BASEBALL SHOP small business that needs an influx of technology to grow.

 

● You will assume you own a (BASEBALL SHOP) small business that needs an influx of technology to grow.
○ For example: assume you own a small (baseball shop) flower shop.
○ This flower shop is still stuck in the 1980s. Assume it is not technology driven.
● Ask yourself some of the following questions and answer them in the first part of your paper.
○ How do customers currently contact you with questions?
○ How do customers contact you to place orders?
○ How are orders documented?
○ How are orders tracked?
○ How do you know an order is ready?
○ How are customers notified their order is ready?
○ How do customers get their orders?
○ How do you know how much inventory you have?
○ What process do you use to order more inventory?
● Ask yourself the following questions and answer them in the next section.
○ Can technology help solve any of these issues?
○ What technologies would you use to solve the issues?
● How would these technologies work together? Answer this in the next section.
○ How would you tie these together?
○ What have you learned in any of the case studies we have done that might apply?
○ When you are done with this section I should be able to see a logical system in place that improves the flower shop’s processes.
● End with a conclusion section.
○ Sum up what you did
● Your PowerPoint will summarize all that you accomplished for the business.
● Also, please do not take your small town flower shop from a one-person operation and try and turn it into 1-800-Flowers.
○ This isn’t realistic.
○ Pick simple, proven technologies and describe how they will work together to improve the operation.
■ For example: do not hire out a 24-hour a-day call center to take orders 365 days a year around the world….

 

Sample Solution

and wasn’t even the only death that year. After Piazza sustained his injuries, it took members of the frat over 40 minutes to decide what to do, which many attribute to the bystander effect as well as groupthink. In many cases like these, the members of the fraternity know what they are doing – engaging in violent and excessive hazing – is wrong. Many of these members not only feel sympathy, but even empathy due to the fact they went through the same ritualistic hazing. Fear of standing out against the group causes these people not to say anything. Everyone wants to fit in, and that leads people to do weird things.

Groupthink is a societal phenomenon unlike any other. This tendency occurs when the desire for harmony within a group leads to irrational behavior. These “irrational behaviors” include ignoring their sympathies or empathies to victims to fit in with the crowd. There have been many cases of people ignoring others being murdered, raped, or otherwise assaulted due to the “bystander effect”, a result of groupthink. Such examples of this include Ilan Halimi, a French Jew kidnapped in Paris and Shanda Sharer who was kidnapped by four teenage girls. Irving Janis proposed about eight symptoms of groupthink, one of which being: Unquestioned belief in the morality of the group, causing members to ignore the consequences of their actions. This nicely ties into the big discussion of “bad morality versus sympathy” as this unquestioned belief in the morality of their group – whatever it may be – becomes “bad” by the unwillingness to question it. Groupthink has been applied to cases such as the fraternity hazing but also what led the Nazi’s to invade the Soviet Union, and is how we get scandals such as Watergate. It also leads to centuries long oppression, through slavery or other forms of degradation.“Bad morality” is any morality that requires you to ignore your natural sympathies to others in order for it to survive.We find good morals to be based in sympathy, in the way we handle

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