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TECHNOPRENEURSHIP ( PRELIMS )

TECHNOPRENEURSHIP ( PRELIMS )
100問 • 1年前
  • Dominic Alix
  • 通報

    問題一覧

  • 1

    came from the French word “entreprendre, ” which means “to undertake. ”

    Entrepreneur

  • 2

    is seeking new sources for businesses and production opportunities, followed by setting up resources (raw materials, workforce, land, and capital) and managing a profitable business enterprise.

    basic definition of entrepreneurship

  • 3

    emphasizes changing the world by producing new or unorthodox solutions to complex issues, such as enacting social change or developing products that upturn the way we live our daily lives.

    modern definition of entrepreneurship

  • 4

    are those who create new businesses, introduce innovation — new concepts, goods, and services — to the marketplace, and take on the associated risks and difficulties to make a profit.

    Entrepreneurs

  • 5

    It means making a new market offering using a new method or technology, creating a new market, or creating a new type of organization to produce or improve a product or service.

    Innovation

  • 6

    A company pools resources to supply quality products or services that satisfy customers’ needs and wants.

    Running a business

  • 7

    refers to the fact that it is impossible to predict how an entrepreneurial endeavor will turn out.

    Taking a risk

  • 8

    originated in the field of entrepreneurship, is used frequently in any content or topic related to business.

    Technopreneurship

  • 9

    Made commuting easy and can accommodate documents, parcels, and food deliveries. It significantly alleviated the problem of long commutes.

    Grab

  • 10

    Connects people in most parts of the world, is a venue for online retailing, and has become an important part of media.

    Facebook

  • 11

    Watching films has become accessible and has documentaries that can be used as a tool for research.

    Netflix

  • 12

    Provides airline ticketing, hotel booking accommodations, and recently expanded services such as car rentals and restaurant vouchers.

    Traveloka

  • 13

    E-commerce platform which started in Singapore. In 2015, it expanded its operations in Vietnam, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan, and Indonesia.

    Shopee

  • 14

    A way to send money to individual accounts that is safe and secure and eliminates the fear of waiting in long lines at payment centers.

    Gcash

  • 15

    is a tech-savvy person who uses technology in doing business.

    Technopreneur

  • 16

    stated that one particular characteristic of technopreneurship is that it is rarely a one-person show.

    Dr. Balachandran

  • 17

    He worked for different tech companies and later excelled. He developed the first 10-Mbit Ethernet CMOS with silicone coupler data-link control and transceiver chip, the first system logic chipset for IBM's PC-XT and the PC-AT, and the local bus concept and the first Windows Graphics accelerator chip for PCs.

    Diosdado Banatao

  • 18

    He is the co-founder of Smart Communications, Inc., CEO of PLDT Communications & Energy Ventures, Inc., CEO/Founder of Voyager Innovations Philippines, and Founder and CEO of Paymaya.

    Orlando Vea

  • 19

    He started the 2 MWh Solar-Battery Micro-Grid project in Paulan, Oriental Mindoro, the first solar microgrid of that scale in Asia.

    Leandro Leviste

  • 20

    He co-founded Cropital, an agritech start-up that aims to provide farmers with sustainable and scalable financing through crowdfunding.

    Rachel De Villa

  • 21

    He is the executive director of IdeaSpace, a non-profit accelerator program for early-stage tech start-ups in the Philippines.

    Diane Eustaquio

  • 22

    He is the CEO of Amazon, a huge online e-commerce platform. Today, it is one of the largest in the United States, and millions of people worldwide shop there every day.

    Jeff Bezos

  • 23

    He came up with the fully electric sports cars known as Tesla Motors. Musk is responsible for the popular online payment network PayPal. He put $80 million into SpaceX and $70 million into Tesla.

    Elon Musk

  • 24

    He developed the most popular social networking application named, Facebook. Initially, he created the platform for university fellows' internal communication, which has recently become the most robust and popular social media network worldwide.

    Mark Zuckerberg

  • 25

    co-founded and launched Google in 1998. Google got a real success in 2004 when it became the most searched engine utilized 200 million times a day.

    Larry Page and Sergey Brin

  • 26

    One of microsoft's founders.

    Bill Gates

  • 27

    He co-founded Alibaba Group, a global technology conglomerate, and was its executive chairman. Additionally, he co-founded the Chinese private equity firm Yunfeng Capital.

    Jack Ma

  • 28

    He co-founded Airbnb, a room-sharing platform with 6 million listings in 100,000 cities and towns worldwide. Since its inception in 2008, the publicly traded company with headquarters in San Francisco has hosted more than a billion guests and reported revenue of $6 billion in 2021.

    Brian Chesky

  • 29

    He is an American businessman, co-founder, and CEO of Snap Inc. Spiegel was the youngest billionaire in the world in 2015.

    Evan Spegiel

  • 30

    She is an entrepreneur, philanthropist, and supermodel.

    Karlie Kloss

  • 31

    She established the Hong Kong-based K-12 coding school First Code Academy, which taught children ages four (4) and up how to code and create mobile applications.

    Michelle Sun

  • 32

    He is a Chinese internet entrepreneur who created the news aggregator Toutiao and the video-sharing platform

    Zhang Yiming

  • 33

    He is the CEO and co-founder of Grab, the leading mobile technology company in Southeast Asia that aims to liberate transportation.

    Anthony Tan

  • 34

    it is vital to have some technical expertise to launch a successful business.

    Technology Ventures

  • 35

    This quote is accurate for technopreneurs who devise and think of ideas on how to live easily.

    "necessity is the mother of all inventions."

  • 36

    is often used to describe the technology.

    Business Innovation

  • 37

    is a change in how a product or service is manufactured, created, or distributed to achieve greater efficiency.

    Process Innovation

  • 38

    is creating new ideas that do not alter established business models.

    Product/Service Innovation

  • 39

    introduces a new value proposition.

    Disruptive Innovation

  • 40

    can occur when existing products and services are "too good," making them overpriced compared to the value existing customers can use.

    Low-end disruptive innovations

  • 41

    can accur when characteristics of existing products limit the number of potential consumers or force consumption to take place in inconvenience centralized settings

    New-market Disruptive innovation

  • 42

    Can be successful when properly introduced in its market entry

    Original Idea

  • 43

    Was improved can achieve competitive success among other enterprises that offer the same product or service

    old idea

  • 44

    Capitalize on the market's needs or at least think of ideas to alleviate the common hassles people encounter.

    Find the sweet spot

  • 45

    Start with a good and feasible idea.

    Generate business idea

  • 46

    Rate the ideas based on a few different criteria and then compare them to one another.

    Prioritize and choose the most potential idea.

  • 47

    At this point, take a closer look at your idea's most significant potential challenges and clarify your assumptions on the key hypotheses that can either make or break the idea.

    Create hypotheses for obstacles and key assumptions.

  • 48

    a primary issue since the introduction of new technologies and the Internet.

    Business ethics in the Age of Technology

  • 49

    is the study of proper company conduct regarding potentially contentious issues, including corporate governance, insider trading, bribery, discrimination, corporate social responsibility, fiduciary duties, and much more.

    Business Ethics

  • 50

    Technopreneurs must adhere to the norms of society.

    The public

  • 51

    It is best to study other enterprises' ethical standards.

    Business organizations

  • 52

    play an important part in coming up with technopreneurial ideas

    Morals and conviction

  • 53

    It refers to businesses taking complete accountability for their conduct. It includes any unethical business practices or poor decisions made during business operations.

    Responsibilities

  • 54

    Customers, employees, and business owners all owe each other respect. Businesses must promote a respectful relationship between all stakeholders and ensure that employees have a safe workplace.

    Respect and consideration

  • 55

    It is greatly desired for employees and business owners to communicate openly. Thanks to this quality, employees and the company can develop trust and a connection. Customers' interactions with a business can also benefit from transparency.

    Sincerity

  • 56

    Conflicts of interest among employees should be kept to a minimum, and healthy competition among employees should be encouraged.

    Healthy Competition

  • 57

    All disagreements between employers and employees should be resolved internally, away from public view.

    Loyalty and respecting commitments

  • 58

    A company's customers, employees, or partners should have complete access to crucial data.

    Information

  • 59

    Any violation of corporate laws, rules, and regulations governing business practices is unethical, so they must be respected and adhered to.

    Respect to the rule of law

  • 60

    also known as the E-Commerce Act, imposes penalties on offenses involving computers and the Internet, such as infecting a customer's computer with viruses when they place an online order, hacking, and stealing original works that are trademarked or copied.

    Republic Act. 8792

  • 61

    method to solve challenging problems and transform opportunities into innovations.

    Design Thinking Process

  • 62

    When models need to be tested, they use

    Prototypes

  • 63

    product is effectively purchased by customers based on the perceived experience it offers.

    Customer experience

  • 64

    An action, fact, or material object has a purpose, plan, or intention behind it.

    Design

  • 65

    unpacks the box of creativity and provides clear objectives fore collie thinking proces use varing to 5 to diet ate cure acts of esterach data to ideas.

    The integrated design thinking framework

  • 66

    is recognizing, comprehending, and sharing another person's emotions.

    Empathy

  • 67

    is a useful tool for technopreneurs to understand their customers better and end users.

    empathy map

  • 68

    The problem is found and looked at this level. Ideas would also begin to emerge, which should be recorded.

    define

  • 69

    The entrepreneur ought to move on to

    ideation

  • 70

    is the creative process of coming up with new ideas during brainstorming sessions.

    ideate

  • 71

    At this level, experimentation is essential.

    Prototype

  • 72

    Using the solutions identified during the prototype phase, tests are carried out to validate the service or product.

    Test

  • 73

    can be considered a living entity

    Strategy formulation: Hierachy of goals

  • 74

    It refers to the desired future state or "big picture" of an organization's goal.

    Vision

  • 75

    A good vision conveys a picture of the future.

    Imaginable

  • 76

    It appeals to the long-term interests of employees, customers, stockholders, and others who have a stake in the enterprise.

    Desirable

  • 77

    It comprises realistic and attainable goals.

    Feasible

  • 78

    It Is clear enough to guide decision-making.

    Focused

  • 79

    It is general enough to allow individual initiative and alternative responses in light of changing conditions.

    Flexible

  • 80

    Is easy to communicate; can be successfully explained within five (5) minutes

    Communication

  • 81

    is more specific and action-oriented than a vision.

    Mission

  • 82

    It must be short so that everyone can remember and understand.

    Concise

  • 83

    It should be measurable so that the company can visibly see progress.

    Outcome-oriented

  • 84

    must include all the stakeholders involved in implementing a company's strategy.

    inclusive

  • 85

    These are the specific and measurable results focused on achieving an organization's mission.

    Strategic Objectives

  • 86

    At least one indicator must measure progress against fulfilling the objective.

    Measurable

  • 87

    This means providing a clear message as to what needs to be accomplished.

    Specific

  • 88

    must be consistent with the organization's vision and mission.

    appropriate

  • 89

    Given the organization's capabilities and environmental opportunities, it must be an achievable target. In essence, it must be challenging but doable.

    Realistic

  • 90

    There must be a time frame for achieving the objective.

    Timely

  • 91

    The product or service that solves problems/adds value. (What)

    Offering

  • 92

    The ideal customer or target audience who will benefit from your offering. (Who)

    Audience

  • 93

    Technopreneurs regularly have many goals at the top of the priority list.

    Business plan

  • 94

    This type of business is owned and managed by one (1) person.

    Solo Proprietorship

  • 95

    This is operated by two (2) or more people who are experts in the skill where their enterprise is categorized.

    Partnership

  • 96

    The partners manage the enterprise and assume responsibility for the partnership's liability, debt, and other obligations.

    General Partnership

  • 97

    This includes a general partner who carries out the business and has unlimited personal liability for the debts and obligations of the partnership and a limited partner who has limited liability and cannot take part in managing the enterprise.

    Limited partnership

  • 98

    A private business or organization known as a

    Cooperative

  • 99

    Forming a corporation is more difficult than the three (3) business types.

    Corporation

  • 100

    This area discusses the alliances or partnerships made by the enterprise. This is beneficial if the enterprise has competition.

    Key Partners

  • REVIEWER FOR INFORMATION MANAGEMENT

    REVIEWER FOR INFORMATION MANAGEMENT

    Dominic Alix · 73問 · 1年前

    REVIEWER FOR INFORMATION MANAGEMENT

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    Dominic Alix

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    PRELIMS ( INTEGRATIVE PROGRAMMING )

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    5問 • 1年前
    Dominic Alix

    問題一覧

  • 1

    came from the French word “entreprendre, ” which means “to undertake. ”

    Entrepreneur

  • 2

    is seeking new sources for businesses and production opportunities, followed by setting up resources (raw materials, workforce, land, and capital) and managing a profitable business enterprise.

    basic definition of entrepreneurship

  • 3

    emphasizes changing the world by producing new or unorthodox solutions to complex issues, such as enacting social change or developing products that upturn the way we live our daily lives.

    modern definition of entrepreneurship

  • 4

    are those who create new businesses, introduce innovation — new concepts, goods, and services — to the marketplace, and take on the associated risks and difficulties to make a profit.

    Entrepreneurs

  • 5

    It means making a new market offering using a new method or technology, creating a new market, or creating a new type of organization to produce or improve a product or service.

    Innovation

  • 6

    A company pools resources to supply quality products or services that satisfy customers’ needs and wants.

    Running a business

  • 7

    refers to the fact that it is impossible to predict how an entrepreneurial endeavor will turn out.

    Taking a risk

  • 8

    originated in the field of entrepreneurship, is used frequently in any content or topic related to business.

    Technopreneurship

  • 9

    Made commuting easy and can accommodate documents, parcels, and food deliveries. It significantly alleviated the problem of long commutes.

    Grab

  • 10

    Connects people in most parts of the world, is a venue for online retailing, and has become an important part of media.

    Facebook

  • 11

    Watching films has become accessible and has documentaries that can be used as a tool for research.

    Netflix

  • 12

    Provides airline ticketing, hotel booking accommodations, and recently expanded services such as car rentals and restaurant vouchers.

    Traveloka

  • 13

    E-commerce platform which started in Singapore. In 2015, it expanded its operations in Vietnam, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan, and Indonesia.

    Shopee

  • 14

    A way to send money to individual accounts that is safe and secure and eliminates the fear of waiting in long lines at payment centers.

    Gcash

  • 15

    is a tech-savvy person who uses technology in doing business.

    Technopreneur

  • 16

    stated that one particular characteristic of technopreneurship is that it is rarely a one-person show.

    Dr. Balachandran

  • 17

    He worked for different tech companies and later excelled. He developed the first 10-Mbit Ethernet CMOS with silicone coupler data-link control and transceiver chip, the first system logic chipset for IBM's PC-XT and the PC-AT, and the local bus concept and the first Windows Graphics accelerator chip for PCs.

    Diosdado Banatao

  • 18

    He is the co-founder of Smart Communications, Inc., CEO of PLDT Communications & Energy Ventures, Inc., CEO/Founder of Voyager Innovations Philippines, and Founder and CEO of Paymaya.

    Orlando Vea

  • 19

    He started the 2 MWh Solar-Battery Micro-Grid project in Paulan, Oriental Mindoro, the first solar microgrid of that scale in Asia.

    Leandro Leviste

  • 20

    He co-founded Cropital, an agritech start-up that aims to provide farmers with sustainable and scalable financing through crowdfunding.

    Rachel De Villa

  • 21

    He is the executive director of IdeaSpace, a non-profit accelerator program for early-stage tech start-ups in the Philippines.

    Diane Eustaquio

  • 22

    He is the CEO of Amazon, a huge online e-commerce platform. Today, it is one of the largest in the United States, and millions of people worldwide shop there every day.

    Jeff Bezos

  • 23

    He came up with the fully electric sports cars known as Tesla Motors. Musk is responsible for the popular online payment network PayPal. He put $80 million into SpaceX and $70 million into Tesla.

    Elon Musk

  • 24

    He developed the most popular social networking application named, Facebook. Initially, he created the platform for university fellows' internal communication, which has recently become the most robust and popular social media network worldwide.

    Mark Zuckerberg

  • 25

    co-founded and launched Google in 1998. Google got a real success in 2004 when it became the most searched engine utilized 200 million times a day.

    Larry Page and Sergey Brin

  • 26

    One of microsoft's founders.

    Bill Gates

  • 27

    He co-founded Alibaba Group, a global technology conglomerate, and was its executive chairman. Additionally, he co-founded the Chinese private equity firm Yunfeng Capital.

    Jack Ma

  • 28

    He co-founded Airbnb, a room-sharing platform with 6 million listings in 100,000 cities and towns worldwide. Since its inception in 2008, the publicly traded company with headquarters in San Francisco has hosted more than a billion guests and reported revenue of $6 billion in 2021.

    Brian Chesky

  • 29

    He is an American businessman, co-founder, and CEO of Snap Inc. Spiegel was the youngest billionaire in the world in 2015.

    Evan Spegiel

  • 30

    She is an entrepreneur, philanthropist, and supermodel.

    Karlie Kloss

  • 31

    She established the Hong Kong-based K-12 coding school First Code Academy, which taught children ages four (4) and up how to code and create mobile applications.

    Michelle Sun

  • 32

    He is a Chinese internet entrepreneur who created the news aggregator Toutiao and the video-sharing platform

    Zhang Yiming

  • 33

    He is the CEO and co-founder of Grab, the leading mobile technology company in Southeast Asia that aims to liberate transportation.

    Anthony Tan

  • 34

    it is vital to have some technical expertise to launch a successful business.

    Technology Ventures

  • 35

    This quote is accurate for technopreneurs who devise and think of ideas on how to live easily.

    "necessity is the mother of all inventions."

  • 36

    is often used to describe the technology.

    Business Innovation

  • 37

    is a change in how a product or service is manufactured, created, or distributed to achieve greater efficiency.

    Process Innovation

  • 38

    is creating new ideas that do not alter established business models.

    Product/Service Innovation

  • 39

    introduces a new value proposition.

    Disruptive Innovation

  • 40

    can occur when existing products and services are "too good," making them overpriced compared to the value existing customers can use.

    Low-end disruptive innovations

  • 41

    can accur when characteristics of existing products limit the number of potential consumers or force consumption to take place in inconvenience centralized settings

    New-market Disruptive innovation

  • 42

    Can be successful when properly introduced in its market entry

    Original Idea

  • 43

    Was improved can achieve competitive success among other enterprises that offer the same product or service

    old idea

  • 44

    Capitalize on the market's needs or at least think of ideas to alleviate the common hassles people encounter.

    Find the sweet spot

  • 45

    Start with a good and feasible idea.

    Generate business idea

  • 46

    Rate the ideas based on a few different criteria and then compare them to one another.

    Prioritize and choose the most potential idea.

  • 47

    At this point, take a closer look at your idea's most significant potential challenges and clarify your assumptions on the key hypotheses that can either make or break the idea.

    Create hypotheses for obstacles and key assumptions.

  • 48

    a primary issue since the introduction of new technologies and the Internet.

    Business ethics in the Age of Technology

  • 49

    is the study of proper company conduct regarding potentially contentious issues, including corporate governance, insider trading, bribery, discrimination, corporate social responsibility, fiduciary duties, and much more.

    Business Ethics

  • 50

    Technopreneurs must adhere to the norms of society.

    The public

  • 51

    It is best to study other enterprises' ethical standards.

    Business organizations

  • 52

    play an important part in coming up with technopreneurial ideas

    Morals and conviction

  • 53

    It refers to businesses taking complete accountability for their conduct. It includes any unethical business practices or poor decisions made during business operations.

    Responsibilities

  • 54

    Customers, employees, and business owners all owe each other respect. Businesses must promote a respectful relationship between all stakeholders and ensure that employees have a safe workplace.

    Respect and consideration

  • 55

    It is greatly desired for employees and business owners to communicate openly. Thanks to this quality, employees and the company can develop trust and a connection. Customers' interactions with a business can also benefit from transparency.

    Sincerity

  • 56

    Conflicts of interest among employees should be kept to a minimum, and healthy competition among employees should be encouraged.

    Healthy Competition

  • 57

    All disagreements between employers and employees should be resolved internally, away from public view.

    Loyalty and respecting commitments

  • 58

    A company's customers, employees, or partners should have complete access to crucial data.

    Information

  • 59

    Any violation of corporate laws, rules, and regulations governing business practices is unethical, so they must be respected and adhered to.

    Respect to the rule of law

  • 60

    also known as the E-Commerce Act, imposes penalties on offenses involving computers and the Internet, such as infecting a customer's computer with viruses when they place an online order, hacking, and stealing original works that are trademarked or copied.

    Republic Act. 8792

  • 61

    method to solve challenging problems and transform opportunities into innovations.

    Design Thinking Process

  • 62

    When models need to be tested, they use

    Prototypes

  • 63

    product is effectively purchased by customers based on the perceived experience it offers.

    Customer experience

  • 64

    An action, fact, or material object has a purpose, plan, or intention behind it.

    Design

  • 65

    unpacks the box of creativity and provides clear objectives fore collie thinking proces use varing to 5 to diet ate cure acts of esterach data to ideas.

    The integrated design thinking framework

  • 66

    is recognizing, comprehending, and sharing another person's emotions.

    Empathy

  • 67

    is a useful tool for technopreneurs to understand their customers better and end users.

    empathy map

  • 68

    The problem is found and looked at this level. Ideas would also begin to emerge, which should be recorded.

    define

  • 69

    The entrepreneur ought to move on to

    ideation

  • 70

    is the creative process of coming up with new ideas during brainstorming sessions.

    ideate

  • 71

    At this level, experimentation is essential.

    Prototype

  • 72

    Using the solutions identified during the prototype phase, tests are carried out to validate the service or product.

    Test

  • 73

    can be considered a living entity

    Strategy formulation: Hierachy of goals

  • 74

    It refers to the desired future state or "big picture" of an organization's goal.

    Vision

  • 75

    A good vision conveys a picture of the future.

    Imaginable

  • 76

    It appeals to the long-term interests of employees, customers, stockholders, and others who have a stake in the enterprise.

    Desirable

  • 77

    It comprises realistic and attainable goals.

    Feasible

  • 78

    It Is clear enough to guide decision-making.

    Focused

  • 79

    It is general enough to allow individual initiative and alternative responses in light of changing conditions.

    Flexible

  • 80

    Is easy to communicate; can be successfully explained within five (5) minutes

    Communication

  • 81

    is more specific and action-oriented than a vision.

    Mission

  • 82

    It must be short so that everyone can remember and understand.

    Concise

  • 83

    It should be measurable so that the company can visibly see progress.

    Outcome-oriented

  • 84

    must include all the stakeholders involved in implementing a company's strategy.

    inclusive

  • 85

    These are the specific and measurable results focused on achieving an organization's mission.

    Strategic Objectives

  • 86

    At least one indicator must measure progress against fulfilling the objective.

    Measurable

  • 87

    This means providing a clear message as to what needs to be accomplished.

    Specific

  • 88

    must be consistent with the organization's vision and mission.

    appropriate

  • 89

    Given the organization's capabilities and environmental opportunities, it must be an achievable target. In essence, it must be challenging but doable.

    Realistic

  • 90

    There must be a time frame for achieving the objective.

    Timely

  • 91

    The product or service that solves problems/adds value. (What)

    Offering

  • 92

    The ideal customer or target audience who will benefit from your offering. (Who)

    Audience

  • 93

    Technopreneurs regularly have many goals at the top of the priority list.

    Business plan

  • 94

    This type of business is owned and managed by one (1) person.

    Solo Proprietorship

  • 95

    This is operated by two (2) or more people who are experts in the skill where their enterprise is categorized.

    Partnership

  • 96

    The partners manage the enterprise and assume responsibility for the partnership's liability, debt, and other obligations.

    General Partnership

  • 97

    This includes a general partner who carries out the business and has unlimited personal liability for the debts and obligations of the partnership and a limited partner who has limited liability and cannot take part in managing the enterprise.

    Limited partnership

  • 98

    A private business or organization known as a

    Cooperative

  • 99

    Forming a corporation is more difficult than the three (3) business types.

    Corporation

  • 100

    This area discusses the alliances or partnerships made by the enterprise. This is beneficial if the enterprise has competition.

    Key Partners