Best Slides for Success: Marketing Mix Presentation
Here are the slides that help you to understand the Marketing mix in easy way.
Marketing Mix
1. Product
2. Price
3. Place
4. Promotion
Now there are 7 Ps !
Propsoed group activities.
References
Lecturing Social Media Analytics
I remember that year—it was 2009 when I first signed up for Facebook. Then, making random posts, comments, and tags, to having around 10 social profiles, didn't just happen overnight. It was fun to learn and grow with time.
In the last 19 years, I have used 3 feature phones ☎️ and 5 smartphones ๐ฑ, and created emails in Yahoo, Hotmail, and Gmail, which was an unexpected shift for me.
Now, I am lecturing on social media analytics, learning a lot about search engines and their algorithms, sharing insights on social media, and also pinpointing the importance of such platforms for small-to-multi-national companies to create brand value and expand their market presence.
Now that AI is embedded in their algorithms, the issue of #data_governance stands at the top of any country’s laws. DATA has become more popular, powerful, and influential for everyone involved in local-to-national-to-regional-to-global platforms.
I am overwhelmed with the scale of its existence and expansion. I feel like I am living in history. With my grandkids, I can share these stories non-stop for hours and hours, and they will listen to us with jaw-dropping amazement ๐ฅณ.
It's loud and clear that the new scope of opportunity is being a Social Media Analyst. However, what I enjoy most in the job is taking selfies with my students. They are future social media analysts ๐.
Learn and Invest ASX: ASX Sectoral Classification
The Australian share market is broken up into 11 Sectors, 24 Industry Groups, 69 Industries and 158 Sub-Industries. Here are the detail break-down of 11 sectors.
Largest sector is Materials that has 41.4% and the list companies listed sector is Ultilities with round 1%.

- Open ComSec Account
- Open CDIA Account
- Trade from ComSec, then the amount will be collected from the CDIA.
Note: There is T+2 settlement. This occurs on the second business day after the trade takes place. Need to make sure, there is fund by the day of the settlement in CDIA
Remark: I am not a stock adviser. I am sharing all these infomration based on what I have learnt so far.
References
https://www.listcorp.com/asx/sectors/
https://www.marketindex.com.au/asx-sectors
https://www.morningstar.com.au/investments/ideas
China vs India: Who Will Be More Powerful by 2050?
As of 2025, China is ahead in economy, military, and technology, but India is rising rapidly with youth, democracy, and digital expansion. By 2050, they may compete for global leadership, especially in Asia.
Let’s compare them in 10 key areas with future projections:
1. ๐ฅ Population & Demographics
| Metric | China (2050) | India (2050) |
|---|---|---|
| Projected Pop. | ~1.3 billion (↓) | ~1.7 billion (↑) |
| Median Age | ~50 years | ~38 years |
| Workforce Size | Shrinking | Expanding |
-
India will be the world’s most populous country
-
Younger population = more workers, more consumers, more innovation
✅ Winner: India
2. ๐ฐ Economy (GDP)
| Metric | China (2050) | India (2050) |
|---|---|---|
| Projected GDP | ~$40–50 trillion | ~$30–35 trillion |
| Global Rank | 1st or 2nd | 3rd or 4th |
| GDP per Capita | ~$30,000+ | ~$18,000–20,000 |
-
China will likely stay ahead in total size
-
India’s growth rate may be faster (due to reforms, youth, tech)
-
Per capita income gap may narrow but still favor China
✅ Winner: China (overall size)
✅ India wins on future growth momentum
3. ๐ก Military Strength
| Metric | China | India |
|---|---|---|
| Military Spending | ~$700B+ (est.) | ~$300B (est.) |
| Personnel | ~2 million | ~1.5 million |
| Nuclear Capability | 400–500 warheads | ~150 warheads |
-
China will maintain a technological and budgetary lead
-
India will close the gap, especially in regional dominance (Indian Ocean)
✅ Winner: China (overall)
✅ India (regional advantage in South Asia/Indian Ocean)
4. ๐ง Technology & Innovation
-
China will continue leading in:
-
AI, 6G, electric vehicles, green tech, quantum computing
-
Tech giants: Huawei, Alibaba, BYD
-
-
India will rise in:
-
Digital infrastructure (e.g., Aadhaar, UPI), software, space tech
-
Startups, biotech, fintech, and education (IITs, ISRO)
-
✅ China leads in hardware & innovation scale
✅ India leads in digital public goods and IT services
๐ฐ Tie (in different strengths)
5. ๐ Global Influence & Diplomacy
-
China:
-
Leader in BRICS, SCO, Belt and Road Initiative
-
Strong presence in Africa, Southeast Asia, and Latin America
-
-
India:
-
Trusted globally for non-alignment, democracy, and South-South cooperation
-
Key partner in QUAD, G20, and global peacekeeping
-
✅ Winner: China (in economic diplomacy)
✅ India gaining faster in soft diplomacy and trust
6. ๐ฐ Space & Cyber Capabilities
-
China:
-
Own space station (Tiangong), lunar and Mars ambitions
-
-
India:
-
Low-cost, high-impact missions (Chandrayaan, Aditya, Gaganyaan)
-
Emerging cybersecurity and satellite power
-
✅ Winner: China (scale)
✅ India (efficiency and innovation)
7. ๐ณ Trade & Manufacturing
| Sector | China | India |
|---|---|---|
| Exports | World's largest exporter | Emerging exporter |
| Manufacturing | Global factory | Rising (Make in India) |
| Import Dependence | Low | Medium-high |
-
China will remain the world’s manufacturing hub
-
India will grow as an alternative but may not overtake
✅ Winner: China
8. ๐ณ Governance & Global Image
-
China: One-party authoritarian, efficient but less trusted
-
India: Largest democracy, chaotic but trusted globally
-
India is admired for:
-
Open internet
-
Rule of law (though challenged at times)
-
Strong diaspora influence (CEOs of Google, Microsoft, etc.)
-
✅ Winner: India (global trust, democracy, soft power)
9. ๐ Infrastructure
-
China:
-
40,000+ km of high-speed rail
-
Mega cities (Shenzhen, Shanghai)
-
Global infrastructure projects via BRI
-
-
India:
-
Accelerating infrastructure push: roads, metros, energy
-
Focused on urban development, smart cities, and rural inclusion
-
✅ Winner: China (scale & quality)
✅ India (catching up fast)
10. ๐ฑ Sustainability & Climate Leadership
-
China is the top polluter, but also the top investor in green tech
-
India has lower per capita emissions, pushing solar energy (ISA) and sustainable farming
✅ China leads in green tech investment
✅ India leads in global climate diplomacy
๐ฐ Tie
๐งพ Summary Table – China vs India in 2050
| Factor | China ๐จ๐ณ | India ๐ฎ๐ณ | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Population | Aging, shrinking | Young, growing | India |
| Economy (GDP) | $45–50T | $30–35T | China |
| Military Strength | Stronger overall | Regionally strong | China |
| Innovation | AI, EV, 6G | Software, digital infra | Tie |
| Global Influence | Infrastructure, trade | Diplomacy, trust | Tie |
| Space & Cyber | Big budget missions | Cost-efficient space | China (scale) |
| Democracy & Trust | Authoritarian | Open democracy | India |
| Infrastructure | Mega projects | Catching up | China |
๐ง Final Verdict: Who Will Be More Powerful by 2050?
-
China will likely remain ahead in total GDP, military power, and industrial scale
-
India will be younger, more democratic, globally trusted, and a dynamic innovation partner
๐ Geopolitical Outlook:
By 2050, the world may see:
-
China as a strong industrial & tech superpower
-
India as a trusted democratic counterbalance, especially in the Global South
๐ In Conclusion:
๐น China will remain more powerful in numbers and scale.
๐น India will be more influential in ideas, values, and human capital.
China vs USA: Who Will Be the Most Powerful by 2050?
As of now (2025), the USA is the world's #1 superpower.
However, China is rising rapidly and challenging America.Let’s break down future projections across key areas to see who will likely lead the world by 2050.
1. ๐ Population & Demographics
| Metric | China (2050) | USA (2050) |
|---|---|---|
| Projected Pop. | ~1.3 billion (↓) | ~380 million (↑) |
| Median Age | ~50 years | ~42 years |
-
China's population will decline due to low birth rate and aging crisis.
-
USA’s population will grow, fueled by immigration and higher birth rates.
-
A younger population means more labor supply, innovation, and consumer activity.
✅ Advantage: USA
2. ๐ฐ Economy (GDP)
| Metric | China (2050) | USA (2050) |
|---|---|---|
| Projected GDP | $40–50 trillion (PPP-based) | $35–45 trillion |
| Global Rank | Likely #1 in PPP | Likely #2 in nominal GDP |
-
China may surpass the USA in size (PPP terms) but not in per capita income.
-
USA will remain wealthier per person, and dominate financial systems (USD, Wall Street).
๐ฐ Tied: China in size, USA in wealth & stability
3. ๐ฌ Technology & Innovation
-
China is investing aggressively in:
-
AI, quantum computing, semiconductors, 5G/6G
-
Tech giants (Huawei, Tencent, BYD) are going global.
-
-
USA still leads in:
-
Software, semiconductors, space tech, R&D culture
-
Companies like Google, Apple, Tesla, NVIDIA dominate.
-
๐ฏ Key: China will catch up in hardware & AI, but USA may retain software + creative edge
๐ฐ Tie or Narrow Lead: USA
4. ๐ก Military Power
| Metric | China (2050) | USA (2050) |
|---|---|---|
| Spending | ~$700B+ (est.) | ~$1 trillion (est.) |
| Global Bases | Dozens (future expansion) | 750+ worldwide |
| Nuclear Arsenal | Catching up | Still largest & modernized |
-
USA will likely retain global dominance in power projection.
-
China will become the #1 power in Asia-Pacific, but still behind in global reach.
✅ Advantage: USA
5. ๐ Global Alliances & Diplomacy
-
USA leads NATO, G7, QUAD, AUKUS, and has strong allies (Europe, Japan, India, Australia).
-
China is leading BRICS, SCO, and the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), influencing Africa, Asia, and Latin America.
๐ฐ Tie in spheres of influence — West vs Global South
6. ๐ฐ Space & Cyber Dominance
-
China has:
-
Own space station (Tiangong), Mars rover, Moon base plans
-
-
USA leads with:
-
NASA, SpaceX, private space economy, deep-space missions
-
✅ Advantage: USA, unless China overtakes in Moon/Mars race
7. ๐ณ Global Financial Power
-
USA controls:
-
USD (world’s reserve currency), SWIFT, IMF, World Bank
-
-
China promotes alternatives:
-
Digital Yuan, BRICS Bank, yuan-based trade
-
Unless there is a major global shift, USD dominance is likely to remain.
✅ Advantage: USA
8. ๐ฑ Soft Power: Culture, Media, Education
-
USA exports culture: Hollywood, NBA, music, fashion, universities (Harvard, Stanford).
-
China struggles with global image due to censorship, authoritarianism, and propaganda perceptions.
✅ Advantage: USA
9. ๐ญ Manufacturing & Green Energy
-
China is the world’s #1 manufacturer and green tech leader (solar, wind, EVs).
-
USA is reshoring some industries, but still relies on Asian supply chains.
✅ Advantage: China (in manufacturing)
10. ๐ Resilience & System Strength
-
USA:
-
Strong democracy, innovation ecosystem, flexible immigration
-
But faces polarization and inequality
-
-
China:
-
Centralized control allows fast decisions
-
But risks from aging, debt, censorship, and slowing economy
-
✅ Long-term systemic advantage: USA
๐งพ Summary Table – USA vs China (2050)
| Category | USA ๐บ๐ธ | China ๐จ๐ณ | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Population Growth | Stable, young | Shrinking, aging | USA |
| GDP (PPP) | ~$40T | ~$50T | China (size) |
| Military Reach | Global | Regional (Asia) | USA |
| Tech & Innovation | Software, space, biotech | AI, hardware, EVs | Tie |
| Global Alliances | Strong (G7, NATO) | Growing (BRICS, BRI) | Tie |
| Soft Power | Global pop culture | Limited | USA |
| Finance & Currency | USD dominance | Digital yuan (limited) | USA |
| Manufacturing | Advanced, shrinking | Largest in world | China |
๐ง Final Verdict:
Who Will Be #1 in 2050?
๐น Economically: China may be #1 in size, but USA will remain richer per capita.
๐น Militarily & Diplomatically: USA will likely stay dominant.
๐น Technologically: A tight race, but USA may keep the innovation edge.
๐น Globally:
-
China: Superpower of the Global South
-
USA: Superpower of the liberal democratic world
✨ Conclusion:
By 2050, China and the USA may form a “bipolar world”, not one single superpower.
-
China will challenge but not fully replace the USA.
-
USA will adapt and retain leadership in innovation, alliances, and global governance.
Nepal’s Prime Ministers and their Alleged Corruption Scandals - Since 1990
1. Madhav Kumar Nepal
Madhav Kumar Nepal was formally charged by the Commission for the Investigation of Abuse of Authority (CIAA) in June 2025 for his role in the Patanjali land scam. During his premiership, the government transferred over 100 ropanis of land to Patanjali Yogpeeth in Bara district, which was later resold, causing a state loss of over Rs. 185 million. The CIAA stated the cabinet decision violated Article 66 of the Corruption Prevention Act.
Additionally, Nepal has been implicated in the Lalita Niwas land grab case, where government land was fraudulently transferred to private hands. The Supreme Court ordered prosecution against both Madhav Nepal and Baburam Bhattarai.
Sources: Kathmandu Post, June 5, 2025, The Diplomat, June 2025 and Ekantipur, February 14, 2025 (Nepali)
2. Baburam Bhattarai
Bhattarai has been named in the same Lalita Niwas land scam. His cabinet, during his premiership, approved decisions that facilitated illegal land transfers to powerful individuals in Baluwatar. Though he has maintained the decisions were legal and collective, the Supreme Court in 2024 found grounds for further investigation and prosecution.
3. Sher Bahadur Deuba
In 2005, the Royal Commission for Control of Corruption (RCCC) convicted Sher Bahadur Deuba for abuse of authority and financial irregularities in the Melamchi Water Supply Project, sentencing him to jail. However, the RCCC was later declared unconstitutional, and the conviction was annulled. He has also been accused of mismanagement in aircraft procurement, cooperative funds, and favoring close allies in fuel import deals, though formal charges were never pursued.
1995–1997,
2001–2002,
2004–2005,
2017–2018,
2021–2022.
4. K.P. Sharma Oli
K.P. Oli’s cabinet was involved in the controversial Giri Bandhu Tea Estate land swap. The cabinet changed land-use policy to allow private individuals to claim state land that had been under public trust. The Supreme Court in July 2024 invalidated this decision, calling it a misuse of power for private gain.
2015–2016,
2018–2021,
2024 to Present
5. Pushpa Kamal Dahal “Prachanda”
After the 2006 Comprehensive Peace Accord, roughly 19,602 Maoist combatants were housed in cantonments with monthly allowances of NPR 5,000 until integration or retirement. Allegations arose that Maoist leaders—including Prachanda—inflated fighter numbers (e.g., stating 35,000 instead of 7,000, later “verifying” 20,000) and thus siphoned off funds through non-existent or ghost combatant. This led to the misuse of billions of rupees through fake fighters. A complaint was filed in 2024, but no strong investigation has taken place yet. Prachanda denied the charges and said he is ready to go to jail if proven guilty. The case shows how corruption and lack of accountability remain big problems in Nepal’s politics..
2008–2009,
2016–2017,
2022–2024







