首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
•Read the following article about a corporation and the questions on the opposite page. •For each question 15-20, mark one lette
•Read the following article about a corporation and the questions on the opposite page. •For each question 15-20, mark one lette
admin
2010-01-28
36
问题
•Read the following article about a corporation and the questions on the opposite page.
•For each question 15-20, mark one letter ( A, B, C or D ) on your Answer Sheet for the answer you choose.
Whatever your business, you can no longer hide from the intense glare of stakeholders. The Internet has given employees, business partners, customers, shareholders and local and global neighbors unprecedented power to know what you and your company are up to. If you are abusing employees or the quality of your product has suffered or you’re keeping important data from your suppliers or shareholders, you can count on that getting out via the Internet and coming back to bite you. Armed with such knowledge, your shareholders can jump right back online to spread the word, organize response, and, eventually, determine the fate of your company. How can you avoid becoming an unwitting target? For starters, your company had better have great products and fair prices, because everyone will know instantly if it doesn’t. But you’ve got to keep the confidence of all your stakeholders ——not just customers or shareholders —— with honesty, accountability, consideration, and, above all, transparency. Here’s how that plays out hi successful companies.
Employees. You lead by example whether you intend to or not. When employees don’t trust you, they won’t build trust for you with customers and business partners. Instead they will play office politics, and productivity will plummet. Microsoft has employee transparency down to a science. Tim Sinclair, who runs the company’s huge website, says, "When there’s good news, everyone knows. When there’s bad news, tell everyone."
Business partners. In the competition among supply chains, trust means lower transaction costs and better performance. Radio frequency ID tugs will bring about ever more accurate real-time information sharing. Wal-Mart — no surprise -- is among the first to tell its suppliers to get with this technology.
Customers. Transparency with consumers can be a force for competitive advantage. When a Stanford Student detailed the source code for Lego’s Mindstorms robotic toy online, not only did the company decide not to sue the student, it encouraged its customers to tinker with the software, even going so far as to develop a website where people can share their creations. Its budding community of customer/ developers has helped Lego expand the market for its robot, helping to popularize it on campuses and among engineers. It gained, essentially for free, new markets, new product ideas, and sheet credibility.
Communities. Think accountability, not just philanthropy. Chiquita was once reviled for its alleged activities in Latin America: It was said to have fomented political coups, bribed politicians, pillaged the environment, and brutalized employees. In 1998 it adopted a policy of corporate responsibility, which calls for honest and open communication about its problems and heating all people with dignity and respect. The policy came too late to save the company from bankruptcy in November 2001, but Chiquita executives say it was instrumental in helping the banana giant repair relations with workers, suppliers, local communities, and environmental activists -- and emerge from Chapter 11 in better shape four months later.
Shareholders. Progressive insurance CEO Glenn Renwick is making an inquisitive investor’s dream come true. Progressive says it’s the only Fortune 500 company to report operating costs on a monthly basis. "I view it as the owners’ information," Renwick says. "When you have information, you should disclose it, good or bad, exactly as it is." Result: Since 2001, Progressive’s share price has gone from $43 to more than $70. Transparency builds trust with shareholders.
In the age of transparency, integrity goes to the bottom line: if you’ve got to be naked, you’d better be buff.
The policy of corporate responsibility adopted by Chiquita
选项
A、resulted from its business activities in Latin America.
B、saved the company from bankruptcy in November 2001.
C、helped the company to be reestablished later.
D、deteriorated its relation with local customers in Latin America.
答案
C
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/nQMsFFFM
本试题收录于:
BEC高级阅读题库BEC商务英语分类
0
BEC高级阅读
BEC商务英语
相关试题推荐
Whatkindofbusinessisbeingadvertised?
Whattypeofcompanyisthecallerworkingfor?
A、 B、 C、 B确认IsabellaShaw是不是新市场营销部部长的否定疑问句。(A)是重复问句中的单词marketing、有重复词错误的错误选项;听到That’sright(C)像是对的,但补充说明的主语不是问
1.Practiseansweringthesequestions.PhaseOne:•Canyoutellmeaboutyourpresentjobandyourplansforthefuture?•Can
Theinterlocutorasksyouquestionsonanumberofwork-relatedandnonwork-relatedsubjects.
Youwillheararadioprogrammeonthesubjectofinnovation,researchanddevelopmentinbusiness.Foreachquestion(23-30)
Youwillheararadioprogrammeonthesubjectofinnovation,researchanddevelopmentinbusiness.Foreachquestion(23-30)
Attentiontodetailissomethingeveryonecanand【C1】______do--especiallyinatightjobmarket.BobCrossley,ahuman-resourc
Attentiontodetailissomethingeveryonecanand【C1】______do--especiallyinatightjobmarket.BobCrossley,ahuman-resourc
•LookatthestatementsbelowandatthefiveextractsfromanarticleaboutInnovation.•Whicharticle(A,B,C,DorE)doese
随机试题
胃大部分切除患者出现贫血,其主要原因是()
普通合伙企业
Alargepartofhumanactivity,particularlyinrelationtotheenvironment,is______conditionsorevents.
患者男,42岁,因咽痛4日,伴发热就诊。患者4日前无明显诱因出现咽痛,程度较剧烈,吞咽时尤为明显,伴发热,但无声嘶及呼吸困难。临床检查见:一般情况可,无明显呼吸困难,说话时似口中含物;左侧腭舌弓显著充血隆起,扁桃体不大,被推向内下方。如病情进一步发展,
骨骼肌兴奋-收缩耦联,肌细胞兴奋时释放到肌浆中的C2+通过什么机制回收到肌质终末池细胞代谢所需的O2和所生产的CO2是通过什么渠道跨膜转运
公路桥梁抗震设计方法采用的是()。
按照成本组成,施工成本可分为若干组成内容,下列属于施工成本组成的是()。
居间人未促成合同成立,不得要求支付报酬,但可以要求委托人支付从事居间活动支出的必要费用。()
设随机变量X方差为2,则根据切比雪夫不等式有估计P{|X—E(X)|≥2)≤___________.
MyPCisoutoforder,theexperimenthastobeputoff.
最新回复
(
0
)