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Business & Economics, Database Highlights & Trials

Job-hunting? Company information search tips

Target Corporation SWOT Analysis

Target Corp. SWOT Analysis


As the temperatures warm up and we move through spring, our thoughts turn fondly to – well, for many students, you’re thinking about job-hunting. You’re thinking about potential employers, maybe you have some interviews lined up. You want to know more about a company as a potential employer, and you want to go beyond what you find on the company’s website and some quick web searching. If you’re a business student, you’ve probably done a good deal of company research for class projects. But if you haven’t done it recently, or aren’t a business student, here are some tips and suggestions.

  • Get a good overview. Business Insights: Essentials and Business Source Premier are great places to check for a basic overview of a public company (one that sells stock or other registered securities to the public.) This can include a description of the company, financial information, and news stories. BSP, BIE, and OneSource Global Business Browser include SWOT reports, which summarize Strengths and Weaknesses of a business, and the Opportunities and Threats it faces in the business environment.
  • Focus your search. BSP and ABI/INFORM Trade & Industry each have a way to search for items about a company that’s more precise than keyword searching. This helps a lot with companies like Target or even Google, whose names are part of daily life. (The word “target,” for example, can refer to target markets, target dates, target-based pay, and of course target practice.) In BSP, you can use the pull-down menu to search for Target as a “company entity,” to get articles specifically about Target the company. And in ABI, you can search for Target as a “company/organization.”
  • Find those private companies, too. As mentioned in an earlier blog post, PrivCo is our newest business resource, covering privately-held companies that average around $50,000,000.00 in annual revenue. For smaller companies, ReferenceUSA is a “business phone book” covering 24 million U.S. businesses. In the Custom Search, you can look for companies by name, business type, business size, location, and more.
  • Don’t forget the news. Yeah, you can find news on the web, but some precision searching can help here as well. ProQuest Newsstand, like ABI, lets you search for articles on a “company/organization.” That helps focus your search in local news sources, like the Star Tribune or Pioneer Press, as well as major papers from other cities (the New York Times, the Chicago Tribune, and the Los Angeles Times, just to drop a few names.) And my good friend BizLink has full-text coverage of 40 regional business journals, including the Minneapolis-St. Paul Business Journal and business journals from Atlanta, Denver, Milwaukee, Portland, and Silicon Valley. It’s a great place to search for information on local or regional companies, and you get that local perspective that you don’t find in national sources.
  • Be sure to check our career and employment resources guide as part of your job search. And good luck!

    Libraries, News & Events, O'Shaughnessy-Frey Library

    O’Shaughnessy-Frey to Shift its Books and Periodicals Collections

    puzzleSuggestion and allure: Collection shift in OSF

    “Education is not furthered by secreting books in which the university has invested funds…displayed to possible readers, the collection becomes alive with suggestion and allure.” So declares an old (1970) book called University Library Administration sitting on my office shelf (mostly for looks, and, honestly, for its ironic value.) I took a look at it today when I was thinking about a big project that we are undertaking – the rearrangement of the books and periodicals in O’Shaughnessy Frey Library. Our goal with the project: move ALL bound journals to the sublevel of the library and rearrange the books on the rest of the floors. We want to make our print collections easier to access, and since the bound journal collection is actually shrinking, consolidating it on one floor is now realistic.

    A project like this is major and will involve touching nearly every volume in the library. It is kind of like the sliding tile puzzle pictured above. We’ll be compressing collections on the sublevel, opening up space on level four, and then beginning the shift of the books, finally ending back on the sublevel, to which we’ll move the rest of the bound journals. Our hope is that we can complete the shift in 12 – 18 months, using mostly student labor, under the supervision of library staff. We do not expect that any books will be “out of circulation,” though there will be work going on at some place in the stacks as the books are moved.

    At the end of the project, we’ll have opened up some good spaces which we will redesign for student use and we’ll engage the community in the design and development of those new spaces. More on that in the future! We’ll keep you informed on the progress of the big shift as it moves forward.

    If you have questions or comments about this project, please let us know.

    – Dan Gjelten, Director of Libraries

     

    News & Events, O'Shaughnessy-Frey Library, Services

    Therapy Pets Here for Midterms!

    Screen Shot 2013-12-15 at 9.38.16 PM

    The ever-popular Library Therapy Pets will be in the OSF Library rotunda

    6-8pm on Tuesday, March 18th.

    The Ides of March and Midterms fall very close together this year, so we thought you might like a little snuggle from a friendly dog to help make it through.

    Or maybe watching a few hops from a fluffy (and amazingly talented) agility bunny will inspire an extra boost of energy to power you through finishing that page of APA citations!?

    Either way, everyone is welcome to take a few moments’ break from midterms stress in order to receive some fluffy encouragement.  What’s not to love about spending time with other animal lovers?

    As always, remember that library staff are available to assist you find any information you need to complete your work.  Please don’t hesitate to ask!

    News & Events

    Art Full Text

    The Art Full Text database provides full-text access to many journal articles on art and art history. For articles where only a citation or abstract is provided, click on the Check for Full Text icon to determine availability.

    – Other subjects covered in this database include women’s studies, cultural studies, and history.

    – Access the Art Full Text database by using the A-Z List of Databases link on the Library Homepage.

    – To search only Scholarly (Peer Reviewed) Journals, select this option from the limiters.

    Use the Research Guides link on the Library Homepage to explore other subject-specific databases in Art/Art History.

    Database Highlights & Trials

    UPDATE: SERVICE INTERRUPTION — Includes Journals from Taylor & Francis, BioOne, and Annual Reviews

    Beginning on Saturday, March 1st at 10 a.m. and lasting up to 16 hours (until March 2nd at 2 a.m.), journals published by Taylor & Francis as well as journals found on the BioOne and Annual Reviews databases will not be available. This will affect almost 400 of our online subscribed journals, but is due only to scheduled platform maintenance.

    If you cannot access journal content during this window and it is from one of these three places, please try again after the scheduled maintenance window. Thank you for your patience!

    Database Highlights & Trials

    SERVICE INTERRUPTION – Taylor & Francis Journals

     

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    Over the weekend, Saturday night into Sunday morning to be specific, journals published by Taylor & Francis will not be available. T&F is doing server maintenance.   Um… ok.  So what does this really mean?  It means that when you’re in Summon or another resource and click GET IT to get an article, and if that article happens to come from the publisher Taylor & Francis, you will not get it.  We have about 135 journals by them.

    Libraries, News & Events, O'Shaughnessy-Frey Library

    Used Book Donations Accepted at Circulation Desk, OSF Library

    Picture3UST Libraries will hold its annual Library Week Used Book Sale, Monday-Thursday, April 14-17.   Shop this popular book sale from Noon to 6 p.m. each day, Monday through Thursday,  in the O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library.   (Please note – we’ll be closed on Friday, April 18, because it is Good Friday.)

    In preparation for the sale, we are inviting and gratefully accepting your donations of used books in these especially popular categories: fiction, art, self-help, literature, poetry, nonfiction, political science, history, children’s books and cookbooks.   Are you getting a head start on spring cleaning?   Or moving to a new office?   If you find you have well-loved books that you no longer wish to keep, please consider donating them to the UST Libraries book sale.

    You can drop off  your books at the O’Shaughnessy-Frey circulation desk anytime the library is open beginning today through Thursday, April 10.

    Please, no textbooks, books in rough shape, etc.  For more information please call Julie Kimlinger at (651) 962-5014.

    News & Events

    TECHNICAL DIFFICULTIES – Summon

    Summon is currently unavailable.  Summon tech support is aware of the problem and are working on it, but it is indeed temporarily unavailable. If/when it does come back, I think it’s safe to expect some wobbly legs for a few hours.

    summonproblems

    Libraries, News & Events, O'Shaughnessy-Frey Library

    All are invited to Library’s March 4th “noonartsound” – Argentina: Tango in Images and Sound

    shelley and chris2

    Shelly Nordtorp-Madson and Chris Kachian

    “noonartsound,” the Library’s popular lecture-concert series that blends musical performance and historical perspective, begins this spring semester on Tuesday, March 4 at noon. This time the subject is “Argentina: Tango in Images and Sound.”

    Each session is held in the O’Shaughnessy Room of the O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library, and brings together the talents of Dr. Shelly Nordtorp-Madson, chief curator and member of the clinical faculty in the Department of Art History, and Dr. Chris Kachian, guitarist and professor of music.    For 12 years, they have presented together, dealing with a variety of periods in art, sculpture, painting, costume history and more, and featuring guitar performances of period music spanning 400 years.   Drs Kachian and Nordtorp-Madson are well-known for their unique style and humor, along with beautiful yet “unstuffy” presentations of their art.

    Dates for the remainder of the series this spring are:
    • April 1: “The Art and Music of the French Baroque Chambre”
    • May 6: “Romantica: Spanish Art and Music of 1880-1920”

    Bring your lunch if you wish, refreshments will be provided.  For more information, call Julie at 651-962-5014.

    Database Highlights & Trials, Libraries, Media/Music Collections, News & Events

    Psychotherapy.net Streaming Video Collection

    psychoterapy
    Psychotherapy.net is a psychotherapy and counseling video streaming collection. The majority of the videos show therapists conducting therapy and demonstrating clinical skills, along with
    pre and post discussions. Includes most major theoretical orientations, including cognitive-behavioral, psychoanalytic/psychodynamic, family systems, existential-humanistic, motivational interviewing, and many others.
    Trial ends March 21.
    Please send comments about how this database could be useful for your classes, research etc. to Cindy Badilla-Meléndezcbadillame@stthomas.edu