BUSINESS-LEVEL STRATEGY By Alan S. Gutterman 1 Abstract Growth is a key goal and objective for emerging companies and management must carefully determine the best way to combine the core competencies within a firm’s functional departments to provide the firm with the best opportunity for achieving and sustaining a competitive advantage in its chosen environment. This report focuses on the process of setting business level-strategy‚ which includes (1) selecting the domain(s) in which
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British Petroleum and its Corporate Strategy Introduction The organisation environment is always changing and therefore it is essential that a structured‚ detailed and continuous analysis of the principal dimensions of the environment is made. In order to profitably satisfy customer needs‚ an organisation must understand its external and internal situation including the customer‚ the market and its own capabilities. Furthermore‚ it needs to understand and adapt to the dynamic and uncontrollable
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BUSINESS LEVEL STRATEGY Any given organization may comprise a number of different businesses. Each operating in distinct markets and serving different customers. A market is defined by demand conditions and based on an organization’s customers and potential customers. Industry is determined by supply conditions and based on production technology. Business level strategy is a means of separating out and formulating a competitive strategy at the level of individual business unit. This is sometimes
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When a premium seller like Apple decides to enter the mass market‚ it usually faces a positioning dilemma - should it play on its ’low price’ avatar and risk losing its brand image‚ or does sticking to its snob value jeopardise its market expansion plans? Our ad tries to overcome this through a dual strategy. First‚ we have attempted to retain Apple’s classy style of communication through the minimalistic poster. The white background is reminiscent of Apple’s earlier print ads. Secondly‚ we
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Corporate Strategy and Decision Making Lecture 3: Rational and Administrative Models of Decision The rational decision model Under the rational model of decision making‚ the assumption is made that participants have agreed in advance that making a decision is the right process to follow and that the rules and language of decision making are understood by all. The rational model aims at making optimal decisions on the basis of a careful evaluation of alternative courses of action. Depending on
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Corporate Strategy Growth as a process: An interview with Jeffrey R. Immelt May 21st‚ 2015 Henry Bösken-Diebels‚ Veronika Larina & Philipp Vinzenz 1 Agenda 1 2 3 4 Changes in GE’s corporate strategy brought by Jeffrey Immelt and the reasons behind them New set of management tools to pursue ambitious organic growth goals Key lessons and managerial implications Q&A May 21st‚ 2015 Henry Bösken-Diebels‚ Veronika Larina & Philipp Vinzenz 2 Agenda 1 2 3 4 Changes in GE’s corporate
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CHAPTER 16 Corporate Strategy and Foreign Direct Investment EASY (definitional) 16.1 Which of the following is likely to be a major long‑run competitive advantage of a U.S. multinational? a) a decline in the real value of the U.S. dollar b) access to low‑cost foreign raw materials c) its ability to quickly adapt its products and technology in line with changing market conditions d) offshore banking facilities located in the Gulf of Mexico Ans: c Section: Product and factor market imperfections
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Starbucks: Back to Basics? Corporate Strategy: Individual Work (stream2) Laura Toleman The purpose of this work This Individual work is based on the case study “Starbucks: Back to Basics?” written by Sachin Govind. The case reviews the success story about the coffee chain and a brand which changed the Americans’ coffee and café culture. However‚ it also highlights that Starbucks had been facing some challenges as well as having difficulties inside the company. Furthermore‚ some analysts
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LVMH’s Diversification Strategy into Luxury Goods The problem After the case and readings the problems of LVMH there are several problems such as the declining demand for luxury goods because it is linked to political events‚ situation and social trends. (After the attacks of 9/11 an impact on luxury goods has dropped and had automatically an impact on LVMH sales) Secondly luxury products are easy to counterfeit‚ some countries such as china‚ turkey‚ and other still have to improve their
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taken the place of strategy. As managers push to improve on all fronts‚ they move further away from viable competitive positions. Michael Porter argues that operational effectiveness‚ although necessary to superior performance‚ is not sufficient‚ because its techniques are easy to imitate. In contrast‚ the essence of strategy is choosing a unique and valuable position rooted in systems of activities that are much more difficult to match. In answering the question ‘what is strategy?’‚ some theorists
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