Darden University of Virginia (USA)
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The Wells Fargo Commercial Banking Scandal - Teaching Note
Lynch, Luann J.; Cutro, CameronTeaching Note DARDEN-C-2394TN-EAccounting and ControlTeaching note for product C-2394Starting at €0.00
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Sian Carraway at PillCo
King, AndrewCase DARDEN-S-0136-EStrategySian Carraway at PillCo, a leading pharmaceuticals company, led an initiative to invigorate organic growth using the company’s current product portfolio. By connecting deeply with consumers, Carraway and her team found weakness in traditional packaging for over-the-counter medications. It was not easy to carry around outside the home. To overcome that disadvantage, she created portable packaging options that gave consumers easier access to medici...Starting at €8.20
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The Wells Fargo Commercial Banking Scandal
Lynch, Luann J.; Cutro, CameronCase DARDEN-C-2394-EAccounting and ControlOn October 25, 2016, Timothy J. Sloan, the new CEO of Wells Fargo bank, apologized to 1,200 of his employees in Charlotte, North Carolina. Sloan had been named to the company’s top position two weeks earlier, when then-CEO John Stumpf resigned amid fallout from the banking scandal for which Sloan apologized. In September, Wells Fargo had agreed to a $185 million settlement with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and two other regulat...Starting at €8.20
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Leading Organic Growth: Module Caselets
Liedtka, Jeanne M.; King, Andrew; Carr, SeanCase DARDEN-BP-0541-ECorporate GovernanceThis is a series of 12 short caselets profiling individual growth leaders that - used in conjunction with “Business Model Innovation: A Process Model” (UVA-BP-0538) - will help students evaluate business situations for innovation opportunities. The course module focuses on enhancing the ability of students to identify and implement organic growth initiatives in mature organizations. An instructor teaching note accompanies the caselets series that...Starting at €8.20
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The Volkswagen Emissions Scandal
Lynch, Luann J.; Cutro, Cameron; Bird, ElizabethCase DARDEN-S-0267-EStrategyIn September 2015, VW had admitted to United States regulators that it had deliberately installed “defeat devices” in many of its diesel cars, which enabled the cars to cheat on federal and state emissions tests, making them able to pass the tests and hit ambitious mileage and performance targets while actually emitting up to 40 times more hazardous gases into the atmosphere than legally allowed. The discovery had prompted the U.S. Environmental ...Starting at €8.20