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Ebook Orbital Virtual Terminal

The Orbital Virtual Terminal is an internet-based point of sale terminal for key entered transactions. It includes a full suite of features to authorize and settle Card Not Present transactions. All transaction data and applications are hosted on Paymentech servers.

All you need to access the Orbital Virtual Terminal is an internet connection and a web browser that supports 128-bit encryption. Using the on-screen terminal, you enter order information to initiate authorizations, settlements, refunds and other transactions. The virtual terminal allows different security levels among users as well as multi-user access.Additionally all credit card data is “masked” unless you have the highest access rights.

Ebook Review of the Scottish Diet Action Plan

in July 1996, Eating for Health: A Diet Action Plan for Scotland, commonly known as the Scottish Diet action plan (SDap), was published by the Scottish Office. launching the plan, the then Minister of State, lord James Dougla- samilton, acknowledged that changes to eating habits, developed over many years, would not be accomplished overnight, but commended the action plan as ‘a blueprint for action over a decade which had the potential to begin a process that would result in better health for all’. its recommendations have been the basis on which food and health action in Scotland has been shaped over the past 10 years.

in 2004, the Scottish executive published Eating for Health: Meeting the Challenge, a strategic framework to guide continued implementation of the SDap. This outlined the coordinated action, improved communication and leadership needed to take forward the SDap as the food and health component of the Scottish executive’s broader policy for health improvement. One of the action points put forward to meet the continued challenge of improving diet-related health in Scotland was to review the progress made to date in implementing SDap recommendations and achieving the targets set for 2005.

Ebook Current Trends And Future Directions In Family Business Management Studies: Toward A Theory Of The Family Firm

The economic landscape of most nations remains dominated by family firms (Heck & Stafford, 2001; Klein, 2000; Morck & Yeung, 2003; Shanker & Astrachan, 1996). Therefore, it is fitting that academia has begun to recognize the importance of family business studies. The field has gathered considerable momentum, particularly in the last several years. Studies of founders (e.g., Kelly, Athanassiou, & Crittenden, 2000; Kenyon-Rouvinez, 2001; Sorenson, 2000), members of the next-generation (e.g., Eckrich & Loughead, 1996; Goldberg, 1996; Sharma & Irving, 2002; Stavrou, 1998), women (e.g., Cole, 1997; Dumas, 1998; Fitzgerald & Muske, 2002; Poza & Messer, 2001), and non-family managers (e.g., Mitchell, Morse, & Sharma, 2003) have increased our understanding of key individual stakeholders. Studies at the group level have added to our knowledge on two of the most pervasive problems in family businesses: conflict (e.g., Boles, 1996; Drozdow, 1998; Habbershon & Astrachan, 1996; Kaye, 1996; Kellermanns & Eddleston, 2002; Sorenson, 1999) and succession (e.g., Cadieux, Lorrain, & Hugron, 2002; Davis & Harveston, 1998; Harveston, Davis, & Lynden, 1997; Miller, Steier, & LeBreton-Miller, 2003; Morris, Williams, Allen, & Avila, 1997). Still other studies have broadened our horizons beyond the United States by providing perspective of the family business situation in Asia (Pistrui, Huang, Oksoy, Jing, & Welsch, 2001; Sharma & Rao, 2000) Europe (Corbetta, 1995; Gallo, 1995; Klein, 2002; Welsch, Gerald, & Hoy, 1995), and South America (Curimbaba, 2002).

Recently, the idea that the family is the critical variable in family firm studies and that the heart of the field is about understanding the reciprocal impact of family on business and business on family has begun to crystallize in the minds of many scholars (e.g., Astrachan, 2003; Dyer, 2003; Habbershon, Williams, & MacMillan, 2003; Rogoff & Heck, 2003; Zahra, 2003). Broad based models of sustainable family businesses that take into account the reciprocal relationships between family and business systems in an effort to foster the simultaneous development of functional families and profitable firms have emerged (Stafford, Duncan, Danes, & Winter, 1999). Other scholars have encouraged the adoption of a “family embeddedness perspective” by including the characteristics of family systems in research studies (Aldrich & Cliff, 2003). Recognizing that the family and business are intertwined in family firms, some researchers define the performance of family firms along both family and business dimensions (Mitchell et al., 2003). Some studies even suggest that the success of family firms depends more on effective management of the overlap between family and business than on resources or processes in either the family or the business systems (Olson, Zuiker, Danes, Stafford, Heck, & Duncan, 2003).

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