Control-Tower Business Development Innovation Assessment

Measure the Value of Your Innovation System, Knowledge Base, Workflows, and Chain of Title

Business development succeeds when stakeholder relationships, documented knowledge, virtual assistant workflows, media review, e-commerce, and intellectual property records work together as one operating system.

This assessment estimates your community impact, risk reduction, revenue creation, and projected 5-year return on investment.

Find Out in 90 Seconds

Answer these multiple-choice questions. Your report will appear on this page without reloading.

Question 1 of 11 — 9% Complete

Section 1 — Organization Size

How large is the organization, community, or business group you want to support?

1–10 people
11–50 people
51–100 people
100+ people

Section 2 — Self and Cultural Awareness Resources

How well does your organization understand the communities, clients, customers, or stakeholders it serves?

Mostly informal
Some notes and customer history
Documented community profiles
Measured, reviewed, and used in campaigns

Section 3 — Essential Skills, Knowledge, and Wisdom

How well are your skills, procedures, FAQs, training materials, and wisdom captured for reuse?

Mostly in people’s heads
Partially documented
Structured knowledge base
Searchable, trained, measured, and reusable

Section 4 — Building Rapport With Communities

How well do you track referrals, meetings, testimonials, repeat engagement, and stakeholder follow-up?

Not consistently tracked
Tracked manually
Tracked in CRM or spreadsheets
Automated with reminders, pipelines, and reporting

Section 5 — Business and Data Security Risk Mitigation

How strong are your approval records, access controls, security practices, and continuity procedures?

Weak or undocumented
Basic policies exist
Access and approvals are tracked
Auditable, role-based, and regularly reviewed

Section 6 — Media Production and Content Review

How well do you document drafts, approvals, revisions, publication dates, and who approved each asset?

Ad hoc content creation
Some review before publishing
Documented review process
Publisher-of-record process with audit trail

Section 7 — Promotional Merchandising and E-Commerce

How well can your organization package offers, sell products, manage subscriptions, or license reusable assets?

No current sales system
Basic offers or manual invoicing
Online offers, cart, or payment links
Reusable offers, licensing, subscriptions, and reporting

Section 8 — Brand Ambassadors, Entertainment, and Activities

How well do events, ambassadors, activities, campaigns, and outreach drive attention back to your organization?

Rare or informal activity
Occasional events or promotions
Campaigns and activities are tracked
Ambassador system with leads, QR scans, events, and reporting

Section 9 — Current Monthly Opportunity Value

Estimate the monthly value of missed leads, weak follow-up, inefficient handoffs, unused content, or underused intellectual property.

$5K per month
$15K per month
$50K per month
$100K+ per month

Section 10 — Intellectual Property and Content Assets

How many reusable assets could be organized, approved, protected, packaged, or licensed?

1–10 assets
11–25 assets
26–75 assets
75+ assets

Section 11 — Legal, Ownership, and Chain-of-Title Risk

How exposed are you to disputes involving authorship, approvals, ownership, content reuse, licensing, or client deliverables?

Low
Moderate
High
Critical
Kraig Pakulski

‘Avatar: Fire and Ash’ lights up the box office with $88 million opening


WALT DISNEY PICTURES, PARAMOUNT PICTURES, LIONSGATE, ANGEL STUDIOS, 20TH CENTURY STUDIOS, CNN

By Auzinea Bacon, CNN

(CNN) — Moviegoers escaped into director James Cameron’s sci-fi universe this weekend, driving the third installment of the “Avatar” franchise to an estimated $88 million domestically.

The opening was shy of analysts’ expectations that it could earn more than $100 million in its first weekend. The first “Avatar” movie debuted in 2009 to $115 million, adjusted for inflation. The second film, “Avatar: The Way of Water,” opened in 2022 to $134 million domestically.

But “Avatar: Fire and Ash” also earned roughly $257 million internationally, bringing its global opening to $345 million. It will likely remain a top draw for moviegoers during the holidays and as it plays into January, said Paul Dergarabedian, head of marketplace trends at Comscore.

“As an international, especially 3D phenomenon, and in IMAX and the other premium formats, ‘Avatar’ is an event movie,” he said.

The movie’s nearly $400 million budget may weaken the chances for a fourth film if it has a disappointing return compared with more popular live-action formats, Cameron told CNN’s Jason Carroll last week. The franchise’s fate will be determined by “Fire and Ash’s” success over the coming weeks, Cameron said.

Movie theater attendance has declined in recent years as streaming services have proliferated and Americans have scaled back on discretionary spending. But blockbuster films like the “Avatar” franchise often lure back audiences who prefer the big screen, IMAX or 3D experiences.

“The theater is a sacred space for me as a filmmaker,” Cameron told CNN. “It’s never going to go away. But I think it could fall below a threshold where the kinds of movies that I like to make, and I like to see, won’t be sustainable. They won’t be economically viable. We’re very close to that right now.”

 

Optimism for year-end box office

 

Despite a strong December, Hollywood failed to return to pre-pandemic levels this year. The domestic box office is down 22.5% compared with 2019, and up just 1.3% year-over-year, with earnings totaling $8.37 billion, according to Comscore.

Theaters, analysts and movie studios rejoiced in 2023, when the release of “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer” revived hope that the theater experience could still thrive. The box office surpassed $9 billion that year, the first and only time since the Covid-19 pandemic.

Though audiences are still showing up to theaters, it “remains to be seen” whether the box office will reach $9 billion again, Dergarabedian said.

“The box office, considering all the ups and downs this year, is going to turn out just fine, and actually lead into what I think could be the biggest post-pandemic year, in 2026,” he said.

This weekend got a boost from Angel Studios’ “David.” The biblical animation adventure movie raked in $22 million and came in second overall.

Lionsgate Films’ psychological thriller “The Housemaid” earned $19 million domestically to finish third this weekend. And family audiences were drawn to theaters for Paramount Pictures’ “The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants,” which earned $16 million.

The three openers could have been major hits if they were released during a slow month like October, said Boxoffice Pro’s editorial director, Daniel Loria. They instead “complement” one another and have time to attract the right audiences through the holidays, he said.

A24’s “Marty Supreme,” Focus Features’ “Song Sung Blue” and Sony Pictures’ “Anaconda” all open in wide release next weekend.

“Marty Supreme,” an awards contender, opened in six theaters this weekend. It finished ninth overall with $875,000 in domestic earnings.

Meanwhile, “Avatar: Fire and Ash” may continue to attract big audiences.

Theaters have seen an uptick in the frequency of moviegoers. There were 33% habitual moviegoers — people who watch at least six movies a year — in August, up from 25% last year, according to Cinema United.

The gains in frequent moviegoers come as theater owners invested $1.5 billion in upgrades over the past year, according to Cinema United. And investments in premium large screens that show movies like “Avatar: Fire and Ash,” as well as deluxe seats and concessions, have driven Gen Zers to theaters.

Courting those young audiences, both through family-friendly movies and adaptations like Warner Bros. Pictures’ “A Minecraft Movie” and Universal’s “Five Nights at Freddy’s 2,” has always been difficult, said Shawn Robbins, an analyst at Box Office Theory. Warner Bros. Discovery is the parent company of CNN.

“What it takes to bring people out to theaters is a little different than it used to be, and I think studios are finally starting to hone in on how to make that really work for the current and future generations,” Robbins said.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2025 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

The post ‘Avatar: Fire and Ash’ lights up the box office with $88 million opening appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

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