single-use plans
(noun)
A strategy for achieving an objective that can only be used in one situation.
Examples of single-use plans in the following topics:
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Overview of Types of Strategic Plans
- The broader overview of strategic plans, as well as the five subgroups within strategic planning, provide businesses with direction.
- Long-range plans are those most closely related to the overall strategic-planning process.
- Single-use plans:As opposed to standing plans, single-use plans cover a specific operation or process that is an outlier to normal operations.
- In all likelihood, a single-use plan will never need to be repeated and will simply cover the content involved in one circumstance.
- Differentiate between the five general planning frames and recognize considerations that must be made prior to planning
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Streamlining Distribution
- Sales planning can be defined as a process in which demand forecast is converted into a feasible operative plan that can be used by producers and salespersons.
- In principle, stock planning is used to calculate the optimal level of safety stocks at every location.
- The term production planning means the development of a master plan for single factories (producers).
- Distribution planning is based on the actual transport costs and requirements that represent single goods locations.
- Transport planning uses current transport prices for the minimization of dispatch costs.
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Constitutional Issues and Compromises
- After the Virginia Plan was introduced, New Jersey delegate William Paterson asked for an adjournment to contemplate the plan.
- Paterson's New Jersey Plan was ultimately a rebuttal to the Virginia Plan.
- Unsatisfied with the New Jersey Plan and the Virginia Plan, Alexander Hamilton proposed his own plan.
- Hamilton's plan advocated doing away with much state sovereignty and consolidating the states into a single nation.
- Compare and contrast the U.S.
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Overview of Inputs to Strategic Planning
- Strategic plans can take the form of business or marketing plans, and consultants and industry experts are used in their development.
- Business strategy refers to the aggregated strategies of a single business firm or a strategic business unit (SBU) in a diversified corporation.
- Solid strategy is the foundation of a well-written marketing plan, and one way to achieve this is by using a method known as the seven Ps (product, place, price, promotion, physical environment, people, and process).
- A product-oriented company may use the seven Ps to develop a plan for each of its products.
- The inclusion of stakeholders offers a variety of tools, each of which may or may not be a useful input depending on the context of the plan.
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Socialism and Planned Economies
- Economic planning in socialism takes a different form than economic planning in capitalist mixed economies.
- In socialism, planning refers to production of use-value directly (planning of production), while in capitalist mixed economies, planning refers to the design of capital accumulation in order to stabilize or increase the efficiency of its process.
- The command economy is distinguished from economic planning.
- A socialist economic system would consist of an organization of production to directly satisfy economic demands and human needs, so that goods and services would be produced directly for use instead of for private profit driven by the accumulation of capital.
- There are many variations of socialism and as such there is no single definition encapsulating all of socialism.
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The Healthcare Plan of 1993
- Bill Clinton had campaigned heavily on health care in the 1992 U.S. presidential election.
- A major health care speech was delivered by President Clinton to the U.S.
- The Clinton health plan required each U.S. citizen and permanent resident alien to become enrolled in a qualified health plan and forbade their dis-enrollment until covered by another plan.
- It listed the minimum coverage and maximum annual out-of-pocket expenses for each plan.
- However, even with Mitchell's bill, there were not enough Democratic Senators behind a single proposal to pass a bill, let alone stop a filibuster.
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Purpose of the Marketing Plan
- A formal marketing plan provides a clear reference point for activities throughout the planning period.
- Still, what's the point of creating a formal marketing plan?
- Exactly what purpose does a marketing plan serve?
- A formal marketing plan provides a clear reference point for activities throughout the planning period.
- However, perhaps the most important benefit of these plans is the planning process itself.
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The Albany Congress and the Intercolonial Defense
- Although rejected by England and the colonies, the Albany Plan became a useful guide in the years leading up to the Revolutionary War.
- The original plan was heavily debated by all who attended the conference, and numerous modifications were proposed until the plan proceeded to be passed unanimously.
- The plan called for a single executive, known as a president general, to be appointed and supported by the Crown; the president general would be responsible for American Indian relations, military preparedness, and execution of laws regulating various trade and financial activities.
- The plan was also rejected by the Colonial Office.
- The cartoon was used in the French and Indian War to symbolize that the colonies needed to join together with Great Britain to defeat the French and Indians.
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What is Strategy?
- A balanced scorecard is a tool sometimes used to evaluate a business's overall performance.
- Another way to keep score of a strategy is to visualize it using a strategy map.
- Guiding Policy: What framework will be used to approach the operations?
- No single strategic managerial method dominates, and the choice between managerial styles remains a subjective and context-dependent process.
- Strategy as plan: a directed course of action to achieve an intended set of goals; similar to the strategic planning concept
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Advantages of a Marketing Plan
- A marketing plan has a strong impact on the internal operations of an organization.
- A marketing plan helps remove the fog and barriers to vision.
- Marketing plans help organizations to:
- Thus, a marketing plan can serve as a rallying point for employees.
- The marketing plan, which is a written document, does the job.