Sales & Marketing Alignment: How to Synergize for Success
Functions and Problems related to Housing
1. * Function and
Problems
Related to Housing*
Group 6
Presentation
2. Housing
- Buildings or other shelters in which people live
- A place to live; a dwelling
-Provision of lodging or shelter
- Something that covers, protects, or supports,
especially: a. A frame, bracket, or box for
holding or protecting a mechanical part.
- An enclosing frame in which a shaft revolves.
- A hole, groove, or slot in a piece of wood
into which another piece is inserted.
- A niche for a statue.
Nautical
- The part of a mast that is below deck.
- The part of a bowsprit that is inside the
hull.
3. Backlog Term
-backlog Term mostly used in homebuilding
industry
-Backlog refers to unfinished work or to customer orders
that have been received but are either incomplete or in
the process of completion. Backlog orders are also known as
Open Orders.
Backlog analysis
-lets you to investigate the potential revenue by reporting
all the work that have been received but not yet fulfilled.
If you assume that you can fulfill all the remaining work in
your backlog, you can predict how much revenue you will
generate over the remaining period.
It is important to watch your backlog over time. If your
backlog is raising, you may face an increasing sales and
demands or you may experience a production problem. If
your backlog is falling, you may face a sales down trend or
you may increase your production efficiency. You should
perform a root cause analysis on the backlog changes and
adjust your operation accordingly.
4. Household
• . The household is "the basic residential unit in
which economic production, consumption, inheritance, child
rearing, and shelter are organized and carried out"; [the
household] "may or may not be synonymous with family".
• The household is the basic unit of analysis in
many social, microeconomic and government models. The
term refers to all individuals who live in the
same dwelling.
• In economics, a household is a person or a group of
people living in the same residence. Most economic models
do not address whether the members of a household are
a family in the traditional sense. Government and policy
discussions often treat the terms household and family
synonymous, especially in western societies where
the nuclear family has become the most common family
structure. In reality, there is not always a one-to-one
relationship between households and families.
5. Professional Squatters
Professional squatters" refers to
"individuals or groups who
occupy lands without the express
consent of the landowner and
who have sufficient income for
legitimate housing. The term shall
also apply to persons who have
previously been awarded homelots
or housing units by
the Government but who sold,
leased or transferred the same to
settle illegally in the same place
or in another urban area, and
non-bona fide occupants and
intruders of lands reserved
for socialized housing. The term
shall not apply to individuals or
groups who simply rent land and
housing from professional
squatters or squatting syndicates
6. Slum
• A slum, as defined by
the United
Nations agency UN-HABITAT,
is a run-down
area of a city characterized
by substandard housing and
squalor and lacking in
tenure security. According
to the United Nations, the
percentage of urban
dwellers living in slums
decreased from 47 percent
to 37 percent in the
developing world between
1990 and 2005.
The term has traditionally
referred to housing areas
that were once relatively
affluent but which
deteriorated as the original
dwellers moved on to
newer and better parts of
the city, but has come to
include the vast informal
settlements found in cities
in the developing world.
7. Relocation
Relocation, also known
as moving is the process of
vacating a fixed location (such
as a residence or business) and
settling in a different one. A
move can be to a nearby
location within the same
neighborhood, a much farther
location in a different city, or
sometimes a different country.
8. Attributes of adequate housing
’Thus the concept of adequacy is particularly significant
in relation to the right to housing since it serves to
underline a number of factors which must be taken into
account in determining whether particular forms of shelter can
be considered to constitute "adequate housing" for the purposes
of the Covenant. While adequacy is determined in part by
social, economic, cultural, climatic, ecological and other factors,
the Committee believes that it is nevertheless possible to
identify certain aspects of the right that must be taken into
account for this purpose in any particular context. They include
the following:
a) Legal security of tenure
b) Availability of services, materials, facilities and
infrastructure
c) Affordable
d) Habitable
e) Accessibility
f) Location
g) Culturally Adequate
9. 1. RESETTLEMENT
the transportation of people (as a
family or colony) to a new settlement
(as after an upheaval of some kind)
10. Problem Related to Housing
• Real causes of problems related to
housing Large chunks of land were
cornered by a few - with much help from
friendly sources with political connections.
Land banks were built. The gold, silver,
and diamonds from the glorious land of
India that was supposed to benefit all was
hastily converted into Special Economic
Zones.
11. GROUP 6
Leader:
*Alfred John S. Tolentino
Members:
Allyssa Jane Mondego
JennyBabe Cinco
Meldin Balatucan
RoseMarie Bello
Jay-Jay Abarabar
Martin Tan