...Chattanooga Case Analysis Dionne Durst Jack Welch Management Institute Dr. Catherine Lada JWMI 510 May 12, 2016 Chattanooga Case Analysis In principle, business leadership has evolved fast especially in the 21st Century. Consequently, individuals are opening up to new ideas and dynamic styles of doing things, which means that competition has remained all-time high in many industries. Therefore, leaders in various organizations have to be vigilant by creating winning teams in their firms that will achieve business goals. Essentially, this paper is going to utilize the issue of leadership experienced by Chattanooga Ice Cream, Inc. when a major client decided to replace them with a competitor in 1996. It will analyze how management went about discussing solutions, starting with the team challenges and dysfunctions. Also, how team members could boost their perspectives about others. Finally, it will make some specific recommendations about how the team leader could improve effectiveness. In essence, Charlie Moore’s democratic style of leadership was failing and making the team dysfunctional while his team members were not excellent team players. Fundamentally, Moore’s team appeared to be moving in circles when deliberating on how to respond to Stay & Shop's move to drop Chattanooga as its supplier. In this regard, the details of the meeting provided point to a team that could not get things done which is a sign of a dysfunctional group. According to Swyers (2012)...
Words: 2033 - Pages: 9
...Chattanooga Case Analysis Jack Welch Management Institute JWI 510 25 July 2015 I. Abstract. In this paper we will explore the Chattanooga Ice Cream Division (CICC) case study (Sloan, HBR, 2003). We will review the significant changes that were taking place internally at the CICC and externally within their market. We will explore these internal and external variants that include: changes in key leadership positions on the CICC staff, internal alliances, customer demand for product diversification and competitor responsiveness to customer demands. All of these factors had a direct impact on CICCs bottom line and resulted in loss of market share. II. Introduction The CICC, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Chattanooga Food Corporation (CFC), was trending downward from 1991 thru 1996 and reported five consecutive years of decline. The bad news continued to grow; in 1996 the division president and general manager Charlie Moore learned that Stay & Shop a 6.5M account and their third largest customer was dropping CICC for the Sealtest line of ice cream products. Faced with losing more market share and a steady downward trend; immediate and major action had to be taken in order to turn the situation around. Charlie was given 120 days to accomplish the task of returning the CICC to the profitable division it once was. The CICC management team had varying degrees of experience in the market and all had their own opinions on the root causes that led to the loss...
Words: 2289 - Pages: 10
...CHATTANOOGA CASE ANALYSIS ASSIGNMENT 2 Chattanooga Case Analysis Assignment 1 Tomas Thomson Jack Welch Management Institute Dr. Earl Richardson JWI 510 November 14, 2015 Abstract The goal of this paper is to analyze the Chattanooga Ice Cream Case. The Chattanooga Ice Cream case is a case study where senior officers of a food company have opposing views for turning a declining business around during a crisis. The general manager, Charles Moore is faced with several challenges. He has a consensus-oriented style that asks for his team’s opinion before making a decision. His style might not be the best for this situation. He is faced with choosing several competing ideas, managing conflict within his team and a quickly approaching deadline. Keywords: Conflict, Peer Relationships, Conflict Resolution Style, Group dynamics, Interdepartmental Relations, Management communication, Candor, Teams CHATTANOOGA CASE ANALYSIS ASSIGNMENT 2 Charles Moore’s conflict resolution style, indecisiveness, and management of group dynamics drove his business unit to near failure. By modifying his style, Charles Moore can turn his team and company around from near failure to a profitable division. Case Analysis: Introduction – Background on Chattanooga Chattanooga Ice Cream, Inc. was founded in 1936 as a subsidiary of Chattanooga Food Corporation. The Ice Cream Division was one of the largest regional ice cream manufacturers in the United States...
Words: 1675 - Pages: 7
...Chattanooga Case Analysis Nicholas Trudics Jack Welch Management Institute Dr. Barrett JWI 510 5/19/2013 Executive Summary The Chattanooga Ice Cream Division Case highlights Charles Moore, the head of said division and his responsibility to his company and his team. The following discusses the dynamic and dysfunction of a senior leadership team, and the contribution of both the individuals and their leader to that dysfunction. Also discussed is the management style of Charles Moore as well as recommendations for the future of this team. Introduction Chattanooga Ice Cream, Inc. was a subsidiary of Chattanooga Food Corporation, founded in 1936. The Ice Cream Division of Chattanooga Foods was one of the largest regional ice cream manufacturers in the United States. (Sloane, 2003) Following the loss of it’s third largest customer, the division’s president and general manager, Charlie Moore and his executive management team met several times to discuss the future of the division. Moore was responsible for not only making a very significant decision about the company’s future, but also the conflicting attitudes and opinions of the members of his team. Team Dynamic and Dysfunction There were quite a number of reasons why the Senior Management team at the Chattanooga ice cream division was dysfunctional. Firstly, the team was not formed under...
Words: 1015 - Pages: 5
...Team Project: Chattanooga Ice Cream Division Case Analysis Now’s your chance to apply to a complex business situation everything you’ve learned from the teamwork model in The Five Dysfunctions of a Team, as well as what you’ve learned so far in the lectures, videos, and readings. Using the team discussion boards, you will complete a written analysis of the Chattanooga Ice Cream Division case study. Each team will submit one case analysis explaining: * Where Charlie Moore has gone wrong as a leader, specifically in terms of team management and decision-making; * What this group of employees themselves could do to better understand the perspectives of each other and their boss; and * What Moore should do now to help his team work together and resolve conflicts more effectively? The case analysis should incorporate concepts and examples from the lectures, readings, videos, and other course materials and should be at least four pages in length. Please cite all sources and references in APA format. The team discussion boards are structured as follows: * Team Introduction Thread: Collaborate under the “Team Introduction” discussion thread to complete the team charter and have the team leader submit it to the “Team Charter” folder by day 7 of Module 2. * Planning Phase Thread: Use the “Planning Phase” thread to outline your team’s case analysis. The team leader needs to post the final outline to the team discussion board by day 7 of Module...
Words: 396 - Pages: 2
...ARCTIC MINING CONSULTANTS Case Synopsis Arctic Mining Consultants is a mining company that deals with mineral exploration. In this case study, the project given is staking 15 claims in Eagle Lake, Alaska. The project Manager was Tom Parker, who has a wide experience and specialized knowledge in all nontechnical aspects of mineral exploration. He is a geological field technician and field coordinator for Arctic Mining Consultants. He assigned his previous field assistants John Talbot, Greg Boyce and Brian Millar to help him complete the project. The job required them to stake at least 7 lengths each day in order to be completed on time. However, the whole team has became very tense and agitated, especially Tom Parker, as the deadline was just around the corner and there’s still many to be finished within the limited time. The problem became worse with the way Tom managed and treated his team. The only motivation to the team was the $300 bonuses promised by the company when the job is done on time, otherwise, they might wished to give up already. This happened because working as a field assistant and in long-working hours only giving them low wages, which is considered unreasonable compared to what they have to do. During the eight hard days, everything had actually proved the strengths and weaknesses of each of the team members, including Tom. Case analysis symptoms 1) What symptom(s) exist in this case to suggest that something has gone wrong? The symptom(s) to suggest...
Words: 2346 - Pages: 10
...1. Would a TNA be needed in this situation? Why or why not? If yes, who would you want to talk to? Training Needs Analysis is a formal process required for the purpose of identifying the training gap that is in existence and its related training need. Considering the IMP case analysis, training needs analysis is required since there are different sectors within the organization which require an individual to possess the necessary skills to perform the expected work within that department. In addition, training is also offered to people working within the ‘different sectors’ in that organization despite the fact that equality is not displayed while offering that form of training. Talking to the HR manager at North America International Airport’s about training needs analysis is a good idea since the HR manager is the one with the authority over the individual’s directly concerned with training such as Mr. Pettipas. 2. Based on the case as presented above, what KSAs need to be trained? From the case analysis at IMP, it is evident that there are several knowledge, skills and abilities that have to be addressed during training to all the employees within those departments. Leadership skills need to be addressed since the HR was not able to assist Ms. Dillman in her case which portrayed that he lacked the leadership skills. Technician skills required for the metal sheet shop needs to be trained since Ms. Dillman lacked knowledge on the requirement of a metal sheet shop technician...
Words: 733 - Pages: 3
...✓ Materials Needed Performance Measurement & Control Systems for Implementing Strategy: Text and Cases, by Simons, Robert. Prentice Hall, ISBN #0-13-234006-2 Cases in Management Accounting & Control Systems 4th Edition, by Allen, Brownlee, Haskins and Lynch, Pearson-Prentice Hall, ISBN #0-13-570425-1 Freakonomics: A Rouge Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything, by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner, Harper Collins, ISBN#0-06-073132-X ✓ University Communication with Students All email communication from the University is sent to the student’s wsu.edu address. Please be sure that you have set up the link to forward your personal email address (aol, hotmail, etc.) or you will miss announcements and information that is very important to you. This is the email I use to contact you regarding class matters. If you change your email address, be sure to update again. ✓ Catalog Course Description with Prerequisitites 3credits: Managerial evaluation of budgeting, cost accounting, and financial analysis techniques; their utilization in control of operations. (pre-requisite acctg 550 or equivalent). Please note that pre-requisites are strictly enforced and that students will be disenrolled if they do not have course pre-requisites). ✓ Instructor Course Objectives Knowledge and Skill Expectations: Students should have the knowledge and skill level to record economic events, read and analyze financial information through the topic areas covered...
Words: 3504 - Pages: 15
...Title Page Course – MKTG 6300 Fall 2007 Service Marketing Student Name: Maria E. Kobayashi Individual Case Analysis Individual Case Summary: Ritz – Carlton Hotels 1. Key issues Ritz – Carlton (RC) wants to be perceived as the premier luxury hotel, with differentiated and personalized service, high levels of guest retention and guest recovery rates, and low levels of service defect incidence. The group wants to achieve this goal by optimizing the balance between human relationships and the systems. Nevertheless, the systems and databases RC had in place at the time of the case do not deliver the level of information needed to reach their objective. Moreover, they do not allow for smooth interaction with the RC team, who are able to gather highly valuable information regarding customers’ preferences, dislikes, or potential problems experimented by the guests. 2. Recommendations First of all, the Encore system should be modified to include real-time updating of customers’ preferences and of potential problems the guests might have experimented during their stay. This should be standardized across all RC properties. Guest categorization should also be standardized and input into the system. This system should be available in a user-friendly way to any member of the RC staff in convenient locations. It should also include a common defect reporting module with the functionality to cross data between different locations. After all these processes...
Words: 382 - Pages: 2
...In the case, a man who goes by the name Moto is sent to Chicago to do business. Here his “responsibility was to hire a contracting company and check on the pricing details.” He works for an auto parts supplier, KKD, who had been researching American contracting companies for the past year and a half. They decided to use Allmack due to it having the best track record. Moto went to meet with a man who worked for the company and was shocked by his rudeness and unprofessional manner. He wasn’t prepared for this and had no idea what to think of it. Also, he was not so used to moving so quickly and rushing around. In America, people are very fast passed and try to get things done as quickly as possible. He presented Mr. Crowell with a gift and he just stated that his daughter would love it. When Crowell said this, Moto should have gone in to a discussion explaining what the dolls meant and the importance of them. This way he could have shown Crowell the value in the gift he was giving him and he would have taken back the comment about his daughter loving them. Throughout the case there are many differences that Moto is shocked by. One of these is the fact that he is used to being called by his last name. He was surprised when Crowell asked for his first name and began calling him by that instead. Also, he wanted proof that the Allmack group was actually as good as they say they are. He asked for records and one of the workers got offended and was wondering why he did not trust them...
Words: 415 - Pages: 2
...to time to write a good CAR. So, once you “get” the Big Picture of the Case, and recognize the major analysis elements (focal system(s), main problem/Alternatives, etc.): o focus on analyzing those Alternatives and coming up with some significant Findings, and especially Recommendations. o As your analysis results “solidify,” focus more and more on Writing a Good CAR and submitting by the Due Date! • Cases can contain more than 1 major “track” for their analysis, allowing for alternative versions of a CAR. So, do NOT simply imitate this Example CAR blindly for its “specific content.” Worse, DO NOT simply copy any of its parts. • Instead, use this Example CAR by way of “Reverse Engineering:” See how its contents arise logically if our Case Analysis Method (Guide) is applied to the Case. This will help you understand how our analysis method works! Then, use the same general analysis method (actually, the Approach) on the Case assigned for your CAR. • Don’t just imitate the pattern of alternative found here! Analyse and find out what alternatives make most sense in the particular Case you are working on. • No Case contains ALL the facts you want to know for its analysis. So, when analyzing Cases, be pragmatic! Do not worry about any facts beyond the Case (unless specifically instructed). Instead, conduct the “best possible” analysis using available Case-facts. • Leave Enough Time to Write a GOOD REPORT based on your...
Words: 1972 - Pages: 8
...discussing “case” materials in light of theoretical arguments advanced in “readings.” Case materials include standard Harvard Business School cases, book chapters about individuals (Robert Moses and Henry Kissinger), corporations (e.g., Lehman Brothers and Time Warner), and industries (e.g., the auto industry), and in-class videos (e.g., a “Bill Moyer’s Journal” segment on David Rockefeller). COURSE REQUIREMENTS Final course grades will be based on student performance on three written assignments and on student participation in class discussions. Written Assignments. Each student will be expected to submit two individual case analyses that indicate what the student learned from reading and discussing the case in question. The case analyses should be one single spaced typewritten page long and should be submitted the week after the case that they address is discussed in class. Individual case analyses will be graded on a scale from 1-3 and together will comprise 10% of a student’s final grade. Each student should also form a group with three to four other students to complete a case study of a real organization. The research for this case study can be carried out using primary sources (e.g., participation observation and/or interviews) or secondary sources (e.g., books, articles, or prepared cases about a target organization). Thus, group members need not have worked in an organization to use it as the subject of their final case analysis. Other case analysis topics...
Words: 1326 - Pages: 6
...ZhiQing | Student ID No.: | 22012511 | Unit Code & Name: | MNG91002 | Campus: | MDIS | Tutor’s Name: | Frankie-Lim | Assignment No: | 1 | Assignment Title: | Case Analysis Research – Striving for Best Academic Practice | Word Count: | 1193 | Due Date: | 21 Apr 2014 | Date submitted: | 20 Apr 2014 | Declaration: I declare that this assignment is my own original work and has not been submitted for assessment elsewhere. I acknowledge and irrevocably agree that the assessor of this assignment may, for the purpose of assessing this assignment: * Reproduce this assignment and provide a copy to another member of faculty for review and comment, including whether the work is an original work; and/or * Provide a copy of this assignment to a plagiarism checking service for review so that it may determine whether the assignment is an original work. The checking service may retain a copy of the assignment on its database for the purpose of future plagiarism checking. I have read and understand the Rules relating to Awards (Rule 3.17) as contained in the University Handbook. I understand the penalties that apply for plagiarism and agree to be bound by these rules. CHEN ZHIQING 20 Apr 2014 Signature (please type) Date Tutor's comments: Paper Title: Case Analysis Research –...
Words: 1822 - Pages: 8
...Northco Case Analysis Johannes Röder, 154BB14B 1. How should Michaels think about the costs of over and under-stocking? Identify the elements of over and under-stocking cost in this case. These two cost factors result from the lack of the ability to match supply with demand. The costs of overstocking depict the cost per unit that arise if actual demand is lower than the expected one. In this particular case the elements of overstocking are the orders of customers in advance without payment, the obsolescence of the goods owing to seasonally and frequently changing trends, the large number of variants and variety in fabrics as well as the requirement to order in considerable quantities. The costs of understocking show the loss of profit per unit if actual demand is higher than the quantity ordered. The components of understocking are the significant variation and the high uncertainty in demand, which lead to difficulties with the forecasts in the beginning of the season. Moreover, the fitting processes and managerial actions to avoid leftover inventory are influencing the understock. The shortcomings in delivery are substantially important in this special case, since the failure for one product could result in the loss of a whole account. With a relatively small customer base of 91 schools as well as the two largest clients representing 14 percent of the sales a loss of a customer would result in sharp decrease in profits. In addition, the defect of a...
Words: 546 - Pages: 3
...Connor Ferguson Admin 351 Jo-anne Goodpipe January 29, 2016 Full Case Analysis of Hallington Utilities Services Company Case Analysis: Case overview 1. Summary of the situation Hallington Utilities Services is first introduced as a utility that distributes electrical power to customers in the municipality of Hallington. In the mid-1990s, the Ontario government decided it should move to deregulate the electrical power market because residents and businesses in Ontario were drastically overpaying for services and were considered the third-highest electricity generation rates in Canada, with no choice of suppliers. HUS was reorganized. It now responded to a Board of Directors. This Board adopted the vision: Excellence in customer service with competitive electricity rates and knowledge of power that is 1st class, which meant focus, was now going to be mainly on providing second to none customer service in attempt to please the public. After this shift there became the growing concern that HUS would face major restructuring and reorientation challenges Hallington employees were beginning to be concerned about their future within the organization. With this growing uncertainty, employee’s morale can be greatly affected. After this introduction about what HUS was and the new regulations facing the company, the case shifts focus on to the human resource specialist, Marion Forbes. Forbes starts by meeting with CEO J. Swatridge. He highlighted three major concerns that have...
Words: 3681 - Pages: 15