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VENDOR PROFILE HCL Technologies — Vendor Profile Series for R&D/Product Engineering Services
Mukesh Dialani

IDC OPINION
As HCL Technologies likes to put it, product engineering is in its DNA. Since inception of its group operations more than 30 years ago, the company has invested in creating technology products and offering engineering services to its customers. Until recently, its focus was to position itself as a "technology services provider." IDC believes that in order to scale revenue and utilize its assets more productively, the strategy has changed since the past five to six years to include other IT services offering. As a result, engineering and R&D services now contribute to approximately 26% of HCL Technologies' total revenue. IDC has made the following observations: ! It is commendable to note that revenue for R&D/product engineering services has risen by 40%, while head count has risen only by approximately 24%. This indicates that HCL is successfully optimizing the use of its resources. ! Among its various initiatives, its Global Risk Reward Partnership (GRRP) model is unique and does enable it to create differentiation. However, success of this partnership will be determined by analyzing customer adoption over the next 2–3 years. ! HCL Technologies has created a sound and robust ecosystem consisting of partnerships, alliances with educational institutions, and manpower certification. ! It has acquired more than 270 customers and its top 10 customers contribute to approximately 38% of revenue for these services. This included acquisition of an additional 37 customers in FY08 and corresponding revenue growth of $137 million. www.idc.com Global Headquarters: 5 Speen Street Framingham, MA 01701 USA P.508.872.8200 F.508.935.4015

Filing Information: October 2008, IDC #214698, Volume: 1 Global Sourcing Strategies: Vendor Profile

IN THIS VENDOR PROFILE
This IDC Vendor Profile profiles HCL's R&D/product engineering services, including the evolution of these services; HCL's vision, core competencies, differentiators, financial and employee data, key markets, infrastructure, certification, strategic investments, partnerships, and alliances; and some customer examples. This document is part of a series of profiles of major vendors in the R&D/product engineering services. Other featured vendors include Accenture, Wipro, Infosys, EDS, Satyam, Tata Consultancy Services, Sierra Atlantic, Patni, and Megasoft/BlueAlly. Subsequently, IDC intends to publish all of these profiles in one major competitive analysis document.

SITUATION OVERVIEW
Company Overview
HCL Enterprise is a leading global technology and IT enterprise that comprises two companies listed in India — HCL Technologies and HCL Infosystems. This enterprise, founded in 1976, is one of India's original IT garage start-ups. HCL had its "first" genesis with grassroots development of complete systems in the mid-1970s, an era of proprietary systems and vertically integrated industry. Subsequently, it saw a great opportunity in combining Unix with 32-bit processors to offer "open systems" that would be more powerful and cost effective compared with proprietary ones. HCL had its "second genesis" by anticipating the inflexion and moving rapidly to adopt the technology abandoning its proprietary approach. In its "third genesis" in the 1990s, it rode the wave of engineering innovation by shifting focus from Unix servers to networking hardware and software, positioning itself as an R&D/product engineering services provider to other OEMs and database companies. By the time it experienced its "fourth genesis," HCL stood at the threshold of a great new opportunity of being a global design house and setting the stage for technology outsourcing. HCL started offering R&D/product engineering services to technology companies in 1999 with the inception of HCL Technologies (see Table 1).

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T ABLE 1
HCL Technologies at a Glance
Category Global business focus Data • Engineering and R&D services. Comprehensive range of R&D and engineering services to component vendors, OEMs, ODMs, and ISVs across multiple industry segments and domains • Enterprise application services. Package and platform-led services ranging from blue printing, development, deployment, global rollouts, help desk support to application maintenance in areas such as ERP, CRM, SCM, and middleware • Enterprise transformation services. Services in areas such as business transformation, technology transformation, application transformation, and data transformation • Custom application services. Services ranging from custom application development, deployment, and integration to corrective maintenance, new releases management, and backup recovery management • IT infrastructure management services. Cost-effective management of technology infrastructure across geographically dispersed locations • Business process outsourcing. Comprehensive range of voice/Web-based contact and front office services such as order to cash, procure to pay, technical help desk, knowledge services, supply chain management, finance and accounting services, and customer life-cycle management and more 2007 global service revenue 2007 global revenue for R&D/product engineering services 2007 R&D/product engineering services share 2008 global service revenue 2008 global revenue for R&D/product engineering services 2008 R&D/product engineering services revenue share 2007–2008 R&D/product engineering services revenue growth 2007 global head count 2007 R&D/product engineering head count $1.4 billion $342 million

23.9% $1.9 billion $479 million

25.2% 40.0%

42,000 10,500

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T ABLE 1
HCL Technologies at a Glance
Category 2008 global head count 2008 R&D/product engineering head count 2008 R&D/product engineering head count growth Investment in infrastructure (labs, IP creation) and employee certification Global R&D/product engineering footprint
Source: IDC, 2008

Data 50,741 13,000 23.8% $15 million (over the past two years)

Chennai, Bangalore, and Noida (India)

Company Strategy
R&D/Product Engineering Vision and Strategy
R&D/product engineering services is a core focus area for HCL Technologies. HCL Technologies' vision is to be a complete, end-to-end service provider to original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) and software product vendors through robust, certified, and industry-specific product development processes. HCL strives to achieve this vision through a continuous cycle of new and innovative business models. One example is its joint venture with Celestica, (a leading global manufacturer offering electronics manufacturing services) to provide concept-tomanufacturing (C2M) services.

Strategy and Action Plan to Achieve This Vision
The following are key elements of HCL Technologies strategy to achieve its vision for R&D/product engineering services: ! HCL has well-defined market segments in its R&D/product engineering services offering. These include aerospace, auto, medical devices, networking + telecom OEMs, software product companies, semiconductor, server + storage, and consumer + Internet. HCL has a focused investment strategy for each of these segments. ! HCL will continue to invest in labs and infrastructure. ! It has made significant infrastructure investments that include creating a private certification and compliance lab in India, providing a complete user experience. This EMC and durability lab is ISO/IEC 17025 accredited and offers EMI/EMC testing, environmental testing, and certification services. Apart from this, HCL

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also invested in dedicated labs for customers. For example, for a large global supplier of end-to-end wireless solutions for wireless communications networks, HCL set up a dedicated RF and ATE lab, software lab, and Antenna lab to design and test its wireless infrastructure equipment. ! HCL Technologies will continue to focus and invest in IP and solution accelerators. It believes that solution accelerators are a key differentiator for the company. ! It promotes flexible and unique business models such as the GRRP to take over the complete ownership of the engineering process for a product or suite of products and getting remunerated as a function of the sales or the joint venture with Celestica to provide end-to-end integrated engineering services also called concept to manufacturing. ! HCL will increase penetration with Global Tech companies by providing multiple engineering services with increased value-adds. For example, for one of the world's leading supplier of process control and yield management solutions for the semiconductor and related microelectronics industries, HCL provides systems engineering services, software engineering services, mechanical engineering services, as well as low-volume manufacturing across multiple product lines. ! It also has increased alliances/360 degree partnerships to drive a higher level of bilateral relationship with global tech major customers.

Role of R&D/Product Engineering Services in Achieving Overall Corporate Vision and Goals
R&D/product engineering services is a leading business for HCL Technologies. R&D/product engineering services accounts for approximately 26% of its total global revenue. It is growing at 40% annually and continues to increase its investment in this business. These services are a core of its value proposition and helps it in providing strategic advantage to its customers and partner community.

Core Competencies
HCL provides R&D/product engineering services to its customers. It provides end-toend solutions and delivers complex and critical products. Its competency spans across domains such as telecom and networking, medical devices, consumer electronics, semiconductor, manufacturing, aerospace, automotive, computing systems, and contract manufacturing. It offers a comprehensive range of R&D/product engineering services to component vendors, OEMs, ODMs, and ISVs across multiple industry segments and domains. HCL Technologies provides full life-cycle product engineering services, spanning from requirements definition to prototype architecture, development, testing, and technical help desk, field support, maintenance, and upgrades.

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HCL Technologies competencies exist in areas that include: ! Concept to manufacturing for high-tech and manufacturing companies, including environment testing and compliance ! Low-volume manufacturing and associated services, including supply chain integration, vendor management, and transfer of technology ! Post-manufacturing services, including product life-cycle services and high-level technical support ! Software product engineering solutions across the life cycle of a product, including new product development, testing, product support, end-of-life product solutions, SaaS, digital protection services, and Web 2.0 services ! Engineering portfolio optimization (EPO)

Key Differentiators
HCL identifies the following areas as its key differentiators for its R&D/product engineering services offering: ! R&D/product engineering services date back to its inception. HCL Technologies has significant experience in offering these services, and it offers a complete gamut of services that include hardware engineering, mechanical engineering, embedded engineering, and software engineering. ! Its solutions (product/commercial) and solution accelerators (subject matter experts, IP, templates, etc.) effectively bridge the gap between business needs and challenges faced by customers and help its customers expand their product portfolio and market share and address new markets. Its key differentiator is its value proposition for customers to move from a "cost saving" positioning to an enabler for "revenue generation." ! HCL has invested in EMC and the durability test lab that has ISO/IEC 17025 accreditation. This enables its product engineering customers to achieve product certifications faster.

Service Offerings
HCL Technologies R&D/product engineering expertise is built on a strong foundation of 30 years of investment and expertise. It offers unique integrated services that span hardware, software, electronic packaging, and value-added services to customers, especially in mission-critical, complex product engineering areas. Its investment in test labs, tools, and infrastructure, coupled with its rich portfolio of reusable components helps its customers to reduce cost and time to market. HCL Technologies services offerings are summarized in Table 2.

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T ABLE 2
HCL Technologies' R&D/Product Engineering Service Offerings by Industry
Computing Hardware/ Software/ Storage/ Office Automation X X

Telecom PLM services Embedded services Engineering design Semiconductor design and development Plant design and automation Software product development
Source: IDC, 2008

Aerospace/ Defense X

Automotive X X

Consumer Electronics X X

Medical Equipment X X

Other (Semiequipment) X X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

HCL's breadth of service offerings include: ! Hardware engineering. Domain-specific hardware engineering and design services in VLSI, ASIC, FPGA, and SoC engineering; board design, embedded software, mechanical engineering; and design, prototyping, and value-added engineering services such as compliance engineering, independent verification and validation, and low-volume manufacturing ! Embedded engineering. Turnkey embedded systems development for new products as well as existing products, safety-critical embedded systems, embedded middleware, rich applications, and interactive GUI development for embedded systems ! Mechanical engineering. Conceptual design, industrial and mechanical engineering design, CAD modeling and detailing, simulation, and analysis ! Software product engineering. End-to-end software product engineering services, including changing market trends such as SaaS and emerging technologies based on solutions-focused methodologies across financial services, manufacturing, retail, and high tech among others

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HCL's product engineering expertise is depicted in Figure 1.

FIGURE 1
HCL Technologies' Product Engineering Expertise

Aerospace, automotive, medical devices
Cockpit/ cabin/body subsystems, automotive electronics, medical devices Structures, composites, body parts Engineering applications

Consumer electronics

Storage and servers industrial
SAN, NAS, blade servers, enterprise servers, measurement and control devices

Telecom/ networking

Semi conductor

Systems engineering

Multimedia, mobile phone, home entertainment, and networking

Enterprise networking equipment, wireless, infrastructure equipment

Fabrication and test equipment, reference designs, components

Mechanical engineering

CAD, analysis, reliability engineering, industrial design, testing Storage and servers management software

Software engineering

Consumer S/W, multimedia

NMS, OSS/BSS, IOS

Automation and control software

ISVs — enterprise products (ERP, DW/BI, CRM, SCM), infrastructure products (DBMS, OS, security), Internet portals and products, SaaS services

Source: IDC, 2008

Figure 2 highlights HCL Technologies revenue split by industry. Its key revenue engines include telecom, aerospace/defense, and medical equipment.

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FIGURE 2
HCL Technologies' R&D/Product Engineering Services Revenue Share by Segment
Other (semiequipment) (8%) Medical equipment (12%) Consumer electronics (7%) Computing hardware/software/ storage/office automation (10%) Automotive (5%) Aerospace/defense (20%)

Telecom/ networking (38%)

Total = $479M
Source: IDC, 2008

According to HCL Technologies, new services will be significant growth drivers in R&D/product engineering services business and will be at the forefront of adoption of new tech trends. Mobility, convergence, SaaS, SOA, unified communications, social networking, green, virtualization, and so forth are some of the big trends that will become mainstream in the next two years and will provide new areas for growth.

Addressing Customers' Intellectual Property Concerns
All employees of HCL Technologies sign a confidentiality and nondisclosure agreement (NDA). This is to ensure that any business information and knowledge acquired during the course of project execution remains confidential and is not shared with anyone other than those associated with the project. It is duly appreciated by HCL that information pertaining to customer-specific applications and business is essentially a tool for maintaining the competitive edge and hence the need to ensure that it is not disclosed: ! Nondisclosure agreement. The NDA could be specific to the ODC. The objectives of the agreement are as follows: # # Generation of nondisclosure agreement document for each customer Generating awareness among team members periodically

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! Intellectual copyright protection for customers # Inter-company nondisclosure and intellectual copyright protection agreement will be signed to ensure integrity Nondisclosure signed by each employee working on the project Non-compete clause for the marketplace signed with customers where relevant

# #

Leveraging Investment in Labs and Certification
Tables 3 and 4 provide some examples of HCL Technologies' investment in labs and certification.

T ABLE 3
HCL Technologies' Investment in R&D/Product Engineering Labs
Location/Year Inaugurated Chennai, India/2006 Skills Offered (Specific to Lab) Electromagnetic interference and compatibility Environment tests Feasibility study, architecture, modeling and design, development, compatibility and interoperability, compliance testing, and regression testing RF circuit and system design for wireless, microwave and medical devices Test automation, Domain specific test, security testing, and certification Employee Count 15

Labs Lab 1

Lab Type EMI/EMC lab

Scope of Lab Work General

Lab 2 Lab 3

Durability test lab Embedded systems lab

General General

Chennai, India/2006 Chennai, India/2003

10 40

Lab 4

RF lab

Customer specific

Chennai, India/2004

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Lab 5

On-demand software test lab

Consumer specific

2008

5

Source: IDC, 2008

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T ABLE 4
HCL Technologies' Investment in Certification
Head Count with This Certification 15 75

Certification NARTE certification SNIA certification

Skills Independent compliance testing and verification Storage networking

Vertical NA Storage networking Security and surveillance

Security integrity level (SIL) certification

Highly secure hardware design skills for products to be installed in inflammable environment Standard for complex electronic hardware development published by RTCA Inc.

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DO-254, design assurance guidance for airborne electronic hardware AS9100

Aero

200

Incorporates the entirety of the current version of ISO 9000, while adding additional requirements relating to quality and safety Comprehensive management system for the design and manufacture of medical devices

Aero

1500

ISO13485

Medical

1000

Source: IDC, 2008

HCL Technologies has created an alliance ecosystem with many educational institutions. A sample list is provided in Table 5.

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T ABLE 5
HCL Technologies' R&D/Product Engineering Educational Institution Alliances
Year Alliance Formed NA Nature of Alliance/Focus Area NA Skills Sourced from Institution Electronics, civil, mechanical, computer, biomedical Analytics

Name of Educational Institution SSN College of Engineering, Chennai

Location Chennai, India

SRM University

Chennai, India

2008

SPC with specific focus on multivariate analytics Partnership for core R&D projects for technology incubation Joint product development to aid the learning experience of the students Industry-Academia Partnerships Industry-Academia Partnerships Industry-Academia Partnerships Industry-Academia Partnerships Industry-Academia Partnerships Industry-Academia Partnerships

IIT

Chennai, Delhi

2001

Electronics, computer science, mechanical

University of Columbia

United States

2008

None

Sri Venkateswara Engineering College Thiagarajar Engineering College

Chennai

2007

CSE, IT, ECE, EEE, EIE CSE, IT, ECE, EEE, EIE CSE, IT,ECE, EEE, EIE CSE, IT, ECE, EEE, EIE CSE, IT, ECE, EEE, EIE CSE, IT, B.Com, BBA

Madurai

2007

RV College of Engineering

Bangalore

2008

PES Institute of Technology

Bangalore

2008

VIT University

Vellore

2008

Stella Maris College

Chennai

2007

Source: IDC, 2008

Table 6 provides an insight into HCL Technologies' joint ventures.

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T ABLE 6
HCL Technologies' Joint Ventures
Name of Company Celestica Joint Venture or Acquired Joint venture Year Acquired 2005

Service Offering/Skills Concept to manufacturing

Industry Focus Full life-cycle product engineering for high-tech OEMs and technology companies Product engineering and product support

NEC

Joint venture

2005

Embedded, ASIC,VLSI, Mobile

Source: IDC, 2008

Tables 7 and 8 provide insight into HCL Technologies R&D/product engineering customers.

T ABLE 7
HCL Technologies' Customer Summary
Planned/Projected for Next Fiscal Year NA NA NA

Last Fiscal Year Total customers Top 10 customer revenue share (%) Top 5 customers revenue share (%)
Source: IDC, 2008

Current Fiscal Year 279 38.2 26.7

242 37.3 28.4

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T ABLE 8
HCL Technologies' R&D/Product Engineering Customers
Geographies Covered Japan, United States, Europe United States United States Japan

Customer Leading Japanese company in printing and imaging

Size of Contract 25 million

Length of Contract 5 years

Brief Description Maintenance and sustenance of multifunction printer products

Leading wireless product vendor Leading vendor in fire and security Leading Japanese semiconductor manufacturer Computer associates

25 million

2 year

Product development from concept to manufacture of a networking product Product engineering and value engineering Embedded SW development

7 million

5 years

3 million

3 years

risk reward sharing

Indefinite

United States

Complete ownership of threat management suite

Source: IDC, 2008

FUTURE OUTLOOK
Having acquired more than 250 customers and with relevant infrastructure and experience to services multiple verticals, HCL Technologies continues to consolidate its presence for these services. However, there are other outsourcing and offshoring vendors that offer these services, and HCL Technologies needs to put in additional efforts to differentiate itself from its competitors. Although the GRRP model described previously is a good step in this direction, customer adoption will be key.

ESSENTIAL GUIDANCE
Advice for HCL Technologies
! Increase marketing efforts, especially in the Americas, to improve brand image and perception. ! Improve net revenue realization per head count for these services. This can be achieved by increased automation and creating and reusing IP components. ! Add a couple of delivery locations either near-shore or onsite to its strongest customer base because currently delivery locations exist only in India.

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LE ARN MORE
Related Research
! IBM: Harnessing the Global Ecosystem to Accelerate Time to Market — But Is There More to Do? (IDC #lcUS21472908, October 2008) ! Outsourcing Research and Development/Product Engineering Services — Is a Hybrid Strategy the Way to Go? (IDC #211835, April 2008) ! Outsourcing Research and Development — Customers Want to Cut Costs, and Vendors Are Reaping the Benefits (IDC #209385, November 2007) ! IDC's Worldwide R&D Product Engineering Services Taxonomy, 2007 (IDC #209093, October 2007) ! Research and Development/Product Engineering Services — A New Frontier of Opportunities (IDC #208397, August 2007)

Copyright Notice
This IDC research document was published as part of an IDC continuous intelligence service, providing written research, analyst interactions, telebriefings, and conferences. Visit www.idc.com to learn more about IDC subscription and consulting services. To view a list of IDC offices worldwide, visit www.idc.com/offices. Please contact the IDC Hotline at 800.343.4952, ext. 7988 (or +1.508.988.7988) or sales@idc.com for information on applying the price of this document toward the purchase of an IDC service or for information on additional copies or Web rights. Copyright 2008 IDC. Reproduction is forbidden unless authorized. All rights reserved.

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...Question 1 (strategy game): You have managed your camera company in the virtual industry environment for seven “years” together with your co-managers. As an individual now, and with the benefit of hindsight, if you were to start again from Year 6, what would you do differently in your strategy and in your management, and why? Note: the game is clearly a means to an end, and what I’ll be looking for in your answer is that you use your “toolkit”, which you have acquired from Strategy and from other courses in this GXMBA. Also, the question is about company strategy and its deployment, not about internal group organization. GO TO ANSWER Article 1 - Home Depot Earnings Beat, Raises Outlook Published: Tuesday, 13 Nov 2012 | 6:33 AM ET By: CNBC.com With Reuters Home Depot raised its full-year outlook on Tuesday as the retailer benefited from a recent uptick in the U.S. housing market and analysts expect a sales boost from super storm Sandy in the current quarter. The nascent recovery in housing has encouraged professional contractors to buy more in recent months. Home Depot, the world's largest home improvement chain, has also gained from its own efforts to improve distribution, cut costs and localize marketing and merchandising. Excluding a charge for closing seven stores in China, Home Depot said it had earned 74 cents per share. Analysts had been expecting 70 cents a share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. Third-quarter revenue...

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...J U LY 2 0 12 strategy practice Becoming more strategic: Three tips for any executive Michael Birshan and Jayanti Kar You don’t need a formal strategy role to help shape your organization’s strategic direction. Start by moving beyond frameworks and communicating in a more engaging way. We are entering the age of the strategist. As our colleagues Chris Bradley, Lowell Bryan, and Sven Smit have explained in “Managing the strategy journey” (on mckinseyquarterly.com), a powerful means of coping with today’s more volatile environment is increasing the time a company’s top team spends on strategy. Involving more senior leaders in strategic dialogue makes it easier to stay ahead of emerging opportunities, respond quickly to unexpected threats, and make timely decisions. This is a significant change. At a good number of companies, corporate strategy has long represented the bland aggregation of strategies that individual business unit heads put forward.1 At others, it’s been the domain of a small coterie, perhaps led by a chief strategist who is protective of his or her domain—or the exclusive territory of a CEO. Rare is the company, though, where all members of the top team have well-developed strategic muscles. Some executives reach the C-suite because of functional expertise, while others, including 1 In a McKinsey Global Survey of more than 2,000 global executives, only one-third agreed that their corporate strategy approach represented “a...

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...evaluates and controls the business and the industries in which the company is involved; assesses its competitors and sets goals and strategies to meet all existing and potential competitors; and then reassesses each strategy annually or quarterly [i.e. regularly] to determine how it has been implemented and whether it has succeeded or needs replacement by a new strategy to meet changed circumstances, new technology, new competitors, a new economic environment., or a new social, financial, or political environment. ------------------------------------------------- Strategic Management – An Ongoing Process by GE Consult on Wednesday, December 16, 2009 at 8:59am December 16, 2009  by Fred Victor  The term “globalization” is not new, what is more, it is more rapid and pervasive nowadays. Significant reductions in barriers to international commerce since the mid-1970s have resulted in markets and industries becoming increasingly integrated across nations. In fact, distance is becoming a shrinking barrier. Markets are globalizing rapidly, due to technological advancement particularly in computer technology, as are the firms that competing. As a result, strategic management will be more significant as the pace of business nowadays.  Managing change has become the "silver bullet" in seeking the final component of successfully managing strategy, process, culture and people in most modern organizations. Furthermore, staying competitive in the face of demographic trends, technological...

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...Book: Be Different or Be Dead by Roy Osing ISBN: 9781626753150 http://www.amazon.com/dp/1894694694/?tag=sounexecbooks-20 This book is an A to Z business strategy guide, including how to create strategic game plan, elements of execution and staying alive in the competition. Author basically has 2 main objectives for readers to reach. The first is to provide a guide for the execution journey and provide a process to follow. One of the lesson I learned from that is, If you commit to the process, It will deliver executional competency to you in your business life even individually. The second is give more information about the conversation about strategic planning. Just from a different point of view by not completely destroying the traditional planning model, main purpose is to shift the balance between where you or your company want to go, and how you intend to get there. I learned a lot more how to create a strategic game plan. Author lists the possible issues you may be facing, and gives keywords for fast implementation. He also states that focusing the critical elements of execution and keeping all these things easy, play an important role for your act. In addition to that author encourages readers to user their leadership intelligent. Author also lists the questions that we need to ask during the journey, and we have to keep these answers always updated along the way: How big you want to be, how do you want to serve and how will you compete to win. Deciding how big you...

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... MAN4120 Exercise 1A: Compare Business Strategy with Military Strategy Ranking the nine military maxims: 1= most important 9= least important Top 9 Maxims: 9= Simplicity-prepare clear, uncomplicated plans and clear, concise orders to ensure thorough understanding Plans are important. Strategic management relies on strategies that are first formulated, implemented and than evaluated for success. This is the most important. 8= Objective- direct every military operation towards a clearly defined, decisive, and attainable objective After plans are formulated in a general scope, now objectives or goals are also formulated in order for it to be implemented and achieved. 7= Unity of Command-for every objective, ensure unity of effort under the responsible commander In business, we have organizational structure. Strategic plans are executed by certain people with duties such as management and employees. Without this type of structure, there is no way of directing the path of success. 6=Offensive-seize, retain, and exploit the initiative At this point, strategy can now be implemented after planning. 5= Maneuver-place the enemy in a disadvantageous position through the flexible application of combat power. Part of implementing strategies, placing competitors in a disadvantage by having “competitive advantage” 4= Mass-concentrate combat power at the decisive place and time Also, part of strategy implementation, deciding when to execute goals...

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...The two broad turnaround strategies that may be followed by Public and Private companies are Strategic and Operating. Strategic turnarounds can be branched into activities that comprises of a change in business strategy for competing in the same business and those that involve for entering a new business or businesses. Operating strategies does not involve altering the business level strategies and usually focuses on increasing revenues, decreasing cost, decreasing assets or a combination effort. Our research work mainly focuses on existing corporates that applies Strategic turnaround strategies to reverse a major decline in their performance. Repositioning Strategy Repositioning is an entrepreneurial strategy that puts its emphasis on growth and innovation. This strategy answers the declining situation in an organization by devising out a new definition of the mission and its core activities. The organization  can choose to stay and become more dominant in the existing market or by diversifying itself into new markets and products. In some of the cases the management may think that the current resource capabilities of a company can achieve a greater competitive advantage, if applied to a new market segment by successfully integrating and making a fit between the capabilities of the firm and the external environment. The repositioning strategy acknowledges the notion of diversification and provides an opportunity for a firm to leverage on it existing resources such as financial...

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