Page 1 of 1 Information Management & New Technologies in Design & Media Arts ©2011 Miami International University of Art and Design Technology and Decision Making Lucas Moore, ArtShirts's creative director, was responsible for model selection, photo shoot coordination, creative licensing, talent licensing, and overseeing the creative-asset production tasks of the ArtShirts and Amazon Web sites. As a creative director, Lucas was also responsible for insuring that all creative assets, including the company logo, met ArtShirts's branding and visual criteria, and that each asset was legally and technically prepared for usage through the company’s various marketing and promotional channels. Although Lucas had shared his “brand bible,” a brand style guide, and vigorously used Basecamp to post creative compositions for approval across the company, his approvals came in slowly and not in any particular divisional order. Occasionally, it would happen that John reviewed a product image after it had gone live on the Web site and hated the model wearing it; a certain shirt wasn't selling and Walter wanted the copy changed immediately; Laura's marketing partners wanted a special asset that was customized to their Web site palette and not ArtShirts’s approved palette; or Cynthia felt that the product description was misleading on a promotional asset. As a result, Lucas often found himself modifying his creative assets several times or even hosting emergency model calls and photo shoots to accommodate last-minute changes and approvals. Lucas found that his current software for gathering approvals did not allow him the ability to forward assets through a hierarchical chain which would give him the assurance that reviews and approvals were being blessed and guided by the appropriate order of decision-makers in the company. CRM 365SAINT LEO UNIVERSITYCOLLEGE OF EDUCATION AND SOCIAL SERVICES DEPARTMENT OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE CRM 365 Local Response to Terrorism3 CREDITS Spring I 2020 Instructor: Dr. Delmar P. Wright Office: Fort Lee Center Phone: (O) 804-861-9634 Fax: 804-861-1816 email: D2L Classlist email Browser Class Meets: Mondays – 5 PM to 7:30 PM Eastern Office Hours: Mondays 11:00 AM to 5 PM Eastern Course Prerequisite: none Catalog Description This course provides a comprehensive overview of the need to plan for the possibility of a terrorist event on the local level. A terrorist event could take place that restricts or retards the state and federal government’s response to a local community. The course will give the student the tools needed to prepare a local agency for immediate response to an event in his or her community. The course will give an introduction to the National Incident Management System and will provide the student with the information necessary to ensure local government compliance with federal law. Text(s) Walsh, D. W., et al. (2012). National Incident Management System: Principles an ...