• Senor Sisig: Hungry for Growth in the Food Truck Industry

    This case takes place as Señor Sisig has had three years of increasing success. The case highlights founder Evan Kidera, and the business as a whole, in Señor Sisig's efforts to continue the company's success and in pursuing the best growth options. Señor Sisig has received great acclaim in its early years. Founder Evan Kidera feels great pressure to capitalize on the opportunities presented to Señor Sisig as a result of the hard work in those early years, and at the same time does not want to over-stretch Señor Sisig's reach. Beyond maintaining business as usual, Kidera was considering three growth opportunities for Señor Sisig: (1) Add more food trucks, (2) expand operations to package products for sales to food retailers, and (3) open a bricks-and-mortar restaurant.
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  • Unauthorized Disclosure: Hewlett-Packard's Secret Surveillance of Directors and Journalists

    In 2006, Hewlett-Packard (HP) admitted it had hired outside investigators to spy on members of its board of directors and journalists to uncover the source of several leaks of confidential board deliberations. The investigators used methods, including "pretexting" (using an assumed identity in order to access others' telephone records), which were possibly illegal and almost certainly unethical. This case uses company e-mails, internal reports, meeting minutes, and published memoirs and interviews to present various perspectives on HP's leak investigations, including those of its non-executive chairman, CEO, former CEO, board members, managers, and investigators. What problem was HP attempting to address? Did the board's behavior conform to accepted standards of good corporate governance? Were the investigation's methods ethical? What, if anything, should the company and its chairman, Patricia Dunn, have done differently? How could HP's new CEO, Mark Hurd, best assure effective governance and ethical behavior in the future?
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