Tag Archives: IKEA

Furniture arrangement/decor ideas for small rental room~

By Jiaying Gan

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So I’m renting a small room in NYC~ and it’ll be great if you friendly people here on DIY would share some ideas on how you would decorate/arrange the room:

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I will need to fit a
1. Queen Size White Hemnes: HEMNES Bed frame – Full – IKEA
2. Pax Wardrobe with 3 doors: PAX Wardrobe with 3 doors – Bergsbo frosted glass/white, white, 58 7/8×14 3/4×93 1/8 ” – IKEA
3. I have two table lamps and two side tables
4. A desk and chair (Haven’t got them yet)

So… 😮

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Source: DoItYourself.com

Meet the World's Most Meaningful Brands — and a Surprising Also-Ran

By Anders Bylund, The Motley Fool

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French media and marketing giant Havas Media just released its list of the world’s most meaningful brands. The study was based on surveys to 50,000 consumers in 14 countries, asking for opinions on 300 global brand names. Some of the top names will seem obvious to American consumers, while other top brands are not so familiar on our Western shores.

Let’s have a closer look.

The top 3
At the very top of the list, you’ll find Swedish furniture giant IKEA. The company ranks high thanks to a commitment to responsible use of materials and humane manufacturing practices. Havas ranks companies based on how they “systematically improve our personal and collective wellbeing,” and IKEA scores strongly on the “collective” side of that equation. The “personal” ranking benefits from IKEA‘s unique combination of low cost and fashion-forward style.

IKEA is unlikely to go public anytime soon, but investors would do well to seek out companies with similar ideals.

In second place, you’ll find all-American information organizer Google . Big G’s official mission is to “organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful.” Do that with a heavy focus on an excellent user experience, and good things will follow — including Google’s internal sales targets and bottom line profits.

Google isn’t out to make a mint above all else — the company wants to change the world for the better. Havas rewards such thinking, and investors will do the same in the long run.

Thirdly, there’s Swiss food giant Nestle. The company owns 8,000 food brands, including some of the world’s most cherished food brands such as Stouffer’s frozen dinners, Nescafe instant coffee, Toll House cookies, and Gerber infant foods. You saw the uproar that resulted when Hostess went under, leaving Twinkies and Wonder Bread without a parent. Imagine the furor you’d find if Nestle’s massive portfolio followed suit. These are brands that billions of people can’t imagine losing.

What’s missing?
American readers might wonder whatever happened to Apple . The consumer electronics leader embodies the very concept of brand presence on U.S. shores, after all. A global survey like the Havas report slants a bit differently.

Why is this fruit missing from the absolute top of the Havas list?

Apple does rank near the top of this essential-brands list. Havas says that the top 60 or so would be sorely missed if they were gone, and Apple certainly qualifies with a 13th-place finish.

But the result must sting in Cupertino anyhow. Arch-rival Samsung is the most-loved electronics firm, in sixth place. Japanese veteran Sony lands a solid eighth spot. Even South Korean conglomerate LG and Dutch graybeard Philips outrank Apple here.

That outcome underscores Apple’s position as a relative newcomer on the global consumer stage. Sony and Philips built their reputations over decades of operational excellence and heavy marketing, often appealing to a very wide customer base. By contrast, Apple’s iPhone and iPad cash machines have only a

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Steve Howard: IKEA Style Sustainability

By Terry Waghorn, Contributor Can a global corporation be environmentally and socially responsible and still deliver a quality product at an affordable price? As chief sustainability officer of IKEA, the iconic manufacturer and retailer of Scandinavian-style furniture, appliances and other household products, Steve Howard has his sights set on that goal every day. Howard recently spoke with Ensia and Terry Waghorn of Forbes on how his company, which operates stores in 44 countries with a total annual sales exceeding €27 billion, strives to integrate sustainability principles and practices into everything it does.

From: http://www.forbes.com/sites/terrywaghorn/2013/04/19/steve-howard-ikea-style-sustainability/

Ikea Wood dining table moving outdoors

By modernhome

Hey guys,

The place I’m renting has been shared with a group of young professionals for years now, and as a result, when I moved in, we had plenty of additional furniture, beyond what we needed. So I took an ikea dining table (it was painted when it was bought from IKEA) and put it outside. I know it probably won’t last long exposed to the elements, but with it already painted, what can I do to weatherize it? It seems paint, at some level, waterproofs wood, but I’m not sure this paint would. What would painting on some kind of sealant or finish do?

What else can I do? Step by step directions are always appreciated as I’m just getting started in DIY world.

From: http://www.doityourself.com/forum/furniture-wood-cabinetry-finishing/493104-ikea-wood-dining-table-moving-outdoors.html

Geneva: Rinspeed MicroMax Concept offers cheerfully wacky public transportation

By Seyth Miersma

Rinspeed MicroMax Concept

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The Geneva Motor Show never does lack for high-minded and/or wacky concept cars, and throughout the years Rinspeed has done more than its fair share to add to the inventive environs. With plucky iconoclasts like the BamBoo, iChange and (of course) the Lotus Elise that got turned into a submarine, what can we do but wait with baited breath for the next installment of Swiss madness? This year the outside-of-the-boxers at Rinspeed have brought along a microMAX concept that sees one giant box on wheels packed with concept-car goodness.

The basic idea behind the EV taxi/bus hybrid is that of smarter public transportation. The microMAX utilizes cloud-based software that can “talk” to other vehicles on the road, and find optimal routes for passenger pick-ups and efficient driving. The roomy interior has space for one driver, two passengers and a lot of stuff, ostensibly making it very convenient for family use or IKEA runs. Naturally the microMAX has a coffee machine (the Swiss love coffee), a refrigerator (the Swiss love snacks) and integrated WiFi (everyone loves the internet).

Look back at our original post for even more information regarding the microMAX concept, and peruse our gallery of live images to get your yearly Rinspeed fix.

Continue reading Rinspeed MicroMax Concept offers cheerfully wacky public transportation

Rinspeed MicroMax Concept offers cheerfully wacky public transportation originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 06 Mar 2013 15:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

Horses For (Main) Courses!

By Richard Howells, AdVoice

The Horsemeat scandal running wild across Europe didn’t exactly break out of the starting gate.Ā It began at a canter in January, when theĀ Food Safety Authority of Ireland found isolated cases of horsemeat in beef burgers sold in British and Irish supermarkets.The story gained global attention, picking up its pace to a full gallop, in mid-February whenĀ European food regulatorsĀ discovered horsemeat inĀ school mealsĀ and hospitals across Europe and the U.K. Major supermarkets, fast food chains and food manufacturers, such asĀ Burger King,Ā IKEA,NestleĀ andĀ Iglo Food Group, have since recalled products. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

IKEA halts meatball sales after horsemeat found

People walk alongside an IKEA outlet in Prague

PRAGUE/STOCKHOLM (Reuters) – Sweden's IKEA halted sales of its trademark Swedish meatballs in 13 European countries after tests in the Czech Republic on Monday showed the product contained horsemeat. IKEA, the world's No. 1 furniture retailer and known also for its signature cafeterias in its huge out-of-town stores, said it had stopped sales of all meatballs from a batch implicated in the Czech tests. The checks were carried out in response to a Europe-wide scandal that erupted last month when tests carried out in Ireland revealed some beef products contained horsemeat. …

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Yahoo Business

Czech inspectors find horsemeat in IKEA meatballs

Pencils are photographed in IKEA shop in Taufkirchen near Munich

PRAGUE (Reuters) – Czech inspectors have found horsemeat in meatballs made in Sweden for IKEA Group, the world's biggest furniture retailer, the Czech food regulator said on Monday. The checks were carried out in response to a European-wide scandal that erupted last month when tests carried out in Ireland revealed some beef products also contained horsemeat. It has triggered recalls of ready meals and damaged confidence in Europe's vast and complex food industry. …

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Yahoo Business

IKEA: Sustainability and Profitability Two Ends of the Same Stick

By Aman Singh, Contributor

The company has: 154,000 workers. 47% of all its managers are women [compared with 17% women on the American Fortune 500’s boards or at the recently concluded World Economic Forum]. 338 stores worldwide. 8% comparable store sales growth in fiscal year 2012. A third of total energy consumption met with renewable energy. Is IKEA‘s newly minted sustainability strategy working? It carries the name People & Planet Positive; the retailer’s stated business mission is “to create a better everyday life for the many people.” The 2012 report is the first for the superstore, whose goals begin with a fourfold increase in sales by 2020 but go on to include two pillars of sustainability, engagement of customers, employees and suppliers and zero energy dependence, as well as community development. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

How IKEA Leveraged The Art Of Listening To Global Dominance

By Jenna Goudreau, Forbes Staff Last week, Swedish furniture retailer IKEA posted record revenues of $36 billion in 2012 and an 8% increase in net profit. The US market was a primary growth driver, with $4.1 billion in total sales. Since opening its first American store in 1985, the low-cost furniture seller now counts 38 stores and has become the second biggest home furnishing company in the US, behind Ashley Furniture.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Hungary groups call for ad boycott of newspaper

Hungarian civic groups are calling on companies to pull their ads from a newspaper that published a column in which a member of the governing Fidesz party made gravely disparaging remarks about the country’s Roma minority.

The appeal from Amnesty International Hungary, the Hungarian Civil Liberties Union, and 21 other groups, including several advocating for the rights of Gypsies — or Roma, as they are also called — said the companies should boycott the Magyar Hirlap newspaper until it “most resolutely condemns” the Jan. 5 column by journalist Zsolt Bayer in which he wrote that “a significant part of the Roma … are animals and they behave like animals.”

Among the companies petitioned by the civic groups are Vodafone, FedEx, IKEA, Procter and Gamble, and Hungarian State Railways.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News