...University of Greenwich ASSIGNMENT SUBMISSION COVER SHEET SUBJECT CODE : BUSI1132 SUBJECT TITLE : CONTEXT AND REGILATORY FRAMEWORKS OF BUSINESS PROGRAMME : BABM YEAR 1 SEGi ID :SCKL 00047599 UOG ID : 000944904 LECTURER’S NAME : MR PRADEEP LEARNING CENTRE : SEGi COLLEGE KUALA LUMPUR SUBMISSION DATE : 17TH JUNE 2016 BOOK REVIW: THE VALUE OF NOTHING: HOW TO RESHAPE MARKET AND REDEFINE DEMOCRACY PAPERBACK 6TH JAN 2011 AITHOR RAJ PATEL the video of Raj Patel’s The Value of Nothing is such a pointed prologue to this testing and critical book, it bears rehashing: "From the 1970s forward, our economy was commandeered by free-showcase fundamentalists whose mantra was eagerness is great, control is awful," Patel says on his site. "But its gets darker still: We were all in the interest of personal entertainment. We purchased, ate and drove more. Furthermore, paid for it with obligation, diabetes and contamination. "We mortgaged our future," he contends. "Also, called it freedom." This book comes at a basic intersection. Amid a period when every Western nation is wagering hard on a full recovery from the considerable worldwide subsidence, this unprecedented attempt to spend our way back to conventional - through numerous billions in bailout and help dollars - is making new danger...
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...Case Study 2.2: The Failed Merger between Renault and Volvo In 1993, merger talks finally broke down between Renault and Volvo. A merger between the two companies had seemed the inevitable consequence of a number of years of collaboration and the plans seemed well set. Cooperation between the two firms had begun in 1990 when Renault took a 25 per cent share in Volvo cars and a 45 per cent share in their truck division. Volvo, for its part, took a 20 per cent share in Renault. The early collaboration took the form of an exchange of engines, the joint purchasing of components and joint developments in quality control. The cooperative arrangements between the two companies were a constant source of internal criticism, which focused on the highly bureaucratic procedures that had been established. In this sense, a full merger was seen by both parties as the more favourable option. The strategic fit between Renault and Volvo seemed ripe for merger. Volvo had strengths in the large car market, where Renault had consistently failed to make an impact. Renault’s strengths lay in the manufacture of small cars and in diesel technology. In terms of market, Volvo was stronger in Northern Europe and especially North America and Renault had a larger market share in Southern Europe and South America. Both companies were probably too small to survive in a globally competitive volume car market. In Europe and the USA, merger was a route for survival, particularly in the face of increasing...
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...พันธมิตรแห่งความสำเร็จ Renault-Nissan ย้อนกลับไป 13 ปีที่แล้ว ก่อนที่ Renault และ Nissan ประกาศความร่วมมือเป็นพันธมิตรกัน ในปี 1999, Nissan ในขณะนั้น แม้จะเป็นผู้ผลิตรถยนต์ขนาดใหญ่เป็นอันดับที่ 2 ในประเทศญี่ปุ่น แต่ก็อยู่ช่วงที่ประสบภาวะตกต่ำอย่างหนัก โดยผลประกอบการขาดทุนมาตลอดตั้งแต่ปี 1992 (ยกเว้นปี 1996) ส่วนแบ่งตลาดในประเทศตกต่ำลงตลอด 26 ปีที่ผ่านมาและไม่มีทีท่าจะสิ้นสุด ภาระหนี้สินที่มีอยู่สูงถึง $20 billion ซึ่งมากกว่า ขนาดธุรกิจของ Nissan อยู่ถึง 4 เท่า ธนาคาที่เคยให้กู้เงินมาตลอด ก็หยุดที่จะปล่อยกู้ให้ พร้อมทั้งกดดันให้ Nissan พยายามหาคู่ธุรกิจเพื่อช่วยลดภาระหนี้สินลง และเพิ่มเงินสดให้ธุรกิจรอดพ้นจากภาวะล้มละลาย สาเหตุที่ทำให้ Nissan ตกต่ำเป็นผลมาจาก โครงสร้างการบริหารงาน ที่ล้าสมัยคล้ายระบบราชการ (Bureaucratic company) มีลำดับขั้นและการตัดสินใจที่ซับซ้อน และรูปแบบการบริหารก็ไม่คำนึงถึงประสิทธิภาพการผลิต มีระบบ Supply Chain ซับซ้อนจากการที่มี ผู้ผลิตชิ้นส่วน (Supplier) มากกว่า 3,000 ราย สำหรับ 25 platforms มีรถเพียง 4 รุ่นเท่านั้นที่กำไรได้ จากทั้งหมด 43 รุ่น ในปี 1992 Yukata Kume, CEO มีความพยายามที่จะแก้ปัญหา โดยออกมาตรการ ‘Plant Closing’ เพื่อที่จะลดความซับซ้อนของระบบ supply chain และเพื่อลดต้นทุนโดยรวม แต่ภาวะตกต่ำก็ยังคงดำเนินต่อไป ในปี 1993, CEO คนใหม่ Yoshifumi Tsuji ยังคงดำเนินการด้วยวิธีคล้ายๆเดิม และในปี 1996 ก็มีการเปลี่ยนตัว CEO อีกครั้งเป็น Yoshikazu Hanawa ซึ่งอยู่ในช่วงที่เงินเยนอ่อนตัวจึงช่วยให้บริษัทสามารถส่งออกรถได้มากขึ้น แต่ก็เป็นเพียงช้วงสั้นๆ จนกระทั่งถึงปี 1998 ที่ภาวะที่เลวร้ายยังไม่สามารถแก้ไขได้ Hanawa จึงเริ่มที่จะมองหาคู่ธุรกิจ...
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...Case Study of the Acquisition of Swedish Volvo by Chinese Geely Author: Lieke Wang Supervisor: Thomas Danborg Master's Thesis in Business Administration, MBA programme February 2011 Abstract The acquisition of the famous Swedish Volvo by the unknown Chinese Geely has attracted a lot of attention in the world-wide medias, particularly in Sweden and China. It is the largest overseas acquisition ever by a Chinese company, which marks a beginning of a new era that the fastest growing China has become a superpower in the world economy. Because this acquisition is such a complex business where two involved companies are so much different, it is of high interest to make a case study of this in the business research area. The thesis begins the study by looking at the basic facts of these two companies: the products, market, finance situation, brand and technology, etc. It was found that these two companies have very little in similarity, but a huge difference in product segment, technology and brand, inter-culture, language, etc. Therefore, there is no immediate cost saving through the integration of two companies and the sharing of the common components, which indicates that the risk of failure of this acquisition is relatively big. However, there do exist some opportunities lying ahead. The most obvious opportunity is the possible rapid expansion in the growing Chinese market as Volvo’s second home market. To be successful in China, Volvo must address several issues: quickly establish...
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...Rapport Final Renault Trucks Rapport Final Renault Trucks Sommaire Introduction 1 Présentation de l’entreprise 4 Histoire de l’entreprise 4 Activité du Groupe 5 Implantation 7 Modélisation de l’Opération 7 Chaîne Logistique 7 Vision Globale de Supply Chain 7 La Chaîne Logistique 8 Description en détail 9 Carte de pilotage en temps réel14 Anticipation Court/Moyen Terme15 Structuration Long Terme16 Interaction avec l’environnement17 Thème d’approfondissement18 Qualité/Jidoka 19 Juste-à-temps 20 Conclusion 22 Annexe 23 Introduction Nous avons visité l’usine de moteurs de Vénissieux le 14 mars dernier, sous la supervision de M. Bertuzzi. Notre visite s’est faite en deux étapes : un passage par le musée de l’entreprise puis par un amphithéâtre où nous ont été présentés l’entreprise, ses chiffres clés, ses valeurs et ses engagements. Enfin, nous avons eu l’opportunité de visiter l’usine à proprement parler et d’avoir un aperçu de quatre lignes de production: la ligne basique, la ligne finale, la zone d’essai et la ligne de peinture. Cette visite a été pour nous très instructive et nous...
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...Production line The factory of Renault Trucks Vénissieux assembles the 6-cylinder engine blocks of 9 and 11L, which are routed to Sweden where the business unit of five brands of the Volvo Group is installed. The “main” engines (engine block, cylinder head, crankshaft, camshaft and crankcase) are performed by the Volvo Group's business units while the supply of other parts (the circuits of oil, gas, electric ...) is from 680 external suppliers. The Engine of 9 and 11L of all the brands of Volvo Group operates in plant Vénissieux. The plant operates five days a week. The engine factory Vénissieux covers 10,000 m² and engine assembly operations are spread over two production lines, each 15 meters: the line ¾ and the line ¼. Each piece assembled has a serial and manufacturing number, which is common to all suppliers of Renault Trucks, to ensure the traceability of engines and to facilitate communication between the various stakeholders. This system of EDI (Electronic Data Interchange) also allows the company to gain speed. The causes of malfunction of an engine due to incorrect assemblage of the pieces can easily be identified and corrected in accordance with the Group's quality policy. Workers have 3 or 4 roles at the same time in the Assembly line. On the main assembly line, several robots are very important. These robots perform tasks in such quality that it would be impossible to assign this task to a human being. They are checking the robots work very often to make sure...
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...Honda in Europe( INTRODUCTION The Honda Motor Company first entered the European market in the early 1960s through the sale of its motorcycles. The company’s motor vehicles were introduced into Europe at a much later date. Honda’s motor vehicle sales in Europe have been relatively poor, especially in the previous five years. Despite its huge success in the North American market, Honda is struggling to gain a significant foothold in the European market. Honda executives wonder why their global strategy is sputtering. Is global strategy just a pipedream, or is something wrong with Honda's European strategy? History of Honda In 1946 Souichiro Honda founded the Honda Technology Institute. The company started as a motorcycle producer and by the 1950s had become extremely successful in Japan. In 1956, Honda entered the US market and was able to position itself effectively, selling small sized motorcycles. In the early 1960s, the company commenced automobile manufacturing and participated in Formula-1 racing (F-1) to assist its technology development. Thanks mainly to its F-1 efforts, Honda became recognized, not only in Japan but in the rest of the world as well, as a technological savvy company. Up to the early 1990s the company had experienced serious organizational mismanagement resulting from tension between the technology side and the marketing-sales side. The situation became so dire, that the technology biased president and founder, Souichiro Honda, was...
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...The Renault and Nissan alliance Renault, the oldest automaker in France, had been nationalized by Charles de Gaulle in 1945. In the late 1990s, its financial performance had been buoyed by a strong European car market, several popular new models, and extensive cost-cutting. So it was time for Renault to find the partners again since merging with Swedish automaker Volvo had failed due to not match objective; internationalization. In 1997, the Asian financial crisis was like the opportunity for Renault. At that time, Nissan, a Japanese company with a famous bureaucratic management style, was a company on the verge of collapse. It faced with the loss of market share and poor returns. For worse, it was in debt and was under the pressure from the bank. These brought Renault and Nissan to ‘The Renault-Nissan Alliance’ in March 1999. The objectives of Renault are to improve the quality and internationalization. Nissan’s objectives are reduce the cost and the debt. In practice, they formed cross-company teams to study and realize synergies across the major functional areas of both firms since the alliance. They combined two nations together. CCTs had to prepare a report on their progress to the Alliance Coordination Bureau (CB) which functions were providing specialized technical advice, trying to resolve companywide policy issues that went beyond a single CCT, and trying to resolve specific conflicts within the CCTs in a given area. CB must make sure decisions are being taken on time...
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...THE VOLVO/SCANIA MERGER CASE |Maastricht University | | | | |School of Business & Economics | | | | |Place & date: |Maastricht 10. Dec. 2013 | | | | |Name, initials: |Michael Göpper, MG | |For assessor only | | |ID number: |I6069490 | |1. Content | | |Study: |Economics & Business Economics | |2. Language structure | | |Course code: |EBC1010 | |3. Language accuracy | | |Group number: |20 | |4. Language: Format & | | | | | |citing/referencing | | |Writing tutor name: |Heidi van Rooijen | |Overall: | | |Writing assignment: |Main Paper (Task 10) | |Advisory grade ...
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...AUTOMOBILE INDUSTRY THE ROAD TO “MAKE IN INDIA” Project Report Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION By Arpit Jain (A020) Rishabh Kapur (A027) Veer Bahadur Singh (A055) Trimester-I Narsee Monjee Institute of Management Studies Mumbai - 400056 August 2015 Table of Contents Introduction 1 Protection: 1970-84 3 Liberalization: 1992-2008 4 Competition: 2009 - 2015 5 Bibliography 6 Introduction In the financial year 2013-14, Indian automobile industry produced 21.48 million vehicles. This made India the seventh-largest producer in the world. The five large auto manufacturing hubs in the country have enabled the gain in automobile production in the country. Figure [ 1 ]: India's Major Auto Hubs The automobile industry is broadly divided into four types of vehicles - 1. Passenger vehicles 2. Commercial vehicles 3. Two-wheelers 4. Three-wheelers. There are 3 regulatory bodies involved with the automobile industry in India – 1. Automotive Research Association of India (ARAI) – It carries out sponsored R&D projects and forms standards for various entities viz. the industry, Government of India and national and international agencies. 2. Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers (SIAM) – It facilitates communication between the Automobile industry, Government, national and international organizations. 3. Automotive Component Manufacturers...
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...Migration – 140 million by 2020; 700 million by 2050 8. 2nd largest pool of Certified Professionals and highest number of Qualified Engineers in the world 9. Investment in Infrastructure 4 Automotive Industry in India 5 Automotive Clusters in India Eicher Escorts Hero Moto Corp Honda Motorcycle Honda SIELCars ICML JCB Maruti Suzuki New Holland Mahindra Suzuki Motorcycles Swaraj Mazda Tata Motors Yamaha North *New Hub: Sanand Tata Motors, Maruti, Ford India, Hindustan Motors Tata Motors East West Bajaj Auto Fiat Force Motors GM John Deere Mahindra Mahindra Navistar Man Force Mercedes Benz PSA Skoda Tata Hitachi Tata Motors Volkswagen Volvo Eicher Ashok Leyland BMW Caterpillar South Daimler Ford Hindustan Motors Hyundai Nissan Renault Royal Enfield Same Deutz TAFE Tata Motors Toyota Kirloskar TVS Volvo Buses (Illustrative List) Significant Manufacturing base of OEMs – Indian & Global 6 Rapidly growing presence of Global OEMs Passenger Vehicle market share by OEM parent country 2007 2011 Mahindra Hindustan Motors Premier Maruti Suzuki Tata Motors Mahindra...
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...April TRAINING EXECUTIVE EXECUTIVE BUSINESS SIMULATION MARKET RESEARCH MARKET RESEARCH PACKAGE FOR THE EUROPEAN PASSENGER AUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRY 2009-2010 Release 9 MARKET RESEARCH MARKET RESEARCH PACKAGE FOR THE EUROPEAN CAR INDUSTRY THE EUROPEAN CAR MARKET The European motor industry is the world's largest car market, having exceeded the US market in total units sold (excluding light trucks). It is also an extremely competitive arena. Some of the patterns to emerge from this market over the last few years are listed below. 1. Sales Figures1 Historical and Current The last strong rise in sales was in 1998 (14.3m), continuing into 1999, however, in 2000 sales fell by 2.2% (14.7m) and stayed at this level in 2001. In 2002 sales fell by 3%, 2003 saw an increase of nearly 5% but this was a result of an expanding marketplace, in reality there was another fall of 1% when comparing sales in the same EU member countries. 2004 saw a genuine 2% increase in registrations, remained stable in 2005, showed a substantial 4% rise in 2006 but then the percentage increase dropped to 1% in 2007. In 2008 European car sales figures were easily the worst for over a decade: 14.6m in extended Europe, 13.6m in the core economies, a drop of 8.2% and 8.1% respectively over 2007 figures. Gloomy forecasts for 2009 proved to be well founded with the whole market falling by a further 0.7% to 14.5m, however, the market excluding the new EU countries did show a 0.7% improvement to 13.7m...
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... and where relevant ethical concerns. Submitted on December 10, 2010 The internationalization of Renault : a strategy of development in emerging countries Nowadays, Renault is the car manufacturer of reference in France, ahead of Peugeot and Citroën of the PSA group. The Renault-Nissan alliance, established in 1999 and based on two independent companies with their own culture and their own brand identity, is the fourth largest automotive group in the world. After experiencing some difficulties in the 80's, Renault has developed an aggressive strategy of international development that makes it today one of the key players in the global automotive market. By focusing on cultural, political, legal and ethical issues, we will first explain the different stages and difficulties in the internationalization of the group. Then, we will study its different implementation strategies in the several new markets and finally, we will discuss the consequences of the internationalization of Renault. The story of Renault started on the 24th of December in 1898. The society Renault Frères grew rapidly and in 1903, Fernand Renault started to develop the commercial network of the company and created the first subsidiaries abroad – England, Belgium, Italy, Germany, Spain and the United States. However, because of collaboration during the 2 nd world war, the state became owner of Renault Frères in 1945. During this period, the internationalization was started but limited : only some european...
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...Strategies of foreign companies on the Russian truck market - The Case of Volvo Trucks Graduate Business School Bachelor thesis 15 credits Author: Ekaterina Ilina Supervisor: Florin Maican International Business Master Thesis no 2005:37 Göteborg september 2011 Supervisor: Jan-Erik Vahlne, Roger Schweizer Table of contents 1. Introduction ................................................................................................................ 2 2. Methodology .............................................................................................................. 3 3. Theoretical framework ............................................................................................... 3 3.1 Concept of a strategy ........................................................................................................ 4 3.2 Competitive strategies ...................................................................................................... 4 3.3 Strategies for growth ........................................................................................................ 5 3.3.1 Further look into market development strategy ............................................................. 6 ...
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...“RENAULT” A. Prezentarea cazului Născut în 1898, odată cu “Voiturette”, RENAULT a devenit rapid cea mai mare companie manufacturieră a Franţei. Dar iată cum a început povestea marelui constructor de automobile. La vârsta de 20 de ani, în 1897, Louis Renault şi-a făcut o intrare strălucitoare în lumea automobilului cu motor, ce abia se năştea. El a convertit mobilul cu trei roţi de Dion-Bouton într-un mic vehicul cu patru roţi căruia i-a adăugat o invenţie proprie, şi anume: transmisia directă prin intermediul primei cutii de viteze. Aceasta a detronat imediat transmisia prin lanţuri şi discuri dinţate. Pe 24 decembrie 1898, Louis Renault petrecea ajunul Crăciunului împreună cu câţiva prieteni. Încrezător în invenţia sa, Louis Renault a pariat că vehiculul său va putea urca panta de 13% a străzii Leptic din Montmartre. A câştigat pariul şi, în perioada imediat următoare , el a primit 12 comenzi. Câteva luni mai târziu a patentat invenţia sa, transmisia directă, ce avea să-i schimbe destinul. Aceasta a fost adoptată în scurt timp de către toţi manufacturierii de automobile ai timpului. Cei doi fraţi ai săi, Marcel şi Ferand, care se ocupau de conducerea afacerilor familiei Reanult, au înfiinţat în 1899 compania “Fraţii Renault” cu un mic capital, fără a-l include pe fratele lor vitreg Louis. Ei l-au lăsat pe acesta unic proprietar al patentului de invenţie şi i-au plătit un salariu bun, dar cu condiţia de a obţine rezultate ce puteau fi puse în practică. Cei doi...
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