ASSIGNMENT SHEET TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2012 CLASS 1– INTRODUCTION AND GOALS FOR THE SEMESTER A. CLASS LECTURE Review of Topics, Assignment Sheets, and Course Outline The Case Method - Rules for Classroom Discussion Instruction for the Formation of Study & Project Groups B. Professor/Student Introductions C. Readings from Course Packet: 1. Fin 394.4 Syllabus -
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Grolsch globalize, and how well has it performed internationally? 2. What are the key elements and limitations of its emphasis on adaptation, in particular? 3. What lessons does Grolsch’s history afford about where to compete? What, specifically, do you think about the MABA process? 4. What lessons does Grolsch’s history suggest about how to compete in the markets targeted— particularly about modes of entry? 5. What other changes would you suggest to Grolsch's historical strategy
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Porter’s Five Forces Bargaining Power of Supplier (Moderate) Toyota has different supplier for different parts of the automobile. Some of the suppliers are: - KEIPER: a supplier of rear seat assembly locks - TAC Manufacturing: a supplier for shift lever knobs - Tenneco: a supplier of exhaust components - Bridgestone: a supplier of tires - Samsung Electronics: creating a car mode App The suppliers for Toyota play a vital role in production. But, there are moderate population of suppliers
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To Keep Your Customers, 108 Harvard Business Review May 2012 hbr.org IllustratIon: andré da loba They don’t want a “relationship” with you. Just help them make good choices. by Patrick Spenner and Karen Freeman May 2012 harvard business review 109 Keep It Simple To Keep Your CuSToMerS, Keep iT SiMple arketers see today’s consumers as web-savvy, mobileenabled data sifters who pounce on whichever brand or store offers the best deal. Brand loyalty, the thinking goes, is vanishing
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Innovation And Organization Structure 1 Report on Innovation & Organization Structure With case study on Google Inc. Ltd. Prepared By:Akash Tripathy (MS12A005) Deepti Agrawal (MS12A031) Nanda KumarA(MS12A044) Ravinder Reddy(MS12A063) Shine Nagpal (MS12A083) Sunaek Sivadas Vishesh Kumar Agarwal(MS12A103) Innovation And Organization Structure 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction…………………………………………………………………………………….3 Innovation a. What is Innovation? ……………………………………………………………........
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BY BOB FRISCH When Teams Can’t Decide Are stalemates on your leadership team making you a dictator by default? Stop blaming your people – start fixing the process. THE EXECUTIVE TEAM is deliberating about a critical strategic choice, but no matter how much time and effort the team members expend, they cannot reach a satisfactory decision. Then comes that uncomfortable moment when all eyes turn to the CEO. The team waits for the boss to make the final call, yet when it’s made, few people like
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articles on strategy outnumber those on execution by an order of magnitude. And what little has been written on execution tends to focus on tactics or generalize from a single case. So what do we know about strategy execution? We know that it matters. A recent survey of more than 400 global CEOs found that executional excellence was the number one challenge facing corporate leaders in Asia, Europe, and the United States, heading a list of some 80 issues, including innovation, geopolitical instability
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If you find yourself facing a price war, you'll need to understand how it started in order to respond effectively. Often the best counterattack does not. involve a retaliatory price How by Akshay R. Rao, Mark E. Bergen, and War ^ 1 I 1^ f Scott Davis N THE BATTLE TO CAPTURE THE CUSTOMER, companies use a wide range of tactics to ward off competitors. Increasingly, price is the weapon of choice - and frequently the skirmishing degenerates into a price war.
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Strategy Process 10 Organizational Structure and Control Prof. Dr. Bernd Venohr Berlin, June 2007 © 2007 Prof. Dr. Bernd Venohr Agenda Introduction to Strategy 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Course Overview and Strategy Concept Economics of Strategy Shareholder Value External Environment Internal Environment Competitive Positioning Diversification Mergers & Acquisitions Global Strategy Business Strategy Corporate Strategy Strategy Process 10 Organizational Structure and Control 11 Strategic
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Henry Mintzberg Manage ^ ^ -^ T HE CHIEF EXECUTIVE of a major Canadian com- pany complained recently that he can't get his engineers to think like managers. It's a common complaint, but behind it lies an uncommonly important question: What does it mean to think like a manager? Sadly, little attention has been paid to that question in recent years. Most of us have become so enamored of "leadership" that "management" has been pushed into the background. Nobody aspires to being a good manager
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