A Case study on Cardinal Health Inc Submitted by: Sadikchya Acharya Business strategy International American University Kings College Bizulli Bazaar‚ Kathmandu Nepal Submitted to: Prof. Raj Kumar Sharma Introduction and Background The case introduces us to the Cardinal Inc which for now is the leading manufacturer in the products of medical it has its own pharmaceuticals. Company is one of the fortune 500 companies the head office is in Dublin‚ Ohio. So‚ talking about pharmaceuticals and
Premium Strategic management Medicine Pharmacology
Introduction. In this assignment I am going to explain the following concepts‚ generic strategies‚ alternative directions and alternative methods. Indeed‚ I would like to support these concepts by referring my work to the automobile sector (as a continuing line provided with the Morgan´s example in class). I am going to use the example of General Motors and Ford‚ they are well known and also provide us a long struggling and interesting history. The first part of my assignment gives a theoretical
Premium Strategic management Automotive industry General Motors
37 The Generic Strategy Trap Danny Miller Management experts claim that for a company to thrive‚ it mus concentrate on a single generic strategy—on one thing it does better th its rivals. But specialization also has its disadvantages. The author sugge that a broader‚ mixed approach may be preferable. S ince the publication of Michael Porter ’s Competitive Strategy‚ many experts on strategy have been extolling the virtues of pure generic strategies. Porter argued that by adeptly
Premium Management Quality control Strategic management
Cardinal Health‚ Inc. Company History Cardinal Health was founded in 1971 when founder Robert D. Walter opened a small distribution center in Columbus‚ Ohio‚ then named Cardinal Foods‚ Inc. In 1979 the food distributor branched out into pharmaceutical distribution when the company purchased a Zanesville‚ Ohio‚ drug distributor and became known as Cardinal Distribution ("Our history‚" 2011). The company evolved over the next several years; they went public and was renamed Cardinal Health in 1983
Premium Health care Strategic management Medicine
Strategic Management Case Cardinal Health Inc. by Developed for Study Assignment Purposes for MBA Course at American Military University BUSN 620 Strategic Management Cardinal Health helps pharmacies‚ hospitals and ambulatory care focus on patient care 1 Disclaimer and Material Purpose Material Purpose: This document and all of the materials contained within are strictly for study assignment purposes to fulfill MBA course BUSN 620 Strategic Management on August 01‚ 2011-September 25‚ 2011
Premium Medicine Pharmacy Health care
Michael Porters Strategy Michael Porter is the University Professor (the highest honor in Harvard University) in Harvard Business School. He is acknowledged as the father of competitive strategy. He has two main theoretical perspectives; one is “the five forces model of competition”‚ and the other one is just the “three competition strategies” (Michael Porters Strategy). The three competition strategies are cost leadership strategy‚ differentiation strategy and segmentation strategy. These strategies
Premium Strategic management
Michael Porter’s Generic Strategies According to Porter‚ strategies allow organizations to gain competitive advantage from three different bases: cost leadership‚ differentiation and focus. Porter calls these bases as generic strategies. Cost leadership emphasizes producing standardized products at a very low per unit cost for consumers who are price sensitive. Differentiation is a strategy aimed at producing products and services considered unique industry wide and directed at customers who are
Premium Porter generic strategies
Porter’s generic strategies framework constitutes a major contribution to the development of the strategic management literature. Generic strategies were first presented in two books by Professor Michael Porter of the Harvard Business School (Porter‚ 1980‚ 1985). Porter (1980‚ 1985) suggested that some of the most basic choices faced by companies are essentially the scope of the markets that the company would serve and how the company would compete in the selected markets. Competitive strategies focus
Premium Strategic management Porter generic strategies Michael Porter
Case 18: Cardinal Health‚ Inc. (A) By Mary B. Teagarden As printed in Strategic Management: Formulation‚ Implementation‚ and Control By John A. Pearce II and Richard B. Robinson February 24‚ 2012 Since its inception in the early 1970s‚ Cardinal Health has grown into one of the leading health care service providers in the world. A Fortune 500 company‚ Cardinal began as a food distributor‚ and then transformed itself under the leadership of Robert Walter into the foremost distributor of
Premium Health care Strategic management Customer
Michael Porter has described a category scheme consisting of three general types of strategies that are commonly used by businesses to achieve and maintain competitive advantage. These three generic strategies are defined along two dimensions: strategic scope and strategic strength. Strategic scope is a demand-side dimension (Michael E. Porter was originally an engineer‚ then an economist before he specialized in strategy) and looks at the size and composition of the market you intend to target.
Premium Porter generic strategies Strategic management Marketing