TOYOTA VS. NISSAN – A CONTRAST IN CULTURE‚ CORPORATE GOVERNANCE‚ OPERATIONAL STRATEGY‚ AND FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE Mohamad R. Nayebpour Graduate Faculty of Business Administration Keller Graduate School of Management DeVry University 2000 West Loop South Houston‚ Texas 77027 (713) 212-3610 mnayebpour@keller.edu H H Akira Saito Visiting Research Fellow The Institute of Economic Research Chuo University Japan fujisan@tamajs.chuo-u.ac.jp H H ABSTRACT Toyota Motor Corporation and Nissan Motor Corporation
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Nissan Motor Company Ltd (Nissan) is Japanese Company engaged in the automotive industry worldwide. The Company‚ including its associated brands‚ designs‚ produces and sells more than 3.7 million passenger cars and commercial vehicles in more than 190 countries. The Company is engaged in manufacture and sale of passenger automobiles‚ as well as the supply of automobile parts. Major overseas market for Nissan included Europe‚ North America‚ Africa‚ New Zealand and China. The Company’s major production
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NISSAN COGENT According to Ian Milburn‚ Deputy Managing Director‚ NETC‚ key elements that they are leading‚ can’t succeed without sales‚ marketing and suppliers. The quality that they want to achieve was basic quality and attractive quality. Dr. Steve Evans had explained the ways that NISSAN incorporates to succeed along with its suppliers. Brian Payne informs that FICOSA‚ a Spanish multinational corporation which involves research‚ development and producing automotive components is also involved
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shifted from Dastun to Nissan and it continued to enhance its reputation based on “innovation in engineering”. By 1989‚ Nissan produced one million cars in North America and began worldwide branding under Nissan brand. This growth was supported by customer’s want for fuel efficient and reliable cars. It was during this growth period that Toyota and Honda that started placing their footing strong in the market and these two brands came to be recognised by customers more than Nissan. The company began
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Transformation at Renault Nissan Nissan Motor Company was on the edge of bankruptcy when French automaker Renault purchased a controlling interest and put Carlos Ghosn as the effective head of the Japanese automaker. Nissan’s known problems of high debt and plummeting market share‚ Ghosn identified that Nissan managers had no apparent sense of urgency for change. Ghosn’s challenge was to act quickly‚ minimize the inevitable resistance that arises when an outsider tries to change traditional Japanese
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Nissan / Renault Negotiation If you are Renault‚ what would you present as the “Big Picture” (outlook and conditions proposal) for an alliance to the Nissan Board of Directors? Present it and negotiate it with Nissan. Your presentation shall include the points of: 1. Strategic objectives and scope of alliance 2. Analysis and proposal of potential operational synergies (brands‚ product range‚ geographic coverage‚ technology and expertise‚ production capacity‚ R&D‚ engineering‚ QC‚ manufacturing
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Renault-Nissan Alliance By Po-Chien Chung Department of International Management International Business Dr. Roger Strange 18th March‚ 2010 2930 Words 1 Introduction “The Renault-Nissan alliance‚ currently heralded as one of the most successful in the business‚ represents the combination of two very different organizations‚ structurally and culturally” (Rugman & Collinson‚ 2004). Renault-Nissan alliance is based on trust and reciprocal respect. Its organization is
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M89472 Submission Date: 18 August 2015 Page 2 of 12 Notes for SWOT analysis of Nissan Strengths • Investment to develop affordable zero-emission vehicles‚ including the Nissan LEAF •We have developed a capacity for responsiveness to crises that our competitors perhaps do not have. •Their diversity within the company automatically allows them to respond to various situations differently. •Strategic Alliance with Renault: Nissan signed a strategic alliance with Renault in order to try and become one of
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International Strategy ■ Create value by transferring valuable core competencies to foreign markets that competitors lack ■ Centralize product development functions at home ■ Establish manufacturing and marketing functions in local country but head office exercises tight control over it ■ Limit customization of product offering and market strategy – Strategy effective if firm faces weak pressures for local responsive and cost reductions Multidomestic Strategy ■
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Japanese business partner‚ Nissan Motor‚ Ghosn moved boldly. He slashed costs‚ closed unprofitable factories‚ shrank the supplier network‚ sold unprofitable assets‚ and rewired Nissan’s insular culture. Skeptics pronounced his efforts doomed. But within a year‚ Ghosn had returned Japan’s second-largest auto manufacturer to profitability and was widely credited with saving it from collapse. Since then‚ Ghosn—who was named CEO of Nissan in 2001—has transformed Nissan into one of the world’s most
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