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Qual, dentre os aspectos apresentados abaixo, é(são) de natureza informal?
De acordo com Peter Senge, dentre os fatores que compõem a Aprendizagem Organizacional, o conceito descrito acima faz referência a uma das cinco disciplinas. Qual?
I - É necessário preparar o ocupante para o desempenho no cargo ao invés de desenvolver competências individuais.
II - É necessário o desenvolvimento de competências essenciais para o negócio ao invés de treinamento para a ocupação de um cargo.
III - É necessário priorizar a rapidez na construção e no desenvolvimento de competências para o negócio, ao invés da rapidez, da qualidade e do baixo custo do treinamento.
Está correto APENAS o que se afirma em
Nesse caso, o plano de remuneração e benefícios levou em consideração fatores que relacionam
Esse sistema de avaliação
No caso, o diretor solicitou informações relativas aos custos de
No caso, a eficiência de custo foi determinada por
PORQUE
Os clientes da rede de agências de turismo “X”, no ano em que ocorreram os ataques terroristas, passaram a optar por pacotes turísticos nacionais, em detrimento dos internacionais, gerando um crescimento de 50% nas operações e 30% na margem de lucro, dados os custos inferiores nas operações nacionais.
Analisando-se as afirmações acima, conclui-se que
A opção por produzir um novo tipo de jeans foi uma estratégia do tipo
Em uma perspectiva global, que estrutura foi adotada pela empresa?
Além de conhecerem profundamente mecânica e dedicarem grande parte do tempo à manutenção e ao aprimoramento de seus carros, esse grupo era conhecido na cidade, acompanhava as preferências dos demais consumidores e tinha bom contato com donos de postos de gasolina, onde costumavam realizar suas reuniões.
Classifica-se o tipo de amostra utilizada pelo consultor como
Essa parceria estratégica é classificada como
• Quantidade de SKUs: 5.500
• Giro médio dos itens: 7,5
• Distância média diária percorrida para realizar picking de um item: 12 metros
• Todos os itens de menor giro estão nas áreas mais distantes da área de separação de pedidos
O gerente do armazém pode implementar diferentes ações, que fornecem os seguintes resultados:
Desconsiderando-se possíveis efeitos de interações entre as ações e qualquer outra variável não mencionada na situação descrita, para alcançar uma gestão eficiente dos materiais do armazém, o gerente deve implementar APENAS as ações
As associações corretas são:
Vendas Anuais = R$ 840.000,00
CMV = 65% das vendas
Prazo Médio de Contas a Receber = 27 dias
Prazo Médio dos Estoques = 30 dias
Prazo Médio de Pagamento = 45 dias
Patrimônio Líquido = R$ 200.000,00
Ativo Não Circulante = R$ 720.000,00
Passivo Não Circulante = R$ 940.000,00
Com base nas informações fornecidas e sabendo que o estoque inicial é igual ao estoque final, qual o ciclo de caixa da empresa?
Que pagamento no fim de 5 meses, contados de hoje, em reais, ainda é necessário ser feito para uma taxa de juros composta de 2% ao mês?
Dado: Considere, para os cálculos, os valores na tabela acima.
By Rachel Ehrenberg Science News, Web edition: Monday, February 21st, 2011
WASHINGTON — Getting blood or other perishable supplies to an area that’s been struck by an earthquake or hurricane isn’t as simple as asking what brown can do for you. But a new model quickly determines the best routes and means for delivering humanitarian aid, even in situations where bridges are out or airport tarmacs are clogged with planes.
The research, presented February 18 at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, could help get supplies to areas which have experienced natural disasters or help prepare for efficient distribution of vaccines when the flu hits.
Efficient supply chains have long been a goal of manufacturers, but transport in fragile networks — where supply, demand and delivery routes may be in extremely rapid flux — requires a different approach, said Anna Nagurney of the University of Massachusetts Amherst, who presented the new work. Rather than considering the shortest path from one place to another to maximize profit, her system aims for the cleanest path at minimum cost, while capturing factors such as the perishability of the product and the uncertainty of supply routes. ‘You don’t know where demand is, so it’s tricky,’ said Nagurney. ‘It’s a multicriteria decision-making problem.’
By calculating the total cost associated with each link in a network, accounting for congestion and incorporating penalties for time and products that are lost, the computer model calculates the best supply chain in situations where standard routes may be disrupted.
‘Mathematical tools are essential to develop formal means to predict, and to respond to, such critical perturbations,’ said Iain Couzin of Princeton University, who uses similar computational tools to study collective animal behavior. ‘This is particularly important where response must be rapid and effective, such as during disaster scenarios … or during epidemics or breaches of national security.
’ The work can be applied to immediate, pressing situations, such as getting blood, food or medication to a disaster site, or to longer-term problems such as determining the best locations for manufacturing flu vaccines. . Retrieved April 7th, 2011.
By Rachel Ehrenberg Science News, Web edition: Monday, February 21st, 2011
WASHINGTON — Getting blood or other perishable supplies to an area that’s been struck by an earthquake or hurricane isn’t as simple as asking what brown can do for you. But a new model quickly determines the best routes and means for delivering humanitarian aid, even in situations where bridges are out or airport tarmacs are clogged with planes.
The research, presented February 18 at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, could help get supplies to areas which have experienced natural disasters or help prepare for efficient distribution of vaccines when the flu hits.
Efficient supply chains have long been a goal of manufacturers, but transport in fragile networks — where supply, demand and delivery routes may be in extremely rapid flux — requires a different approach, said Anna Nagurney of the University of Massachusetts Amherst, who presented the new work. Rather than considering the shortest path from one place to another to maximize profit, her system aims for the cleanest path at minimum cost, while capturing factors such as the perishability of the product and the uncertainty of supply routes. ‘You don’t know where demand is, so it’s tricky,’ said Nagurney. ‘It’s a multicriteria decision-making problem.’
By calculating the total cost associated with each link in a network, accounting for congestion and incorporating penalties for time and products that are lost, the computer model calculates the best supply chain in situations where standard routes may be disrupted.
‘Mathematical tools are essential to develop formal means to predict, and to respond to, such critical perturbations,’ said Iain Couzin of Princeton University, who uses similar computational tools to study collective animal behavior. ‘This is particularly important where response must be rapid and effective, such as during disaster scenarios … or during epidemics or breaches of national security.
’ The work can be applied to immediate, pressing situations, such as getting blood, food or medication to a disaster site, or to longer-term problems such as determining the best locations for manufacturing flu vaccines. . Retrieved April 7th, 2011.
By Rachel Ehrenberg Science News, Web edition: Monday, February 21st, 2011
WASHINGTON — Getting blood or other perishable supplies to an area that’s been struck by an earthquake or hurricane isn’t as simple as asking what brown can do for you. But a new model quickly determines the best routes and means for delivering humanitarian aid, even in situations where bridges are out or airport tarmacs are clogged with planes.
The research, presented February 18 at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, could help get supplies to areas which have experienced natural disasters or help prepare for efficient distribution of vaccines when the flu hits.
Efficient supply chains have long been a goal of manufacturers, but transport in fragile networks — where supply, demand and delivery routes may be in extremely rapid flux — requires a different approach, said Anna Nagurney of the University of Massachusetts Amherst, who presented the new work. Rather than considering the shortest path from one place to another to maximize profit, her system aims for the cleanest path at minimum cost, while capturing factors such as the perishability of the product and the uncertainty of supply routes. ‘You don’t know where demand is, so it’s tricky,’ said Nagurney. ‘It’s a multicriteria decision-making problem.’
By calculating the total cost associated with each link in a network, accounting for congestion and incorporating penalties for time and products that are lost, the computer model calculates the best supply chain in situations where standard routes may be disrupted.
‘Mathematical tools are essential to develop formal means to predict, and to respond to, such critical perturbations,’ said Iain Couzin of Princeton University, who uses similar computational tools to study collective animal behavior. ‘This is particularly important where response must be rapid and effective, such as during disaster scenarios … or during epidemics or breaches of national security.
’ The work can be applied to immediate, pressing situations, such as getting blood, food or medication to a disaster site, or to longer-term problems such as determining the best locations for manufacturing flu vaccines. . Retrieved April 7th, 2011.