Clusters and the new economics of competition Harvard Business Review; Boston; Nov/Dec 1998; Michael E. Porter; Volume: 76 Issue: 6 Start Page: 77-90 ISSN: 00178012 Abstract: Today’s economic map of the world is dominated by what are called clusters: critical masses - in one place - of unusual competitive success in particular fields. Clusters are not unique‚ however; they are highly typical - and therein lies a paradox: the enduring competitive advantages in a global economy
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Chapter 9 Cluster Analysis Learning Objectives After reading this chapter you should understand: – The basic concepts of cluster analysis. – How basic cluster algorithms work. – How to compute simple clustering results manually. – The different types of clustering procedures. – The SPSS clustering outputs. Keywords Agglomerative and divisive clustering Á Chebychev distance Á City-block distance Á Clustering variables Á Dendrogram Á Distance matrix Á Euclidean distance Á Hierarchical and
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QUANTITATIVE TECHNIQUE TOPIC:CLUSTER ANALYSIS USING SPSS INTRODUCTION Grouping similar customers and products is a fundamental marketing activity. It is used‚ prominently‚ in market segmentation. As companies cannot connect with all their customers‚ they have to divide markets into groups of consumers‚ customers‚ or clients (called segments) with similar needs and wants. Firms can then target each of these segments by positioning themselves in a unique segment (such
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SWOT ANALYSIS STRENGTHS WEAKNESSES 1. established institution 1. poor leadership 2. good physical location 2. low employee morale 3. highly skilled multispecialty physicians 3. poor policy making 4. loyal employees 4. absence of marketing plan OPPORTUNITIES THREATS 1. increasing population 1. large competitor hospitals‚ PPP for POC will affect orthopedic cases 2. growing economy 2. expensive state of the art medical equipment 3. increasing PHILHEALTH membership 3. compliance
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Chapter 16 Cluster Analysis Identifying groups of individuals or objects that are similar to each other but different from individuals in other groups can be intellectually satisfying‚ profitable‚ or sometimes both. Using your customer base‚ you may be able to form clusters of customers who have similar buying habits or demographics. You can take advantage of these similarities to target offers to subgroups that are most likely to be receptive to them. Based on scores on psychological inventories
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This article was downloaded by: [141.133.13.113] On: 06 September 2014‚ At: 09:00 Publisher: Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS) INFORMS is located in Maryland‚ USA Interfaces Publication details‚ including instructions for authors and subscription information: http://pubsonline.informs.org Planning the Netherlands’ Water Resources Bruce F. Goeller‚ S. C. Abraham‚ A. F. Abrahamse‚ J. H. Bigelow‚ J. G. Bolten‚ D. M. de Ferranti‚ J. C. De Haven‚ B. F
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1a) Perfect competition describes a market structure whose assumptions are extremely strong and highly unlikely to exist in most real-time and real-world markets. In perfect competition‚ there are a large number of firms in the industry. The firms in this industry are price takers as they sell at whatever price is set by demand and supply in the industry as a whole. All the firms produce homogeneous products which are exactly identical; it is impossible to distinguish between a good produced in one
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of the question. Question 1 a) Describe the market‚ products/services and justify your classification of this market as monopolistic competition Your description should be brief but demonstrate a key understanding of the structure‚ conduct and performance of this industry / market. You must justify this selection as being an example of monopolistic competition‚ and do this you must relate your description to aspects of the theory. To put that another way‚ you must apply theory. b) Describe and
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Dr. Miller’s initial study on historical movie taglines. This follow-up analysis considered movie taglines between 1979 and 2014 which relates to my own personal “movie watching years”. The goal was to employ additional strategies including stemming and looking at various combinations of clustering algorithms‚ pairwise distance metrics and words extracted to create the terms by document matrix to understand impact on cluster efficiency. Ultimately looking to answer the question of how movies classes
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News: Colombia’s Ecopetrol cuts targets due to rebel attacks. Article highlights: In Colombia the guerilla group F:A:R:C attacks on Ecopetrol’s pipeline increased more than triple this year. This has caused that the best-preforming oil company in Colombia‚ which in addition belongs to the state to reduce its production targets drastically. The guerrilla group have attacked this company various times because it generates a great income for the state‚ and many of these incomes funds the military
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