industriell ekonomi och organisation (Inst.)Abstract : The consumer behaviour is adapting within industries due to new technologies such as smart phones. As consumer behaviour changes so do companies by adapting their way of engaging and interacting with their customers. This provides potential to innovate new service offerings. READ MORE
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4. The clash between Ikea's brand identity, ideologies and employees' values
University essay from Lunds universitet/Företagsekonomiska institutionenAbstract : In May 2019, Ikea group in Poland posted an article in the intranet regarding LGBT-movement, encouraging the employees to support the LGBT+ community by participating in the celebration the company was about to host. A religious employee, with the pseudonym Tomasz K., chose to show his disapproval by posting a comment to the article. READ MORE
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5. Gender and Sexuality on Gethen : A Contemporary Analysis of Ursula K le Guin's The Left Hand of Darkness
University essay from Karlstads universitet/Institutionen för språk, litteratur och interkultur (from 2013)Abstract : Ursula K Le Guin wrote The Left Hand of Darkness (1969) because she wanted to explore the limitations of gender and sexuality in a way that reflected the ongoing epistemic changes in her society. She created the Gethenians, an ambisexual, androgynous species that live most of their life without an assigned sex, making their entire society lack the concept of gender. READ MORE