Joint Ventures: Difference between revisions

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==Strategies==
==Strategies==
Make connections and links to connected keyterms and articles. Remember to consult the guide for [[links]].
*Brian L. Ott and Robert L. Mack, the authors of the media and communications textbook, "''Critical Media Studies: An Introduction''," and subsequent professors of media studies at the University of Colorado, Denver, and at the University of Texas at Austin, said of joint ventures that, "another reason [why] media conglomerates might join forces [in using joint ventures] is to '''expand their control''' in a particular industry. <ref>Ott and Mack, ''Critical Media Studies: An Introduction'', (Wiley & Sons, 2014).</ref>


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 23:57, 8 February 2017

A joint venture, or "JV," is a business agreement, made by two or more parties, who choose to split the costs of a project or investment in equal ways, and in doing so share ownership. Companies partake in joint ventures so that in the case of their project not being successful, neither owner will have to take the brunt of the failure on their own. The use of joint ventures is practiced all over the world, foreign and domestic to the United States.[1]


Process of Joint Ventures

Many terms are used beyond Media Studies or come from other fields, mention those here.

Strategies

  • Brian L. Ott and Robert L. Mack, the authors of the media and communications textbook, "Critical Media Studies: An Introduction," and subsequent professors of media studies at the University of Colorado, Denver, and at the University of Texas at Austin, said of joint ventures that, "another reason [why] media conglomerates might join forces [in using joint ventures] is to expand their control in a particular industry. [1]

See also

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References

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External links

Additional online resources for this keyterm.

  1. Ott and Mack, Critical Media Studies: An Introduction, (Wiley & Sons, 2014).