首页
登录
职称英语
•Read the following article about a company’s program and the questions on the o
•Read the following article about a company’s program and the questions on the o
游客
2025-05-28
22
管理
问题
•Read the following article about a company’s program and the questions on the opposite page.
•For each question 15-20, mark one letter (A, B, C or D ) on your Answer Sheet for the answer you choose.
Caught in the spotlight of hostile scrutiny, global companies from the Gap to McDonald’s to Wal-Mart have launched so-called social-compliance programs to fend off critics of their supply chain practices. These new programs frequently require company suppliers to meet basic labor-practice standards. That compliance is all excellent first step, but it requires strategic thinking, not just-in-time tactical responses.
Starbucks has charted a course that suggests a new strategic template, one that other brand-driven multinationals might want to explore. When anti-globalization activists singled out Starbucks for having exploited third-world farmers, the company saw the attack as a direct threat to the brand and to its public commitments to social responsibility. But rather than assume a purely defensive posture, Starbucks launched a pilot program to fundamentally change its relationship with its suppliers. The company began to actively cultivate and reward environmentally and socially responsible suppliers a strategic gamble it calls sustainable sourcing. Not only could sustainable sourcing defend against Starbucks’s critics, company executives reasoned, but it could build the brand and even drive the company’s growth. This spring, Starbucks announced that it was making sustainable sourcing a cornerstone of its global strategy.
With annual growth in the late 1990s at about 20%, Starbucks executives were confident the demand was them to sustain this rate of growth. But they knew their supply chain’s future was less predictable and reliable. If the flow of specialty beans from around the globe fell short, both its growth plans and the quality of its coffee would be at risk.
To protect its coffee supply, Starbucks realized it had to identify and nurture partners that could meet its quality standards and keep pace with its increasing demand. Moreover, to protect its brand, the company had to be certain that these suppliers shared its commitment to corporate citizenship. In 2001, the company launched a pilot called the preferred supplier program to attract and reward farmers committed to socially and environmentally responsible farming. The company reasoned that the farms that took the best care of their employees and land would be the most sophisticated, responsive, and responsible suppliers just the sort to help Starbucks fulfill its aggressive growth plan.
To become a preferred supplier, farmers must apply to the program. Reviewers evaluate applicants on 20 measures to determine how well they adhere to sustainable environmental practices (procedures that protect the scarce real estate on which high-quality coffee can grow ) and responsible social practices (methods, for example, that reduce the risk that deliveries will be compromised by labor unrest, corruption, or legal violations ). Suppliers accepted into the program are awarded points for meeting environmental, social, and economic criteria; the more points they earn, the more Starbucks pays them for their coffee. Preferred providers will typically receive a 5% premium on each pound of beans they sell. They can also win long-term contracts to reduce market risk and receive credit to fund improvements that promote sustainability. With the recent expansion of the pilot program to all of its supply chain, Starbucks expects that in five years 60% of its coffee will come from preferred suppliers.
Starbucks’s idea is innovative and refreshingly proactive. But it’s clearly a gamble. It’s uncertain whether sourcing this way will pay off, either by satisfying the company’s critics or by assuring adequate supplies. While the jury’s still out, brand-driven companies may want to try this experiment: Put your brand managers and supply chain people in a room together and have them jointly develop a sourcing strategy that’s directly tied to growth. You might just hit on your next big idea. [br] The writer says the main purpose of Starbucks’ sustainable sourcing is to
选项
A、encourage responsible suppliers.
B、build a new-type relationship with its suppliers.
C、enhance its brand.
D、promote the company’s growth.
答案
B
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/4094300.html
相关试题推荐
•ReadthearticlebelowaboutCoca-colaanditsadvertising.•Foreachquestion
•ReadthearticlebelowaboutCoca-colaanditsadvertising.•Foreachquestion
•ReadthearticlebelowaboutCoca-colaanditsadvertising.•Foreachquestion
•ReadthearticlebelowaboutCoca-colaanditsadvertising.•Foreachquestion
•ReadthearticlebelowaboutCoca-colaanditsadvertising.•Foreachquestion
•Readthefollowingextractfromanarticleaboutcustomerrelationsandtheque
•Readthefollowingextractfromanarticleaboutcustomerrelationsandtheque
•Readthefollowingextractfromanarticleaboutcustomerrelationsandtheque
•Readthefollowingextractfromanarticleaboutcustomerrelationsandtheque
•Readthearticlebelowaboutsuccessfule-mailnegotiation.•Choosethebestse
随机试题
Task1StaffAppraisalSchemeThenewlyappointedHumanResourcesDirectorofth
Whatisthemaintopicofthepassage?[br][originaltext]Japanese-stylec
[originaltext]Goodmorning,class.Beforewebegintoday,Iwouldliketoa
Whatdoesthepassagemainlytellus?[br]Theimportantrelationshipbetweenen
在横向斜坡地形,棚洞外侧基础埋置深度超过路面以下()时,宜在路面以下设置钢
中药鉴定取样时,最终抽取的供检验用样品量一般不得少于实验用量的A.3倍 B.
市场法中权益状况调整的内容包括()。A.土地使用期限 B.容积率 C.
假设年利率为6%,年指数股息率为1%,6月22日为6月期货合约的交割日,4月1日
一般资料:夏某,女,23岁,售票员。 案例介绍:夏某由其母亲带来,主诉两年来经
建设工程招标文件包括()等。A:投标人须知 B:合同专用条款 C:工程量清单
最新回复
(
0
)