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Author: Bell, David E.
YOUR SEARCH PRODUCED 16 MATCHES. PAGE 1 of 2 Items 1-10 of 16
Author: Bell, David E.
Product Type:
Source: Harvard Business School Publishing
Publication Year: 1993
Nopane is a proprietary drug that sells in much of the United States. It faces substantial competition. The brand manager is undertaking an experiment to determine whether ad copy should be emotional-based or rational-based...
Authors: Bell, David E.; Sanghavi, Nitin; Fuller, Virginia A.; Shelman, Mary L.
Product Type: Cases
Source: HBSP
Publication Year: 2008
The case allows students to explore a rural business model in India, and discuss its implications for both agribusiness and retail.
Authors: Bell, David E.; Winig, Laura
Product Type: Cases
Source: Harvard Business School Publishing
Publication Year: 2007
Disney--and by extension, DCP--is highly influential with children: can the company use its “magic” to get children to switch from sugary, processed foods and become lifelong converts to a more nutritious diet? What is the food industry's responsibility in this controversial space? Discusses the role and responsibility of a for-profit company in addressing a significant social issue, namely, obesity.
Authors: Shelman, Mary L.; Milder, Brian; Bell, David E.
Product Type: Cases
Source: Harvard Business School Publishing
Publication Year: 2007
This case illustrates inherent conflicts between social causes.
Authors: Bell, David E.; Shelman, Mary
Product Type: Cases
Source: Harvard Business School
Publication Year: 2006
In 2003, Monsanto's patented ”Roundup Ready” technology was used illegally on 70-80% of the soybean area in southern Brazil. Jerry Steiner, executive vice-president of commercial acceptance, must decide if the situation in Brazil is stable enough to support a significant increase in breeding and biotech spending to develop products specifically designed for the Brazilian market.
Authors: Bell, David E.; Kindred, Natalie
Product Type: Cases
Source: Harvard Business School
Publication Year: 2010
For Asian Agri and other Indonesian palm oil producers, the future promised rising demand from fast-growing Asian populations, but also intensifying criticism from environmental groups. Asian Agri appeared well positioned to capitalize on the growing palm oil market, but the broad-strokes vilification of the palm oil industry was a source of serious concern. In the face of great uncertainty, the management team needed to devise a strategy for the future.
Authors: Bell, David E.; Shelman, Mary
Product Type: Cases
Source: Harvard Business School
Publication Year: 2006
Brazil's national agricultural research corporation, Embrapa, has developed an integrated crop and livestock production system that will allow farmers and ranchers to intensify production and improve profitability while preserving natural resources. Considers how a country should manage its agricultural policies and natural resources to balance growth in agricultural production with the loss of virgin land and biodiversity.
Authors: Bell, David E.; Li, Iris T.; Feiner, Jeffrey M.
Product Type: Cases
Source: Harvard Business School Publishing
Publication Year: 2002
Wal-Mart has been growing at 15% per year for the last 10 years. Can it keep growing at that rate for the next 10 years? CEO Lee Scott reflects on his strategy for achieving such growth, relying on a combination of supercenters, neighborhood markets, and international interest...
Authors: Bell, David E.; Milder, Brian
Product Type: Cases
Source: Harvard Business School
Publication Year: 2008
In 2006, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the Rockefeller Foundation joined together to form a new organization, AGRA, to tackle the historic challenge of increasing agricultural production in Africa.
Authors: Bell, David E.; Shelman, Mary
Product Type: Cases
Source: Harvard Business School Publishing
Publication Year: 2007
The Secretary of the Convention on Biological Diversity is working to increase the participation of the private sector in order to meet the treaty's “2010 Target,” which called for a significant reduction in the loss of biodiversity at all levels (global, regional, and national). Considers the roles of governments, the private sector, NGOs, and local communities and indigenous groups in natural resource management.
YOUR SEARCH PRODUCED 16 MATCHES. PAGE 1 of 2 Items 1-10 of 16