...Ethical Strategy Review of Cisco Systems ethical strategy, what they say, what they do, and how it impacts their stakeholders. 2010 Contents Introduction 3 Background Information 3 Cisco’s Ethical Strategy 6 Stated Ethical Strategy 6 Stakeholder Analysis 9 Employees 9 Customers 13 Government 15 Suppliers 17 Shareholders 18 Communities 20 Institutionalization of Ethics 21 Explicit Components 21 Implicit Components 22 Corporate Environmental Management 23 Environmental Policy 23 Environmental Management Systems (EMS) 24 Crisis Management Policy 25 Overall Evaluations and Conclusions 26 Recommendations 27 Works Cited 29 Appendix 32 Appendix A - Cisco Code of Business Conduct 33 Appendix B - Cisco Ethics Decision Tree 34 Appendix C – Cisco Systems Inc. Board of Directors 35 Appendix D – Cisco CSR Awards and Recognition 36 Appendix E – Cisco’s Supplier Code of Conduct 39 Appendix F – Cisco’s Supplier Ethics Policy 40 Introduction The purpose of this paper is to see how a Cisco integrates their ethical and socially responsible practices into their business. The paper will look at the company background, and history. It will then analyze the ethical strategy of the company by reviewing the stated ethical strategy, statements and documents that support that strategy and how the strategy impacts the major stakeholders of the company. An examination of how Cisco institutionalizes their ethics strategy into the company...
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...JANE M. SAMPLE 123 Main Street | Arlington, VA 12345 | 877.875.7706 | info@greatresumesfast.com Versatile and motivated bilingual professional with expertise in finance, translation and marketing including stock market analysis, English and Korean translation and event coordination. Numerous skills and comprehensive knowledge readily support a variety of professional undertakings. Displays dedication and determination in all endeavors with diligent attention to detail for optimal end results. Core Skills & Knowledge: Marketing Product Promotion Event Coordination Translation Client Relations Market Analysis Team Leadership Support Services Finance Management PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT ACCOUNTANT INTERNSHIP June – July 2008 Hana Financial Group Seoul, Korea Established in 1971, Hana Financial Group is the 3rd largest commercial banking group in South Korea whose subsidiaries are involved in banking, securities, and investment. Executed stock market research and analysis and designed the World’s currency chart on a daily basis. Created PowerPoint presentations to present the analysis of global financial issues to team members. Provided support for numerous duties including collating reports, filing information, faxing and organizing data. TRANSLATOR March – April 2007 Seoul, Korea Edu-People Academic Institution Designed sample TOEFL questions and English vocabulary for junior high school students. Translated English writing into Korean, and Korean...
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...Strategy & Technology Pg 69-77 Major sources of competitive advantage Brand Scale Switching Costs & Data Differentiation Network Effects Distribution Channels Brand A firm’s brand is the symbolic embodiment of all the information connected with a product or service. A strong brand proxies quality and inspires trust Viral Marketing (consumer promotes product or service if a firm performs well) Brands Amazon eBay Google Viral Marketing Google Hotmail Skype eBay Facebook YouTube Scale Business benefit from economies of scale when the cost of an investment can be spread across increasing units of production or in serving a growing customer base. A growing firm may also gain bargaining power with its suppliers or buyers. Scale of technology of investment can also act as a barrier to entry, discouraging new, smaller competitors. Economies of scale BlueNile (sold as many diamonds in 1 year with one location as a traditional jeweler would with 116 stores.) Bargaining power with suppliers or buyers Dell (make concessions) eBay (raise auction fees) Scale of technology Intel (pioneer in cutting edge technologies) Google (runs on an estimated 450,000 to 1 Mio servers) Switching costs & data Switching costs exist when consumers incur an expense to move from one product to another. Data can be a particularly strong switching cost for firms leveraging technology. In order to win customers from an established incumbent, a late-entering rival must offer a product...
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...then known as Malaysian Airways Limited and later on, as Malaysia-Singapore Airlines (MSA) in 1966. The airline company scored a revenue of S$100 million back in 1968. In 1970s, two entities known as SIA and Malaysian Airline system emerged from the split of MSA, and ever since then, SIA experienced growth as the company focuses on its operations. According to World Airline Awards (2014), Singapore Airlines is ranked third in the global airline ranking. The airline has earned an outstanding reputation with its high quality service provided to their customers, thus further strengthen the airline’s premier position in the tight competitive market. 2.0 Review of the Organisation’s Reward Strategy and Performance Management System 2.1 Performance Appraisal System In the effort to evaluate the quality of employees’ performance relative to the standards of the company, Towards Optimal Productivity (TOP) is a scheme launched by SIA together with Singapore Airlines Staff Union (SIASU) to recognize and rewards good performance through its performance-based culture framework for Singapore based employees (Singapore Air, 2013). Rewards such as promotions, merit awards and career growth are part of a further improved and extensive appraisal system carried out by TOP. Workplace Improvement and Innovation Scheme (WINS) is...
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...New Health Medical Systems Staffing Strategy HRM/548 Gwendolyn Ford June 2, 2014 Jennifer Familant One of the main issues that needled American today is the provision of a new strategic healthcare system. With Medicare on the rise the prediction is by the year 2019 there will a vast number of people uninsured and depending on Medicare to compensate for medical treatment. The primary issue of healthcare in the United States is a leading part of the health medical system staffing problem because the staffing relies on Americans utilizing physician care. Understanding and developing current strategies will align organizations with new innovative ways to implement business strategic direction, and recommend staffing strategies that will meet the need of the organization’s goals are topics that will be address in this paper. Communicating a guided vision is the key role to planning strategically. Implementing any type of plan for the business should be deliberate strategically in order for the business to operate daily. The involvement of a diverse team of employees at any level in the organization can help to construct a communal vision, and growth all individual's in the organization motivates to understand the success of the plan. Simplicity and constant communication, from planning anticipate consequences that design the measure of performance can be vital to the success. Effective staffing frequently involves groups with simplicity of the shared vision, and extensive...
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...SIEMENS BUILDS A STRATEGY-ORIENTATED HR SYSTEM 1) Based on the information in this case, provide examples for Siemens of at least four strategically required organizational outcomes, and four required workforce competencies and behaviors. • Organizational outcomes are the results that follow from a preceding set of events and activities. In the application case, Siemens wants the following results, among others: A) Develop high-tech products and services, which also have to be very innovative and valuable B) Be a “learning company”, which means that employees have to be able to learn on a continuing basis C) A culture of team work to take advantage of all the potential of the employees D) Mutual respect and social roles in the employees to help creating a climate of transparency, fairness and diversity • Workforce competencies and behaviors the company needs to achieve its strategic aims: A) Diversified workforce and cross-cultural experience to cope with globalization B) Teamwork skills C) Learning environment so the employees are open to learn new things on a daily basis D) Respect, openness and social skills 2) Identify at least four strategically relevant HR policies and activities that Siemens has instituted in order to help human resource management contribute to achieving Siemens’ strategic goals. A) Training and development activities to help employees learn on a continuing basis. It consists on a system of combined classroom and hands-on apprenticeship...
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...Strategies for Evaluating Electronic Medical Records System Keisha Williams-Young HCS/587 May 02, 2011 In the past few years, many organizations have been making technological advances when it comes to medical records. By implementing Electronic Medical Records system to the Long-Term Care Home Facility, managers will be taking a huge leap into the future. Of course, when organizations decide to make an over-haul change of this magnitude, managers need to make sure they have planned strategies for measuring the various outcomes. Now that the implementation of Electronic Medical Records system has been implemented at the Long-Term Care Facility, management needs to focus on the strategies for determining just how effective was the change to the EMR system. The managers must also be able to analyze possible future outcomes of the implementation as well as looked at how they plan to measure the quality and satisfaction outcomes of the implemented change plan. Change Effectiveness Now that Electronic Medical Records system has been implemented at the Long-Term Care Facility, managers will now have to determine how effective the change to the EMR system was. According to Spector (2010), effectiveness is determined by the degree to which employee behavior is adaptive; moving people in a direction that is in the long-term best interests of employees and the organization. By watching, talking, and gathering surveys from employees...
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...Proctor & Gambles Business Strategy and the Use of Collaboration Systems Proctor and Gambles goal is to maintain the popularity of its existing brands through advertising and marketing, while also creating innovative products cost effectively to improve the lives of their consumers around the world. To increase its success in the business world, P&G spends 3.4 percent of revenue on innovation, therefor finding better ways to innovate and develop new ideas is critical and for a large company like P&G, finding methods of collaboration that are effective throughout the company can be difficult. That's why P&G has been active in implementing IT that fosters effective collaboration and innovation. Procter and Gamble utilizes a distributed development strategy, to form a basis for the distributed development strategy Procter and Gamble must make use of a collaborative environment. both as a way to develop groundbreaking innovations more quickly and to reduce research and development costs. P&G is using collaboration systems to execute its business model and business strategy by allowing researchers to use the tools to share the data they've collected on various brands; by giving marketers a more effective way to access the data they need to create more highly targeted ad campaigns; and enabling managers easier ways to find the people and data they need to make critical business decisions. To do this P&G needed to develop alternatives to business practices that were not sufficiently...
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...DISCUSS HOW THE BUSINESS STRATEGY AFFECTS INFORMATION SYSTEMS AND ORGANIZATIONAL DECISIONS AT ROCHE AND HOW INFORMATION SYSTEMS SUPPORT ROCHE’S BUSINESS STRATEGY? Business strategy with information systems strategy and organizational strategy can form a Triangle. This triangle is known as the information systems strategy triangle and highlights the alignment necessary between decisions of business strategy, information systems, and organizational design. This means any adjustment to one of them will affect the other two. Organizational strategy, information strategy and business strategy must complement each other and they must be designed so that they support, rather than hinder each other. In successful companies the business strategy is the most important element in the “Triangle”. But to be a real success a firm must balance these three strategies: business, organizational, and information systems (Pearlson & Saunders, 2013). Business Strategy Organizational Strategy Information Strategy The Information Systems Strategy Triangle Business strategy should drive information system decision making, and changes in business strategy should entail reassessments of information systems. Moreover changes in information systems potential should trigger reassessments of business strategy. If a decision is made to change business strategy of the “triangle”, it is necessary...
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...Table of Contents Introduction 2 System Description 2 System Strengths and Weaknesses 4 System Protection Options 5 Antivirus Protection 5 Firewall 6 Comprehensive system configuration management 6 Application Whitelisting 6 Disk and filesystem-level Encryption 7 Tiered level authentication and Biometric level access 7 Risk Mitigation Strategies 7 Conclusion 10 Bibliography 11 Introduction The purpose of this white paper is to demonstrate the strength and potential weaknesses of the firms’ computer systems, and also to address the upper managements concerns over a possible threat of an internal or external attack to our systems. In this paper we will also be discussing the steps that have been taken to secure our systems against both forms of attacks; we will also be exploring risk mitigation strategies that serve as a means to help prevent such attacks from ever occurring. As with ever system, there is always the possibility of a sophisticated attack being invented that is capable of breaching our systems, so we will be addressing the strategies and steps that will be taken in the event that our systems are ever breached by an internal or external attack. System Description The system in question that is being used by the organization is the Dell Precision R5500 Rack Workstation. We currently have a total of 20 such workstations and our systems are equipped with the latest technological components and...
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...Association for Information Systems AIS Electronic Library (AISeL) ECIS 2000 Proceedings European Conference on Information Systems (ECIS) 1-1-2000 Best of Breed IT Strategy: An Alternative to Enterprise Resource Planning Systems Ben Light University of Salford Christopher P. Holland Manchester Business School, c.hollan@fs2.mbs.ac.uk Sue Kelly Manchester Business School Karl Willis IT Consultant Follow this and additional works at: http://aisel.aisnet.org/ecis2000 Recommended Citation Light, Ben; Holland, Christopher P.; Kelly, Sue; and Willis, Karl, "Best of Breed IT Strategy: An Alternative to Enterprise Resource Planning Systems" (2000). ECIS 2000 Proceedings. Paper 180. http://aisel.aisnet.org/ecis2000/180 This material is brought to you by the European Conference on Information Systems (ECIS) at AIS Electronic Library (AISeL). It has been accepted for inclusion in ECIS 2000 Proceedings by an authorized administrator of AIS Electronic Library (AISeL). For more information, please contact elibrary@aisnet.org. search Best Of Breed IT Strategy: An Alternative To Enterprise Resource Planning Systems Ben Light Information Systems Institute, University of Salford - b.light@salford.ac.uk Christopher P. Holland and Sue Kelly. Manchester Business School - c.holland@fs2.mbs.ac.uk Karl Wills IT Consultant * Abstract - Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) software has become the dominant strategic platform for supporting enterprise-wide business...
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...www.emeraldinsight.com/0968-5227.htm IMCS 14,3 Formulating information systems risk management strategies through cultural theory Aggeliki Tsohou, Maria Karyda and Spyros Kokolakis Department of Information and Communication Systems Engineering, University of the Aegean, Samos, Greece 198 Evangelos Kiountouzis Department of Informatics, Athens University of Economics and Business, Athens, Greece Abstract Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the potential of cultural theory as a tool for identifying patterns in the stakeholders’ perception of risk and its effect on information system (IS) risk management. Design/methodology/approach – Risk management involves a number of human activities which are based on the way the various stakeholders perceive risk associated with IS assets. Cultural theory claims that risk perception within social groups and structures is predictable according to group and individual worldviews; therefore this paper examines the implications of cultural theory on IS risk management as a means for security experts to manage stakeholders perceptions. Findings – A basic theoretical element of cultural theory is the grid/group typology, where four cultural groups with differentiating worldviews are identified. This paper presents how these worldviews affect the process of IS risk management and suggests key issues to be considered in developing strategies of risk management according to the different perceptions cultural groups have...
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...Business-Level Strategy TRUE/FALSE 1. A business-level strategy is a “big picture,” highly-generalized action plan that will move an organization toward achievement of its general vision. ANS: F PTS: 1 REF: Page 98 OBJ: Learning Objective 1 KEY: Knowledge MSC: AACSB: Analytic | Management: Strategy | Dierdorff & Rubin: Strategic & Systems Skills 2. A generic business strategy is one that can be used in all industries and by all types of firms. ANS: T PTS: 1 REF: Page 99 OBJ: Learning Objective 1 KEY: Knowledge MSC: AACSB: Analytic | Management: Strategy | Dierdorff & Rubin: Strategic & Systems Skills 3. Wal-Mart has not adjusted its business model since the mid 1990s. ANS: F PTS: 1 REF: Page 99 OBJ: Learning Objective 1 KEY: Knowledge MSC: AACSB: Reflective Thinking | Management: Strategy | Dierdorff & Rubin: Strategic & Systems Skills 4. Competitive scope describes the breadth of the target market the organization wishes to serve. ANS: T PTS: 1 REF: Page 99-100 OBJ: Learning Objective 2 KEY: Knowledge MSC: AACSB: Analytic | Management: Strategy | Dierdorff & Rubin: Strategic & Systems Skills 5. In general, firms with a standardized product should narrowly segment their market. ANS: F PTS: 1 REF: Page 100 OBJ: Learning Objective 2 KEY: Comprehension MSC: AACSB: Analytic | Management: Strategy | Dierdorff & Rubin: Strategic & Systems Skills 6. Typically, the customers of organizations using the cost-leadership strategy are not...
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...When Leaders Really Walk the Talk: Making Strategy Work Through People Timothy J. Galpin, Practice Leader for Merger & Acquisition Services, Watson Wyatt Worldwide G rowth has returned to the loretront of competitive thought for shaping commerce into the next millennium. Yet, many business leaders would argue that growth never left the collective corporate consciousness. They contend that the downsizing and cost cutting of the early 1990s were done to position the company for growth. This may be true; however, activities focused on the cost side of the profit equation were a relatively simple "strategy" to pursue. 38 HUMAN RESOURCE PLANNING Witli laptops in liund, armies ol consullaiils were employed lo chum out graphs, charts, and tables that bolstered recommended head cuts in organizations across the globe. However, these activities have now given way to more popular growth activities. Strategies such as mergers and acquisitions, new market penetration, mass customization, customer intimacy, strategic alliances, and the like are all in the sights of businesses large atid small. More difficult than a downsizing strategy to develop and document, growth strategies, once contrived, present management with an even greater challenge: how to make their strategies work. Turning strategic plans into tangible business results can frustrate even the most seasoned manager. Unfortunately, the scenario follows an all-too-familiar pattern. First, there is ...
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...The Execution Premium: Linking Strategy to Operations for Competitive Advantage Q&A with HBS professor Robert S. Kaplan by Martha Lagace Companies often manage strategy in fits and starts. Though executives may formulate an excellent strategy, it easily fades from memory as the organization tackles day-to-day operations issues, doing what HBS professor Robert S. Kaplan calls "fighting fires." A new book due in August by Kaplan and David P. Norton aims to make strategy a continual process. The Execution Premium: Linking Strategy to Operations for Competitive Advantage (HBS Press) shows managers how to weave organizational principles into a more effective management system that respects the differences between strategy and operations yet integrates them in a powerful way. Kaplan and Norton introduced the Balanced Scorecard, a performance measurement system, in 1992. The Execution Premium is their fifth book as coauthors. Kaplan recently explained the ideas behind The Execution Premium and how they bridge the common divide between strategy and operations. Q: What particular issues around execution need to be better addressed in business? A: There are two key issues. First is leadership. Without strong visionary leadership, strategy will not be executed effectively. The second key issue is to recognize that strategy and operations (or tactics) are both important but different. The normal course of events is for companies to focus on day-to-day operations and short-term problem solving...
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