Showing posts with label Competition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Competition. Show all posts

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http://atschool.eduweb.co.uk/southwold/project/november5/fawkes.htm

Essay writing competition

Economics essay competition

Published: October 24 2008 14:59 | Last updated: October 24 2008 14:59

To celebrate the publication of The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, 2e Palgrave Macmillan is pleased to announce The New Palgrave Economics Writing Prize.

You are invited to submit a 1000 word essay on the subject of Why Economics Matters.

The winning essay will be published on www.dictionaryofeconomics.com and www.ft.com. In addition to this, the winner will receive:

£1000

A personal 12 month subscription to The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics Online.

Entries should be emailed to dictionaryofeconomics@palgrave.com by 11th November 2008.

The winner will be announced one month later.

The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics contains 1872 articles by 1506 of the world’s leading economists, including 25 Nobel Prize winners.

Why not make use of this dynamic resource when researching your essay?

For the next two weeks, we are providing FREE access to the Dictionary when accessed via this page. Please click here to access The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics Online.

The essays will be judged by:

Tim Besley, Kuwait Professor of Economics and Political Science, LSE, External Member, Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee and Contributor to The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics

Chris Giles, Economics Editor, The Financial Times

Tim Harford, Leader Writer, The Financial Times

Stephen Rutt, Global Publishing Director, Economics, Business and Management, Palgrave Macmillan

Terms and Conditions

● Essays submitted any later than midnight 11th November 2008 GMT will not be accepted.

● Employees from Palgrave Macmillan Ltd or The Financial Times are not eligible to enter this competition.

● Prize money will be issued no later than 45 days after the winner is announced, providing the address and contact details of the winner have been supplied.

● Free access to the Dictionary from this web page will expire on 11th November 2008.

● Essays must be submitted in electronic form as a word document.

● Essays must be in English and typed in double spacing throughout.

● Essays must not exceed 1,100 words in total length, including references.

● The author of the submitted essay warrants that the submitted essay, other than direct quotations from third parties appearing in quotation marks and properly referenced in Harvard form, is entirely original to the author, the author is the sole owner of all rights in the essay, other than such third party material, and the essay does not infringe any copyright or other intellectual property of any other person.

● The author of the submitted essay warrants that no part of the submitted essay has previously been published in any form.

● The author of the submitted essay warrants that no material requiring permission to reproduce from third parties shall be included.

● The author of each shortlisted entry will be required to submit a signed copy of the Terms and Conditions before final judging takes place and assign copyright in their essay, in the event of it winning, to Macmillan Publishers.


Source: www.ft.com

Three days to go until....

This is closed!

First you need the idea, then you need the pitch.

THE IDEA.

1. Expect to have ideas . If you believe you’re incapable of coming up with ideas then you won’t come up with any. Put aside any negativity about yourself or you creativity and expect to have ideas.

2. Keep and open mind. Ideas can come from anywhere and some of the best ideas will seem daft or impossible based on your current knowledge, experience and assumptions. Try to be prepared to explore new ideas and to change your view of the world.

3. Keep a written record of your ideas, ideas that inspire you or ideas that are new to you - When you write things down you are more likely to remember them and if you don’t you’ve got a record to refer back to. I keep a record of all the ideas I see, read/hear about or have and I review it regularly. My written record has also evolved into this blog full of ideas.

4. Try to learn something new every day. Talk to other business people, talk to your friends and neighbours, talk to anyone that looks interesting and will talk to you. Read websites, magazines, books whatever medium you prefer try to read something that will expand your knowledge everyday. I enjoy business/entrepreneurs biographies and histories especially those that explain where the business or idea for it came from.

5. Talk about your ideas. Talk about your ideas to anyone who will listen, more often that not it’s my wife who has to listen to my ideas, if she’s not around however I’ll talk to myself! Failing that write down what you’d say to someone to explain the idea. The point is that in explaining the idea you’ll usually spot flaws or areas for improvement thus making the idea better.

6. Ask questions and listen to peoples problems, hopes, dreams and aspirations. As a small business consultant I always ask people what problems, issues or challenges they face in their business (or job), there are often good business opportunities in solving those problems. Peoples hopes, dreams and aspirations can provide ideas for example a business like Red Letter Days helps people fulfil their dreams by providing experiences such as driving a supercar or flying a plane. Weight Watchers appeals to those hoping to loose weight.

7. Research see what else is out there that is similar. Evaluate potential competition and keep notes on what you find. Use the search engines to look for similar ideas, businesses or products and take notes on them.

8. Draw a mind map. A mind map is a diagram used to represent words, ideas, tasks or other items linked to and arranged radially around a central key word or idea. It is used to generate, visualize, structure and classify ideas, and as an aid in study, organization, problem solving, decision making, and writing.

9. Synthesise ideas. Put two or more unrelated ideas together. One way to do this is to brainstorm with your team. You’ll get the best results if you’ve followed steps 1 - 6 first as you’ll have a larger pool of ideas to combine.

10. Sleep on it. Go away for a while and think of something else, often your subconscious mind will continue to work on the problem and will come up with new ideas or refinements on the ideas you already have.

Source



Advice to pitchers (from Peter Jones - Dragons Den):

1) Dress appropriately. You wouldn’t ask your bank manager for a loan dressed in jeans and a t-shirt, and you shouldn’t expect me to invest in you if you don’t know what is appropriate to wear in a given situation. Dress according to the job you are applying for, or the request you are making.

2) Be confident. You should have faith in yourself and your idea. Often I look to invest in an individual as much as in their concept – so show what you can do! You get few opportunities to pitch directly to investors, so make the most of them. Even if they choose not to invest in you, it is a great opportunity to get some feedback from experienced business people.

3) Be honest about your company and your forecasts. There is nothing more embarrassing than seeing a pitcher crumble when their figures are questioned and picked apart by savvy investors. Do not over-estimate your capability, it will not inspire investors with enthusiasm or confidence in you. Some investments that are made on Dragons’ Den fall through because pitchers over-exaggerate about their business potential, and are misleading about their contacts and their progress so far.

4) Be concise. Make sure that your business plan can be easily understood by those who you are pitching to and do not waffle. Remember, I want hard facts and figures as well as how you are going to make your concept into reality. What you say must inspire investors, without drifting into a fantasy realm.

5) My final, and perhaps my most crucial tip of all, is make sure that you research your idea thoroughly! It is amazing how many people try to pitch to me, without having looked into the market sector that they are trying to break into. Sometimes a simple internet search reveals that their idea has been done before, or that their estimation of demand is completely skewed. Look around at your competitors and see how you can offer a better and more competitive service than them.

Finally, my top tip is, make your dreams reality. Here’s to your dreams!"

Spoof...




and...

Business Competition

Don't forget, closing date is the 15th.

Fame, (small) fortunes await......

Approach to teaching

Methods there are many, principles but few, methods often change, principles never do