Harley Davidson was founded in 1903 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin by William S. Harley and Arthur Davidson along with the Walter and William A. Davidson brothers. They started the company out of a shared interest in motorcycle engines and a desire to work on them due to boredom. The company's mission is to fulfill dreams through motorcycling by providing motorcycles and branded products and services. Some of Harley Davidson's recent successes include the introduction of several new motorcycle models in 2009 like the V-Rod Muscle and Street Glide.
Henry Ford invented the motorbike around 1890 by attaching small motors to bicycles, creating one of the first motorbikes, though Daimler is credited with making the very first motorbike in history. Motorbikes became popular in the USA after their invention, and today millions of people worldwide use motorbikes for transportation.
This presentation provides an overview of Harley-Davidson, a leading motorcycle company. Some key points:
- Founded in 1903 in Milwaukee by William Harley and Arthur and Walter Davidson, Harley-Davidson produced their first prototype in 1907 and built over 150 models by 1911.
- During World Wars I and II, Harley-Davidson produced many motorcycles for the US military, receiving awards for production excellence.
- In the 1990s, the Fat Boy model helped Harley-Davidson become a leader in the heavyweight motorcycle market. However, some police departments complained of instability issues in the early 2000s.
- Today Harley-Davidson continues to leverage its strong brand
BMW was founded in 1916 as Bayerische Flugzeugwerke to produce aircraft engines. In 1917 it was renamed Bayerische Motoren Werke GmbH. After World War 2, BMW transitioned to motorcycle production and later expanded into automobile production. Today, BMW produces cars, motorcycles and bicycles under the BMW, Mini and Rolls-Royce brands worldwide, with major production facilities in Germany, the US, South Africa, India and China. BMW has grown to become one of the largest and most valuable automotive brands globally.
The document provides brief histories of four automobile companies and individuals:
1) Nicolà Romeo founded a mining equipment company in Italy in the early 1900s that later expanded into truck and engine manufacturing.
2) Aston Martin was founded in 1914 in London by Lionel Martin and Robert Bamford and has grown into a luxury sports car producer.
3) Chrysler Australia released 13 models between 1962-1978, with the highest seller being the VJ model at 90,865 units and the lowest being the final CM model at 16,005 units.
4) Herbert Austin was born in England but lived and worked in Australia as an engineer, where he met his wife and began designing automobiles for
Before you start a business you need capital to ensure the sufficient requirements. Therefore, you can raise capital from a number of parties such as bankers, investors and customers. Before you send your proposal, you need to explain more about the purpose, budget, target and the amount you want to borrow. So this is an example of the best presentation slide.
Harley Davidson was founded in 1903 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin by William S. Harley and Arthur Davidson along with the Walter and William A. Davidson brothers. They started the company out of a shared interest in motorcycle engines and a desire to work on them due to boredom. The company's mission is to fulfill dreams through motorcycling by providing motorcycles and branded products and services. Some of Harley Davidson's recent successes include the introduction of several new motorcycle models in 2009 like the V-Rod Muscle and Street Glide.
Henry Ford invented the motorbike around 1890 by attaching small motors to bicycles, creating one of the first motorbikes, though Daimler is credited with making the very first motorbike in history. Motorbikes became popular in the USA after their invention, and today millions of people worldwide use motorbikes for transportation.
This presentation provides an overview of Harley-Davidson, a leading motorcycle company. Some key points:
- Founded in 1903 in Milwaukee by William Harley and Arthur and Walter Davidson, Harley-Davidson produced their first prototype in 1907 and built over 150 models by 1911.
- During World Wars I and II, Harley-Davidson produced many motorcycles for the US military, receiving awards for production excellence.
- In the 1990s, the Fat Boy model helped Harley-Davidson become a leader in the heavyweight motorcycle market. However, some police departments complained of instability issues in the early 2000s.
- Today Harley-Davidson continues to leverage its strong brand
BMW was founded in 1916 as Bayerische Flugzeugwerke to produce aircraft engines. In 1917 it was renamed Bayerische Motoren Werke GmbH. After World War 2, BMW transitioned to motorcycle production and later expanded into automobile production. Today, BMW produces cars, motorcycles and bicycles under the BMW, Mini and Rolls-Royce brands worldwide, with major production facilities in Germany, the US, South Africa, India and China. BMW has grown to become one of the largest and most valuable automotive brands globally.
The document provides brief histories of four automobile companies and individuals:
1) Nicolà Romeo founded a mining equipment company in Italy in the early 1900s that later expanded into truck and engine manufacturing.
2) Aston Martin was founded in 1914 in London by Lionel Martin and Robert Bamford and has grown into a luxury sports car producer.
3) Chrysler Australia released 13 models between 1962-1978, with the highest seller being the VJ model at 90,865 units and the lowest being the final CM model at 16,005 units.
4) Herbert Austin was born in England but lived and worked in Australia as an engineer, where he met his wife and began designing automobiles for
Before you start a business you need capital to ensure the sufficient requirements. Therefore, you can raise capital from a number of parties such as bankers, investors and customers. Before you send your proposal, you need to explain more about the purpose, budget, target and the amount you want to borrow. So this is an example of the best presentation slide.
How I got 2.5 Million views on Slideshare (by @nickdemey - Board of Innovation)Board of Innovation
This document provides tips for creating engaging slide decks on SlideShare that garner many views. It recommends focusing on quality over quantity when creating each slide, using compelling images and headlines, and including calls to action throughout. It also suggests experimenting with sharing techniques and doing so in waves to build momentum. The goal is to create decks that are optimized for sharing and spread across multiple channels over time.
An impactful approach to the Seven Deadly Sins you and your Brand should avoid on Social Media! From a humoristic approach to a modern-life analogy for Social Media and including everything in between, this deck is a compelling resource that will provide you with more than a few take-aways for your Brand!
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive functioning. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms for those who already suffer from conditions like depression and anxiety.
How People Really Hold and Touch (their Phones)Steven Hoober
The document discusses design guidelines for touchscreen interfaces based on research into how people actually hold and interact with mobile devices. It provides data on finger sizes, common grips, touch targets, and notes that touch interaction is not just about finger size and pinpoint accuracy. The guidelines include making targets visible and tappable, designing for different screen sizes, leaving space for scrolling, and testing interfaces at scale.
You are dumb at the internet. You don't know what will go viral. We don't either. But we are slighter less dumber. So here's a bunch of stuff we learned that will help you be less dumb too.
What 33 Successful Entrepreneurs Learned From FailureReferralCandy
Entrepreneurs encounter failure often. Successful entrepreneurs overcome failure and emerge wiser. We've taken 33 lessons about failure from Brian Honigman's article "33 Entrepreneurs Share Their Biggest Lessons Learned from Failure", illustrated them with statistics and a little story about entrepreneurship... in space!
Rand Fishkin discusses why content marketing often fails and provides 5 key reasons: 1) Unrealistic expectations of how content marketing works, 2) Creating content without a community to amplify it, 3) Focusing on content creation but not amplification, 4) Ignoring search engine optimization, and 5) Giving up too soon and not allowing time for content to gain traction. He emphasizes that content marketing is a long-term process of building relationships and that most successful content took years of iteration before gaining significant reach.
SEO has changed a lot over the last two decades. We all know about Google Panda & Penguin, but did you know there was a time when search engine results were returned by humans? Crazy right? We take a trip down memory lane to chart some of the biggest events in SEO that have helped shape the industry today.
Inside this guide, you'll learn an insiders tips and techniques to getting into the marketing industry - no job applications necessary.
You'll learn what marketing really is, why you'll find a job easily, what entry level marketing jobs look like and four actionable things you can try right now to help get you into the marketing industry.
Visit Inbound.org and the Inbound.org/jobs community jobs board to find opportunities and connect with professional marketers from all over.
The What If Technique presented by Motivate DesignMotivate Design
Why "What If"...?
The What If Technique tackles the challenge of engaging a creative, disruptive mindset when it comes to design thinking and crafting innovative user experiences.
Thinking disruptively is a disruptive thing to do, which means it's a very hard thing to do, especially when you add in risk-averse business leaders and company cultures, who hold on tight to psychological blocks, corporate lore, and excuse personas that stifle creativity and possibilities (see www.motivatedesign.com/what-if for more details).
The What If Technique offers key steps, tools and examples to help you achieve incremental changes that promote disruptive thinking, overcome barriers to creativity, and lead to big, innovative differences for business leaders, companies, and ultimately user experiences and products.
Let's find out what's what together! Explore your "What Ifs" with us. See www.motivatedesign.com/what-if for details about the What If Technique, studio workshops, the book, case studies and more downloads--including a the sample chapter "Corporate Lore and Blocks to Creativity"
Connect with us @Motivate_Design
The document provides principles for presenting data in the clearest way possible: tell the truth and ensure credibility with data; get to the main point by drawing meaning from the data; pick the right tool like pie, bar, or line graphs depending on the data; highlight what's important by keeping slides focused on conclusions, not all data; and keep visuals simple to avoid distractions.
What Would Steve Do? 10 Lessons from the World's Most Captivating PresentersHubSpot
The document provides 10 tips for creating captivating presentations based on lessons from famous presenters like Steve Jobs, Scott Harrison, and Gary Vaynerchuk. The tips include crafting an emotional story with a beginning, middle, and end; creating slides that answer why the audience should care, how it will improve their lives, and what they must do; using simple language without jargon; using metaphors; ditching bullet points; showing rather than just telling through images; rehearsing extensively; and that excellence requires hard work with no shortcuts.
This document provides an overview and introduction to digital strategy from Bud Caddell, SVP and Director of Digital Strategy at Deutsch LA. It defines key terms like digital strategy, digital strategist, and core concepts. It explores what a digital strategy and strategist are, essential concepts like insights, cultural tensions and category conventions, and what deliverables a digital strategist produces. The document is intended to educate young practitioners entering the field of digital strategy.
Today we all live and work in the Internet Century, where technology is roiling the business landscape, and the pace of change is only accelerating.
In their new book How Google Works, Google Executive Chairman and ex-CEO Eric Schmidt and former SVP of Products Jonathan Rosenberg share the lessons they learned over the course of a decade running Google.
Covering topics including corporate culture, strategy, talent, decision-making, communication, innovation, and dealing with disruption, the authors illustrate management maxims with numerous insider anecdotes from Google’s history.
In an era when everything is speeding up, the best way for businesses to succeed is to attract smart-creative people and give them an environment where they can thrive at scale. How Google Works is a new book that explains how to do just that.
This is a visual preview of How Google Works. You can pick up a copy of the book at www.howgoogleworks.net
The document defines shampoo as a liquid or cream preparation used to wash hair and remove dirt, oils, and other contaminants. It discusses the typical ingredients in shampoo including surfactants, conditioners, and additives. The functions of shampoo are also outlined, such as effectively removing dirt while imparting a pleasant fragrance. Various types of shampoo are classified based on appearance, use, and origin. Quality control tests are described to test the foam stability, dirt dispersion, viscosity, and other properties of shampoo.
The document provides information about Pantene's market share and 4P's analysis in Thailand. It states that Pantene has been the leading beauty shampoo brand since 2009, with 14% of the market share. While Sunsilk has the largest share at 26%. The analysis also examines the brands' products, prices, places of distribution and promotional strategies. It finds that Pantene's bottles are white while competitors have color-coded bottles for different formulas. Pantene targets all consumer groups but has not fully utilized online media or emphasized new product developments.
How I got 2.5 Million views on Slideshare (by @nickdemey - Board of Innovation)Board of Innovation
This document provides tips for creating engaging slide decks on SlideShare that garner many views. It recommends focusing on quality over quantity when creating each slide, using compelling images and headlines, and including calls to action throughout. It also suggests experimenting with sharing techniques and doing so in waves to build momentum. The goal is to create decks that are optimized for sharing and spread across multiple channels over time.
An impactful approach to the Seven Deadly Sins you and your Brand should avoid on Social Media! From a humoristic approach to a modern-life analogy for Social Media and including everything in between, this deck is a compelling resource that will provide you with more than a few take-aways for your Brand!
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive functioning. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms for those who already suffer from conditions like depression and anxiety.
How People Really Hold and Touch (their Phones)Steven Hoober
The document discusses design guidelines for touchscreen interfaces based on research into how people actually hold and interact with mobile devices. It provides data on finger sizes, common grips, touch targets, and notes that touch interaction is not just about finger size and pinpoint accuracy. The guidelines include making targets visible and tappable, designing for different screen sizes, leaving space for scrolling, and testing interfaces at scale.
You are dumb at the internet. You don't know what will go viral. We don't either. But we are slighter less dumber. So here's a bunch of stuff we learned that will help you be less dumb too.
What 33 Successful Entrepreneurs Learned From FailureReferralCandy
Entrepreneurs encounter failure often. Successful entrepreneurs overcome failure and emerge wiser. We've taken 33 lessons about failure from Brian Honigman's article "33 Entrepreneurs Share Their Biggest Lessons Learned from Failure", illustrated them with statistics and a little story about entrepreneurship... in space!
Rand Fishkin discusses why content marketing often fails and provides 5 key reasons: 1) Unrealistic expectations of how content marketing works, 2) Creating content without a community to amplify it, 3) Focusing on content creation but not amplification, 4) Ignoring search engine optimization, and 5) Giving up too soon and not allowing time for content to gain traction. He emphasizes that content marketing is a long-term process of building relationships and that most successful content took years of iteration before gaining significant reach.
SEO has changed a lot over the last two decades. We all know about Google Panda & Penguin, but did you know there was a time when search engine results were returned by humans? Crazy right? We take a trip down memory lane to chart some of the biggest events in SEO that have helped shape the industry today.
Inside this guide, you'll learn an insiders tips and techniques to getting into the marketing industry - no job applications necessary.
You'll learn what marketing really is, why you'll find a job easily, what entry level marketing jobs look like and four actionable things you can try right now to help get you into the marketing industry.
Visit Inbound.org and the Inbound.org/jobs community jobs board to find opportunities and connect with professional marketers from all over.
The What If Technique presented by Motivate DesignMotivate Design
Why "What If"...?
The What If Technique tackles the challenge of engaging a creative, disruptive mindset when it comes to design thinking and crafting innovative user experiences.
Thinking disruptively is a disruptive thing to do, which means it's a very hard thing to do, especially when you add in risk-averse business leaders and company cultures, who hold on tight to psychological blocks, corporate lore, and excuse personas that stifle creativity and possibilities (see www.motivatedesign.com/what-if for more details).
The What If Technique offers key steps, tools and examples to help you achieve incremental changes that promote disruptive thinking, overcome barriers to creativity, and lead to big, innovative differences for business leaders, companies, and ultimately user experiences and products.
Let's find out what's what together! Explore your "What Ifs" with us. See www.motivatedesign.com/what-if for details about the What If Technique, studio workshops, the book, case studies and more downloads--including a the sample chapter "Corporate Lore and Blocks to Creativity"
Connect with us @Motivate_Design
The document provides principles for presenting data in the clearest way possible: tell the truth and ensure credibility with data; get to the main point by drawing meaning from the data; pick the right tool like pie, bar, or line graphs depending on the data; highlight what's important by keeping slides focused on conclusions, not all data; and keep visuals simple to avoid distractions.
What Would Steve Do? 10 Lessons from the World's Most Captivating PresentersHubSpot
The document provides 10 tips for creating captivating presentations based on lessons from famous presenters like Steve Jobs, Scott Harrison, and Gary Vaynerchuk. The tips include crafting an emotional story with a beginning, middle, and end; creating slides that answer why the audience should care, how it will improve their lives, and what they must do; using simple language without jargon; using metaphors; ditching bullet points; showing rather than just telling through images; rehearsing extensively; and that excellence requires hard work with no shortcuts.
This document provides an overview and introduction to digital strategy from Bud Caddell, SVP and Director of Digital Strategy at Deutsch LA. It defines key terms like digital strategy, digital strategist, and core concepts. It explores what a digital strategy and strategist are, essential concepts like insights, cultural tensions and category conventions, and what deliverables a digital strategist produces. The document is intended to educate young practitioners entering the field of digital strategy.
Today we all live and work in the Internet Century, where technology is roiling the business landscape, and the pace of change is only accelerating.
In their new book How Google Works, Google Executive Chairman and ex-CEO Eric Schmidt and former SVP of Products Jonathan Rosenberg share the lessons they learned over the course of a decade running Google.
Covering topics including corporate culture, strategy, talent, decision-making, communication, innovation, and dealing with disruption, the authors illustrate management maxims with numerous insider anecdotes from Google’s history.
In an era when everything is speeding up, the best way for businesses to succeed is to attract smart-creative people and give them an environment where they can thrive at scale. How Google Works is a new book that explains how to do just that.
This is a visual preview of How Google Works. You can pick up a copy of the book at www.howgoogleworks.net
The document defines shampoo as a liquid or cream preparation used to wash hair and remove dirt, oils, and other contaminants. It discusses the typical ingredients in shampoo including surfactants, conditioners, and additives. The functions of shampoo are also outlined, such as effectively removing dirt while imparting a pleasant fragrance. Various types of shampoo are classified based on appearance, use, and origin. Quality control tests are described to test the foam stability, dirt dispersion, viscosity, and other properties of shampoo.
The document provides information about Pantene's market share and 4P's analysis in Thailand. It states that Pantene has been the leading beauty shampoo brand since 2009, with 14% of the market share. While Sunsilk has the largest share at 26%. The analysis also examines the brands' products, prices, places of distribution and promotional strategies. It finds that Pantene's bottles are white while competitors have color-coded bottles for different formulas. Pantene targets all consumer groups but has not fully utilized online media or emphasized new product developments.
My Fashion PPT is my presentation on fashion and TrendssMedhaRana1
This Presentation is in one way a guide to master the classic trends and become a timeless beauty. This will help the beginners who are out with the motto to excel and become a Pro Fashionista, this Presentation will provide them with easy but really useful ten ways to master the art of styles. Hope This Helps.
5. The History of Brylcreem
• The first Brylcreem product was a pomade created in
1928 by County Chemicals at Chemico Works in
Birmingham, England.
• The pomade is an emulsion of water and mineral oil
stabilized with beeswax.
• Beecham was the longtime owner of Brylcreem.
Sara Lee bought the personal care unit of SmithKline
Beecham in 1992.
• Various Brylcreem products are sold worldwide.
Brylcreem is marketed in the US by Combe
Incorporated, in Europe by Unilever
7. Top 10 Slogan Hall of Fame (2003)
“Reach out and touch someone.”
“Have it your way.”
AT&T
Burger King
“Vorsprung durch technik.”
“Where do you want to go today?”
Audi
Microsoft
“Ah, Bisto!”
“It's Miller time!”
Bisto
Miller
“The quicker picker-upper.”
“It's everywhere you want to be.”
Bounty
Visa
“A little dab'll do ya.”
“Drivers wanted.”
Brylcreem
Volkswagen