问答题As Starbucks launches an aggressive expansion in China, a coffee frontier steeped in nearly, 5000 years of tea. The goal: to build hip hang-outs mat tap into a new taste for China’s emerging middle class. Starbucks China doesn’t plan any advertising, p

题目
问答题
As Starbucks launches an aggressive expansion in China, a coffee frontier steeped in nearly, 5000 years of tea. The goal: to build hip hang-outs mat tap into a new taste for China’s emerging middle class. Starbucks China doesn’t plan any advertising, promotions, or other marketing strategies, aside from sponsoring an online coffee club and the occasional office-tower coffee tasting. Instead, the company is counting on selecting such high-visibility, high-traffic cafe locations that they market themselves. Its main advertising medium is the store itself.

相似考题

4.DImagine,one day,getting out of bed in Beijing and being at your office in Shanghai in only a couple of hours,and then,after a full day of work,going back home to Beijing and having dinner there.Sounds unusual,doesn't it? But it's not that unrealistic,with the development of China’s high—speed railway system.And that’s not a11.China has an even greater high—speed railway plan—to connect the country with Southeast Asia,and eventually Eastern Europe.China is negotiating to extend its own high·-speed railway network to up to 17 countries in 1 0 to 15 years,eventually reaching London and Singapore.China has proposed three such projects.The first would possibly connect Kunming withSingapore via Vietnam and Malaysia.Another could start in Urumqi and go through Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan,and possibly to Germany.The third would start in the northeast and go north through Russia and then into Western Europe.If China’s plan for the high-speed railway goes forward,people could zip over from London to Beiling in under two days.The new system would still follow China’s high—speed railway standard.And the trains would be able to go 346 kilometers an hour,almost as fast as some airplanes.China’s bullet train(高速客车),the one connecting Wuhan to Guangzhou,already has the World’s fastest average speed.It covers 1,069 kilometers in about three hours. Of course,there are some technical challenges to overcome.There are so many issues that need to be settled,such as safety,rail gauge(轨距),maintenance of railway tracks.So,it’s important to pay attention to every detail.But the key issue is really money.China is already spending hundreds of billions of yuan on domestic railway expansion.China prefers that the other countries pay in natural resources rath er than with capital investment.Resources from those countries could stream into China to sustain development.It’11 be a win-win project. For other countries,the railway network will definitely create more opportunities for business,tourism and so on,not to mention the better communication among those countnes.For China,such a project would not only connect it with the rest of Asia and bring some much-needed resources,but would also help develop China’s far west.We foresee that in the coming decades,millions of people will migrate to the western regions,where the land is empty and resources unused.With high-speed trains,people will set up factories and business centers in the west once and for a11.And they’11 trade with Central Asian and Eastern European countries.67.China’s new high-speed railway plan will be a win-win project because .A.China will get much-needed resources and develop its western regionsB.China and the countries involved will benefit from the project in various waysC.China will develop its railway system and communication with other countriesD. the foreign countries involved will develop their railway transportation,business and tourism

更多“问答题As Starbucks launches an aggressive expansion in China, a coffee frontier steeped in nearly, 5000 years of tea. The goal: to build hip hang-outs mat tap into a new taste for China’s emerging middle class. Starbucks China doesn’t plan any advertising, p”相关问题
  • 第1题:

    - Can I exchange foreign currency in Bank of China -()

    A、No, you can’t. Bank of China is not responsible for exchanging foreign currency.

    B、Yes, you can. Bank of China is an authorized foreign exchange bank.

    C、No, you can’t. Bank of China is not open on Sundays.


    参考答案:B

  • 第2题:

    McDonald’s will follow the example of Starbucks in serving coffee of different sizes such as “venti” and “grande”.()

    此题为判断题(对,错)。


    参考答案:错

  • 第3题:

    短文理解

    听力原文: The banking system of China evolved from a mono-banking system between the 1940s and the early 1970s. Not until 1978 did China's banking system make a drastic shift in its banking philosophy and structure. The shift is not only a necessity for the country's development, but also acts as a gesture showing the "openness" of the country to the outside world.

    Today, after nearly forty years of rapid development, China is moving towards a modem and market-oriented banking structure although there is still much to be improved to meet the needs of the country's development.

    In the mid 1990s, banks in China began to focus their attention on capital adequacy requirements, non-performing and bad loans, profitability and also the industry's overall expansion strategy. Reforms of monetary and financial system in China are speeding up in the 90s. Existing specialized banks gradually have become commercial banks.

    21. What kind of banking system did China have before the 1980s?

    22.Up to now, how long has China experienced rapid development?

    23.What are the banks in China focusing their attention on?

    (21)

    A.The same system as in the western countries.

    B.A mono-banking system.

    C.A modern banking system.

    D.A commercial banking system.


    正确答案:B
    解析:录音原文提到The banking system of China...between the 1940s and the early 1970s. 20世纪40年代至70年代,中国银行系统从单一系统起步慢慢发展。

  • 第4题:

    下面说明不正确的是( )。

    A.chara[10]="china";

    B.chara[10],*p=a;p="chiua";

    C.char*a;a="china";

    D.chara[10],*p;p=a="china";


    正确答案:D
    解析:C语言中操作一个字符串常量的方法有:①把字符串常量存放在一个字符数组之中。②用字符指针指向字符串,然后通过字符指针来访问字符串存储区域。当字符串常量在表达式中出现时,根据数组的类型转换规则,它被转换成字符指针。本题选项D)错误的关键是对数组初始化时,可以在变量定义时整体赋初值,但不能在赋值语句中整体赋值。

  • 第5题:

    23.Mary doesn’t like to______ .

    A. go to school

    B. be late

    C. get up early

    D. live in China


    正确答案:B
    23.B【解析】根据原文“She doesn't like to be late.”故选B。

  • 第6题:

    The CEO of Star Records announced plans for aggressive expansion, saying the company will purchase ( ) new properties in the next two years.

    A. many

    B. little

    C. much

    D. any

    答案:A
    解析:

  • 第7题:

    Today,China’s massive industrialization and_____for cars have made it dependent on oil imported from the Middle East and Africa .

    A.nostalgia
    B.substitution
    C.mania
    D.anecdote

    答案:C
    解析:
    本题考查词语含义。题目意为“现在中国的大规模工业化和对汽车的狂热已经让它依赖上了从中东和非洲进口的石油。”A项意为“思乡、怀念”。B项意为“代替、调换”。C项意为“狂热、热情”。D项意为“轶事、奇闻”。因此选C项,对汽车的热情。
      

  • 第8题:

    下面判断正确的是()

    • A、char*a="china";等价于char*a;*a="china"
    • B、charstr[10]={"china"};等价于charstr[10];str[]={"china"};
    • C、char*s="china";等价于char*s;s="china";
    • D、charc[4]="abc",d[4]="abc";等价于charc[4]=d[4]="abc"

    正确答案:C

  • 第9题:

    单选题
    The gas reserves in the far west and off the eastern and southern coasts of China ______.
    A

    have been tapped for more than 50 years.

    B

    have an output that is failing.

    C

    are just beginning to be tapped.

    D

    are not nearly enough to provide for the nation’s fuel consumption.


    正确答案: C
    解析:
    录音中指出在“Xinjiang in the far west and off the eastern and southern coasts”,中国刚刚开始“tap some of its largest gas reserves”,其中tap意为“开发,发掘”,因此选C。
    【录音原文】
    China’s biggest oilfields such as Daqing, have been in production for half a century or more and their output is falling. By contrast, the country is just beginning to tap some of its largest gas reserves in Xinjiang in the far west and off the eastern and southern coasts.

  • 第10题:

    问答题
    Passage 8  Some people might want a “double tall skinny hazelnut decaf latte”, but Howard Schultz is not one of them. The chairman and “chief global strategist” of the Starbucks coffee chain prefers a Sumatra roast with no milk, no sugar and poured from a French press—the kind of pure coffee, in fact, favoured by those coffee snobs who sneer at Starbucks, not just for its bewildering variety of choice and flavours (55,000 different drinks, by the company’s count), but for its very ubiquity—over 10,500 locations around the world, increasing at a rate of five a day, and often within sight of each other.  Starbucks knows it cannot ignore its critics. Anti-globaiisation protesters have occasionally trashed its coffee shops; posh neighbourhoods in San Francisco and London have resisted the opening of new branches; and the company is a favourite target of internet critics, on sites like www.ihatestarbucks.com. Mr. Schultz is watchful, but relaxed: “We have to be extremely mindful and sensitive of the public’s view of things... Thus far, we’ve done a pretty good job.” Certainly, as reviled icons of American capitalism go, Starbucks is distinctly second division compared with big leaguers like, say, McDonald’s.  The reason, argues Mr. Schultz, is that the company has retained a “passion” for coffee and a “sense of humanity”. Starbucks buys expensive beans and pays its growers—be they in Guatemala or Ethiopia—an average of 23% above the market price. A similar benevolence applies to company employees. Where other corporations seek to unload the burden of employee benefits, Starbucks gives all American employees working at least 20 hours a week a package that includes stock options (“Bean Stock”) and comprehensive health insurance.  For Mr. Schultz, raised in a Brooklyn public-housing project, this health insurance—which now costs Starbucks more each year than coffee—is a moral obligation. At the age of seven, he came home to find his father, a lorry-driver, in a plaster cast, having slipped and broken an ankle. No insurance, no compensation and now no job.  Hence what amounts to a personal crusade. Most of America’s corporate chiefs steer clear of the sensitive topic of health-care reform. Not Mr. Schultz. He makes speeches, lobbies politicians and has even hosted a commercial-free hour of television, arguing for reform of a system that he thinks is simultaneously socially unjust and a burden on corporate America. Meanwhile the company pays its workers’ premiums, even as each year they rise by double-digit percentages. The goal has always been “to build the sort of company that my father was never able to work for.” By this he means a company that “remains small even as it gets big”, treating its workers as individuals. Starbucks is not alone in its emphasis on “social responsibility”, but the other firms Mr. Schultz cites off the top of his head—Timberland, Patagonia, Whole Foods—are much smaller than Starbucks, which has 100,000 employees and 35m customers.  Indeed, size has been an issue from the beginning. Starbucks was created in 1971 in Seattle’s Pike Place Market by three hippie-ish coffee enthusiasts. Mr. Schultz joined the company only in1982. Inspired by a visit to Milan in 1983, he had envisaged a chain of coffee bars where customers would chat over their espressos and cappuccinos. Following his dream, Mr. Schultz set up a company he called “Il Giornale”, which grew to a modest three coffee bars. Then, somehow scraping together $ 3.8m (“I didn’t have a dime to my name”), he bought Starbucks from its founders in 1987.  Reality long ago surpassed the dream. Since Starbucks went public in 1992, its stock has soared by some 6,400%. The company is now in 37 different countries.  No doubt the coffee snobs will blanch at the prospect. Yet they miss three points. The first is that, thanks to Starbucks, today’s Americans are no longer condemned to drink the insipid, over- percolated brew that their parents endured. The second, less recognised, is that because Starbucks has created a mass taste for good coffee, small, family-owned coffee houses have also prospered (and no one has ever accused Starbucks, with its $ 4 lattes, of undercutting the competition).  The most important point, however, is that Mr. Schultz’s Starbucks cultivates a relationship with its Customers. Its stores sell carefully selected CD-compilations, such as Ray Charles’s “Genius Loves Company”. Later this year the company will promote a new film, “Akeelah and the Bee”, and will take a share of the profits. There are plans to promote books: Customers can even pay with their Starbucks “Duetto” Visa card.  Short of some health scare that would bracket coffee with nicotine, there is no obvious reason why Starbucks should trip up, however ambitious its plans and however misconceived the occasional project. Mr. Schultz says: “I think we have the licence from our customers to do more.” The key is that each Starbucks coffee house should remain “a third place”, between home and work, fulfilling the same role as those Italian coffee houses that so inspired him 23 years ago.  1. What does the author mean by “Starbucks is distinctly second division compared with big leaguers like, say, McDonald’s”? According to Mr. Shultz, what is the reason for that?  2. What is Mr. Schultz’s “personal crusade”? What made him so devoted to it?  3. What does Mr. Shultz mean by “I think we have the license from our customers to do more”? (Para.10). Give some examples.

    正确答案: 【参考答案】
    1. The statement “ Starbucks is distinctly second division compared with big leaguers like, McDonald’s”, means that even though Starbucks is also faced with anti-globalization protesters, the hostile sentiments against it are much less than those against other renowned American multinational chain stores like McDonald’s. According to Shultz, the reason for this is that Starbucks has retained a passion for coffee and a sense of humanity. Starbucks buys coffee beans an average of 23% above the market price. Starbucks also gives all American employees working at least 20 hours a week a package includes stock options and comprehensive health insurance.
    2. Different from other corporate chiefs who try to avoid the sensitive topic of healthcare reform, Mr. Schultz publicly pushes forward the reform of healthcare system which he believes is simultaneously socially unjust and a burden on corporate America. He makes speeches, lobbies politicians and has even hosted a commercial-free hour of television. He pays his worker’s expensive premiums and emphasizes on “social responsibility”. Schultz’s devotion to this was largely due to his childhood experience. When he was seven, his father, a lorry-driver slipped and broke his ankle. He had no insurance, no compensation and lost his job.
    3. It has been a dream for Mr. Schultz that his coffee shop should be “a third place” between customers’ home and work where they would chat over their espressos and cappuccinos. Starbucks has always been putting the relationship with customers on the top of its concerns. Its stores sell carefully selected CD-compilations. Later this year, the company will promote a new film. There are plans to promote books. Customers can even pay with their Starbucks “Duetto” Visa card.
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第11题:

    单选题
    A vessel casualty must be reported to the MSA in China if it involves().
    A

    loss of life

    B

    an injury requiring only first aid

    C

    property damage

    D

    loss of equipment which doesn't reduce the vessel's maneuverability


    正确答案: B
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第12题:

    单选题
    下面的说明中,错误的是()。
    A

    char a[10]= “china”;

    B

    char a[10], *p=a; p=“china”;

    C

    char *a; a=“china”;

    D

    char a[10], *p; p=a=“china”;


    正确答案: D
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第13题:

    China’s markets have been strengthened by Strong domestic consumption and it also stimulated both multinationals and domestic companies to shift the emphasis of their operations from 'Made in China' to 'Made for China'.()

    此题为判断题(对,错)。


    参考答案:对

  • 第14题:

    China is a historic country with 5000 years of ________.

    A.warriors

    B.pagodas

    C.imagination

    D.civilization


    答案:D

    解析:warriors意为“武士、勇士”;pagodas意为“佛塔”;imagination意为“想象,想象力”;civilization意为“文明”。显然题干想表达的意思是“中国是一个具有五千年文明历史的国家”,故本题选D。

  • 第15题:

    函数UPPER("China=中国")的值是( )。

    A.China=中国

    B.CHina=中国

    C.CHINA=中国

    D.china=中国


    正确答案:C
    解析:UPPER()函数的格式是:UPPER(字符表达式>),功能是将指定表达式值中的小写字母转换成大写字母,其他字母不变。所以UPPER("China=中国")的函数值是“CHINA=中国”。

  • 第16题:

    下面判断正确的是( )。

    A.char *a="china";等价于char *a;*a="ghina";

    B.char str[5]={"china"};等价于char str[]={"china"};

    C.char*s="china";等价于char*s;s="china";

    D.charc[4]="abc",d[4]="abc";等价于char c[4]=d[4]="abc";


    正确答案:C
    解析:选项A)char*a;*a="china"应改为char*a;a="china";选项B)应该将str[5]改为str[6];选项D)表述方法错误,c,d两个数组定义时不能连续赋值。

  • 第17题:

    A vessel casualty must be reported to the MSA in China if it involves ______.

    A.loss of life

    B.an injury requiring only first aid

    C.property damage

    D.loss of equipment which doesn't reduce the vessel's maneuverability


    正确答案:A

  • 第18题:

    Nancy Liu amved in Sydney from China as a"skilled immigrant"with an economics degree 14 years ago.With her husband,she set up a business consultancy in the suburb in southem Sydney.However,Liu was only an epitome of thousands of Chinese investors.Since then,Chinese investment has transformed the city:many of its shop signs are now in Chinese.Ms Liu was a forerunner of a new wave of Chinese immigrants to Australia's oldest and biggest city.Hong Kong once supplied most of Australia's Chinese settlers,but over the past few years the pattern has shifted.Now it is the rising middle classes from other places of China who go there,looking for a more relaxed life style.About 4%of Sydney's people were bom in China.Currendy,China has become Australia's biggest trading partner,and its largest source of foreign students.


    答案:
    解析:
    14年前,拥有经济学学位的刘南希作为“技术移民”从中国来到悉尼,与丈夫一起在悉尼南部郊区成立了一家商业咨询公司。然而,刘只是成千上万中国投资者的一个缩影。自那以后,中国投资改变了这座城市:如今许多商铺的标识都是中文。刘女士是前往澳洲历史最悠久也是最大城市的新一波中国移民潮的先行者。澳洲的中国移民一度以香港移民为主,不过在过去几年中,这种模式已经悄然改变。如今新兴的中产阶级从中国的其他地方来到这里,寻求一种更轻松的生活方式。大约4%的悉尼人口出生在中国。目前,中国已成为澳洲最大的贸易伙伴,也是最大的留学生来源国。

  • 第19题:

    下面的说明中,错误的是()。

    • A、char a[10]= “china”;
    • B、char a[10], *p=a; p=“china”;
    • C、char *a; a=“china”;
    • D、char a[10], *p; p=a=“china”;

    正确答案:D

  • 第20题:

    填空题
    The Capital Airport is the largest one in China.→ The Capital Airport is ____ any other airport in China.

    正确答案: larger than
    解析:
    the largest one=larger than any other…,都表示最大的一个。

  • 第21题:

    问答题
    Converting the Masses: Starbucks in China  It sounds like Mission Impossible: Sell coffee to China’s tea drinkers. Starbucks’ solution is to select high-profile locations on the busiest streets, where stores are sure to seduce the see-and-be-seen set.  As Starbucks launches an aggressive expansion in China, a coffee frontier steeped in nearly, 000 years of tea. The goal: to build hip hang-outs mat tap into a new taste for China’s emerging middle class.  Starbucks China doesn’t plan any advertising, promotions, or other marketing strategies,  aside from sponsoring an online coffee club and the occasional office-tower coffee tasting. Instead, the company is counting on selecting such high-visibility, high-traffic cafe locations that they market themselves. Its main advertising medium is the store itself.  But in fast-changing Chinese cities, finding locations that will embody the fight lifestyle is more akin to gambling than science. The computerized mapping databases that the company uses to test a potential street comer in the United States would be little help in Chinese cities. Starbucks also faces an uphill battle. Local media reported that 70%of people they surveyed would rather not see the chain in Beijing’s Forbidden City. And even for middle-class Chinese, Starbucks is a barely affordable luxury.  While retailers say a top marketing weapon in urban China is to charge more for public consumption. That’s because Chinese customers have different priorities than their American yuppie counterparts. Guys 40 years old are not coffee drinkers, but if the environment is good and the coffee is not bad, they’ll come back. The store layout, artwork and food options make Starbucks more friendly to Chinese eyes, but coffee remains the core offering and people don’t go there for the coffee. They go there to present themselves as modem Chinese in a public setting.

    正确答案: 【参考译文】
    星巴克强力吸引中国消费者 向中国的饮茶人兜售咖啡,听起来简直是天方夜潭。而星巴克的招数是选择繁华街道的黄金地段,在那儿咖啡店一定会吸引那些爱凑热闹的人。
    随着星巴克在中国开拓市场的强劲势头,具有近五千年历史的中国茶文化就渗透了来自咖啡王国的浓香(咖啡先锋浸入拥有近五千年茶文化历史的中国)。目标是把星巴克建成时兴的常去的场所,吸引中国新兴中产阶级品尝新的口味(开发新的口味来迎合中国新兴的中产阶级)。
    除了在网上主办咖啡俱乐部及偶尔在写字楼提供咖啡品尝活动外,星巴克在中国不打算进行任何广告宣传、促销活动,也不打算实施其他的营销策略。相反,星巴克公司依靠选择那种显眼的、交通发达的咖啡店店址来做自我宣传;星巴克最主要的宣传媒介是咖啡店本身(相反,星巴克公司依靠的是咖啡店的选址,交通便利的醒目地址便是其最主要的宣传手段)。
    然而,在变化飞快的中国大城市找到能体现适当生活方式的地方,与其说是一种科学的经营理念,倒不如说是一场赌博(很像是一场赌博而不大像是科学经营手段)。在美国,该公司利用计算机处理的地图数据库探寻潜在街角,但这种做法在中国城市却没有多大用处。同时,星巴克也面临着一场攻坚战。据当地媒体报道,70%的接受调查者不同意星巴克在北京的紫禁城开连锁店。即使对中国的中产阶层而言,星巴克咖啡也是一种勉强能消费得起的奢侈品。
    不过,零售商们却说,在中国城市营销的一个最强有力的武器就是对大众消费品制定高价格,原因是中国消费者的侧重点与美国的雅皮士们不同。40岁的中国人几乎不喝咖啡,但如果环境优雅、咖啡味道又不差,他们还会成为回头客。虽然咖啡仍是星巴克咖啡店的主题,但店内的布局、艺术品的摆放以及可供选择的各色食品比咖啡本身更令中国人着迷,而且人们光顾星巴克并不为了喝咖啡,而是为了在公共场合有机会表明自己是时尚的中国人。(星巴克咖啡店的布置、艺术作品及食品供应吸引着中国人的眼球,但咖啡还是主要供应品,而且人们光顾星巴克不是为了喝咖啡,而是在公共场合炫耀自己是新潮的中国人。)
    解析: 暂无解析

  • 第22题:

    单选题
    Shanghai is the most largest city by population in the People's Republic of China.
    A

    is

    B

    the most largest city

    C

    in

    D

    the People's Republic of China


    正确答案: B
    解析:

  • 第23题:

    单选题
    China's recent policy will bring the high-tech benefits of the West back to _____ China's modernization.
    A

    cause

    B

    expect

    C

    fuel

    D

    cherish


    正确答案: B
    解析:
    fuel刺激,推动。cause引起。expect期待。cherish珍惜。