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Family Business in Real Estate Sector
Research proposal
Family Business in Real Estate Sector
The advantages and disadvantages of family business in real estate and evaluation of competition of family business and publicly listed real estate companies
Introduction
This study is to make us understand on the topic of the family business in the real estate sector. We will focus majorly on its advantages and disadvantages. Moreover, we shall see on how the business operates. Here, the task will be on the evaluation of the competition of the business family with the of publicly listed real estate companies
Aims
To have knowledge on how the family business works in the real estate sector.
What are the advantages of the family business?
How the family business advantages affect the operation of the business?
What are the disadvantages of the business?
How do the disadvantages affect the operation of the business?
To analyse the operation of the family business in the real estate today
How does the family operate their business?
How do we evaluate the competition of family business and the real estate in companies?
In this case study of family business, we shall see on the challenges it faces during its operation. The above questions will make us understand further what we are talking about. The purpose of the case study is to enlighten those who may want to venture into this business to the general idea on what it takes. The new entrepreneurs will benefit because they will have the knowledge on how to combat the disadvantages, which they will use to their advantage. It will help them to know how to maximise their profits in the business.
Objectives
First is to know the advantages and disadvantages of business in real estate sector. Secondly it is to evaluate the competition of family businesses and publicly listed real estate companies.
Having knowing the aims and objectives of the family business one is in a position evaluate whether to venture into this business or in the real estate companies
Literature Review
To formulate analysis, I reviewed the HAND BOOK RESEARCH OF FAMILY BUSINESS. In this topic, we shall analyse the operation of the family business more so in line of its advantage and disadvantages to the real estate sector. In addition, we shall focus on how to evaluate its competition and listed public estate companies.
A family business is one which the members are the family member or related. They are the one who operationalize the business. They also contribute to financing of the business injection resources for it to operate. The family members have a significant commitment towards the business for its growth. Most of the firms are family-owned because a person has a share and not the state.
In the handbook research of family business, it fails to give use the way to overcome the challenges that the family goes through during its operation. In my study thought it is wise, the family members participating in the business should avoid wrangles during the inheritance. The review of journal suggests that the members should have a constitution which will cater for the inheritance. In the operational side, the family should have a decision which will make the business boom
Research process
A Research /study design
In this case study, we will use a quantitative process.
Methods
Interviewing the people who operate the family business to tell us on the advantages and disadvantages of their business. I shall interview as well the analyst so as to get more information on the challenges that the business is facing. This method will be most efficiently because talking one on one with the people affected will makes us understand the challenges
Participant observation. I will observe and evaluate the competition of the family business with that of the real estate companies. The method of the research makes us know better by ourselves by seeing what is happening to the business today.
Subject
Whom to be studied?
I will make a case study on the following people for interviewing and my own observations so as to get clear information to be analysed
The business owners
Business analyst
Real estate owners
Work plan
Principal investigator Jan Feb March Apr may June
Business owners yes yes yes
Business analyst yes yes yes yes
Real estate owners yes yes yes Research assistant
Jan Feb March Apr may June
Collect data yes yes yes yes yes Enter data yes yes yes yes Analyse data yes
References
PUNCH, K. (2006). Developing effective research proposals. London, SAGE.
VITHAL, R., & JANSEN, J. (1997). Designing your first research proposal: a manual for researchers in education and the social sciences. Kenwyn, Juta.
Drug effects and Policies (2)
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Comparing the Film Troy to Homer’s Iliad
Introduction
Troy (2004) is an epic historical war movie based on Homer’s poem Iliad. The film sidesteps Greek gods turning the heroes into action fighters. In this version of the Iliad, Troy is city that has been inundated for 10 years before being eventually conquered by the Greek army headed by King Agamemnon. The Trojan War emerged because Helen, the queen of Sparta, had been abducted by Paris, the son of King Priam. On the other hand, Iliad is a poem that tells a tale of the rage of the greatest Greek hero ever to fight the Trojan war. His name is Achilles. Iliad is a tale about gods and goddesses and heroes and heroines. The story centers on the Achilles and his determination and anger to slay the Trojan Hero named Hector to recover Helen, the most beautiful woman the world has ever seen. Worth noting, both the poem and the film have similarities in the plot, such as Troy’s siege by the Greeks and the feuds between King Agamemnon and warrior Achilles. The most notable difference between the poem and the film is how some of the major characters in the Iliad die yet survive in Troy. Additionally, the time of death of the characters differs as well as the relationships between characters. This essay aims to compare Iliad and Troy, including the mythological characters in the film, how they start, and how they end.
How they Begin
The film Troy begins at a site called Hisarlik, located in northwest Turkey. A clash between two nations emerges after Paris. The Trojan prince convinces Hellen, the Queen of Sparta, to abandon her husband Menelaus, leave her life behind, and sail alongside him to his home in Troy (Rosidin, 12). Afterwards, Menelaus discovers that his wife is missing and is taken by his enemies, the Trojans. Menelaus then approaches his brother, Agamemnon and requests his help in getting his wife back. Annoyed by his enemies actions, the king comes up with a plan to get Helen back from the Trojans. On the other hand, the poem Iliad begins in the middle as opposed to starting with a background of what transpired before. Homer begins by writing about Achilleus rage. The author sings about the wrath that Achilleus has and the consequences it bears. In this scene, Agamemnon threatens to take Achilleus’ prize, Hellen by force and Achilleus is about to draw his sword and kill him but Athene appears and stops him.
Mythological Characters
Homer fills Iliad with mythical characters from the beginning to the end. He does this in reference to the many gods and creatures that were part of Greek mythology. Some of the mythical creatures in the Iliad include Ares, Poseidon, Zeus, Hera, Athena, Thetis, Apolo, Artemis, and Hermes. Ares is Aphrodite’s lover and is the god of war. Poseidon is the god of the sea and Zeus is the King of Gods. Hera is Zeus’s wife, Athena is the goddess of wisdom, and thetis is the sea nymph and Achilles mother (Van den Berg, 30). Apolo is the god of the sun, Artemis is the goddess of hunting and Hermes is the messenger of the gods. Some of the mythical characters in Troy are Agamemnon, Achilles and Adrastus, while Helen is the main goddess. Helen is Menelaus’s spouse and her father and mother are Zeus and Leda respectively.
The Ending
Troy ends with the death of Achilles. He removes all arrows except the one on his heel. He then bids Briseis goodby and watches as she flees with Paris before breathing his last. The Greeks finally take control of Troy and hold a funeral for Achilles. Odysseus cremates Achilles’s body by himself and the surviving Trojans escape to Mount Ida. Iliad ends with Hector’s death. Achilles, who is the hero in the poem is the one that kills Hector. Achilles kills Hector as an act of revenge for killing Patroclus, his great friend. The poems end with the Trojan War coming to an end.
Conclusion
In closing, the poem Iliad and the film Troy share similarities as well as differences. Troy (2004) is based on Holmer’s epic poem Iliad. Both stories revolve around a war between two rivals over a beautiful woman named Helen. Helen is the wife of King Menelaus who the Trojan prince convinced to abandon her husband and sail back with him to Troy. The king and his brother result go to war to recover his wife. From this story, I have learned the importance of evaluating your opponent before going to war with them. Additionally, there is a need for careful reconciliation among rivals as it can save lives.
Works Cited
Rosidin, Asep. The anaysisi of social and discourse deixis in movie” TROY” script. Diss. UIN Sunan Gunung Djati Bandung, 2020.
Van den Berg, Baukje. “The wise Homer and his erudite commentator: Eustathios’ imagery in the proem of the Parekbolai on the Iliad.” Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies 41.1 (2017): 30-44.
Family and Literacy
Family and Literacy
“Family is one of the main literacy sponsors of a person because circumstances in the family affect the person’s literacy”. The family plays a significant role in promoting literacy to its members. Other than being sponsors of literacy in many ways, the family contributes much on one’s basic educations including first language and basics in social interaction, analytical skills in distinguishing things, as well as other forms of education. Early experiences in every person assist a lot in determining one’s brain structure in which case the brain is the key determinant of the way people learn, think, respond to challenges, and behave when interacting with other people. It is also argued that the skills one acquires before reaching the age of six sticks to people for a lifetime.
Economic or financial status of a family affects the literacy level or literacy capacity of the family members. A wealthy family is likely to ensure high level of literacy security to its members whereas a poor family may be influenced by circumstances to stop offering sponsorship to its members’ literacy through education. Brandt (175) says, “People who labor equally to acquire literacy do so under systems of un-equal subsidy and unequal reward.” A family may not act as a literacy sponsor adequately given that the head of the family has low literacy or is illiterate. Low literate individuals are likely to be unemployed making it hard to educate their young children, a process that may create a chain of illiteracy within the family for many generations. An instance of a chain of continuity in illiteracy is that of parents of a given family having been never graduated in high school, making it difficult to sponsor their children through high school. Other than being unable to sponsor its children in education, illiterate parents may hardly find the importance of education in children especially in a situation whereby the illiterate parents have succeeded in life through other efforts that hardly require the application of literacy. “There are a number of things that one can make about discourse”, says Gee (84). He says that such discourse form the basis for any family’s power and social status. Children disvalues their families based on its status and may not see the importance of being sponsored by such families and end up being illiterate of have a low literacy level. In such a family environment, children are likely to face many problems in education due to the various barriers and disadvantages in acquiring education through the family as the sponsor.
Parents with more education seem to be more prepared to sponsor their children through any level of education thereby exposing them to many opportunities in life. Other than being sponsors, family conditions may have a significant impact of a child’s ability and readiness to learn within a learning institution. Learning ability and readiness to learn may be affected by various factors such as one brain capacity, one’s content with the services offered within the learning institution, as well as the social relationships with other students and teachers. The key factor affecting a child’s performance in school is the family background including social aspects of the family and its economic conditions. The kind of literacy sponsorship influences greatly on a child’s education and performance. While children sponsored by their families seem to be satisfied with their sponsorship and being proud of their families, children having other kind of sponsorships may feel unsecure in that the sponsorship can be terminated any time given that the condition of the sponsorship are destructed. Literacy sponsorship may be affected by the family economic status even if the family is not the main sponsor of the child acquiring education. Gee (85) says, “Much of what we come by in life after our initial enculturation involves a mixture of acquisition and learning.”
In many cases, literacy sponsorship of those children from poor or low caste-races may be faced with issue. In a situation whereby the parents may not be in an economic position of sponsoring the education being offered to their children, sponsors may come in but in many case on condition that the child is great performer has some required attributes. Even if this sponsor comes around, it may come out that he or she is not a stronghold to the sponsorship and may terminate it at any given time. On the other hand, children within the origin of families with strong economic backgrounds get sponsorships that are too strong as compared to those children from the poor family backgrounds. The powerful literacy sponsors that the rich families’ students may receive are associated with the families’ economic or political privileges that seem consistent. In the case of poor students from poor family background as well as those from low-caste racial groups, there is less or no consistence in accessing literacy sponsorships. The economic and political conditions that could lead them to access powerful sponsorships are doomed by the poor family relationships with the powerful sponsors who in turn are from rich and successful family backgrounds. “I am sure that sponsors play even more influential roles at the scenes of literacy learning and use than this essay has explored” Brandt (183).
In many cases, the two groups of students show differences in performance attributed to their families and family backgrounds. These backgrounds are mainly education of their parents as well as their family income levels, which differ significantly. In many cases, family income is termed to be a function of the parents’ education in that the higher the level of education of the families, the higher the family’s level of income. Norms and values of the parents could also affect the children’s performance in a great deal. These norms are however hardly different within families of the same ethnicity or race but in families that differ in racial aspects. Performance in this case could be seen to differ due to difference in the level of exposure of the learners. Learners learning a certain aspect of technology could have real life exposure and experience of the technology as influence by their parents. Those having a greater exposure are likely to perform better and have a special interest in whatever they are learning. Children also do better when offered gift as Webb (6) say, that “sponsors can include commercial entities, such as companies who award prizes in a jingle-writing contest and restaurants who offer gift certificates to children who read a designated number of books, as well as institutions, such as the African-American church.”
At the same time, their parents gives them a better chance of interacting with great people and organizations from which they can get access to sponsorships and better jobs that can sustain any demands in higher levels of literacy or advanced skills’ acquisition. “While this shift in working conditions may be evidence of the deskilling of workers induced by the Industrial Revolution, it also offers a site for reflecting upon the dynamic sources of literacy and literacy learning” (Brandt 165). Form these various circumstances, it come out that a person’s family is one of the key literacy sponsors of on his or her literacy. The sponsorship may hardly be direct but the family’s conditions in terms of its background, racial factors, political influence, and economic conditions may play a key role in exposing the children of that particular family to literacy sponsorships. These various conditions would also determine the child’s performance at school due the satisfaction obtained from the family background, the family provisions such as possibility of acting as the sponsor, as well as the exposure provided by the family in education. Families therefore contribute much to their members’ literacy sponsorships and performance. “sponsors of literacy are more prolific, diffused, and heterogeneous” (Webb, 6)
Works Cited
Brandt, D. (1998). Sponsors of Literacy. College Composition and Communication, Vol. 49, Is. 2 , 165-185.
Gee, J. P. (1998). What is Literacy. Taylor and Francis Group.
Webb, S. (n.d.). A Family Affair: Competing Sponsors of Literacy in Appalachian Students’ Lives. Literacy in American Lives , 5-24.
