World Domination
Your blood still rushing from your latest move, you decide to launch an extensive advertising campaign to lift the Adelaide News's fortunes off the sea bed.
You exhaust the paper's funds marketing Adelaide News stickers, fridge magnets, socks, teddy-bears, fluffy kangaroos. Not to mention, television advertisements, pamphlets in letterboxes, and personal visits to schools and workplaces.
Yet almost simultaneously, your major rival, the Southern Courier, steps up its own advertising campaign, headed by a new public face, a smart local model called Helena Tonemeyer. The Courier's campaign is both professional and catchy, and despite your exhaustive efforts, your rival comes out on top.
Out of money, your paper has to scratch for subscriptions, managing to keep only the most loyal readers. The Courier's subscriptions, on the other hand, continue to soar.
Almost a year later, you receive a phone call from the Courier's new chief editor, Helena Tonemeyer herself. She offers a substantial sum to buy you out. To you, it's seems like the death knell has finally tolled. You accept, and take the money. Your father cheers you up, saying "Business is business" and other such lines which sound hollow at the best of times.
You do have enough money, however, to take over another of your father's businesses, or else you could invest in some harbourside property and still live a life of style. What do you choose?
You exhaust the paper's funds marketing Adelaide News stickers, fridge magnets, socks, teddy-bears, fluffy kangaroos. Not to mention, television advertisements, pamphlets in letterboxes, and personal visits to schools and workplaces.
Yet almost simultaneously, your major rival, the Southern Courier, steps up its own advertising campaign, headed by a new public face, a smart local model called Helena Tonemeyer. The Courier's campaign is both professional and catchy, and despite your exhaustive efforts, your rival comes out on top.
Out of money, your paper has to scratch for subscriptions, managing to keep only the most loyal readers. The Courier's subscriptions, on the other hand, continue to soar.
Almost a year later, you receive a phone call from the Courier's new chief editor, Helena Tonemeyer herself. She offers a substantial sum to buy you out. To you, it's seems like the death knell has finally tolled. You accept, and take the money. Your father cheers you up, saying "Business is business" and other such lines which sound hollow at the best of times.
You do have enough money, however, to take over another of your father's businesses, or else you could invest in some harbourside property and still live a life of style. What do you choose?