Course: General Management and Organization Behavior Date: October 14th‚ 2013 TIFFANY & CO. THE COMPANY OVERVIEW Tiffany & Company (known colloquially as Tiffany or Tiffany ’s) is an American multinational and one of the world’s premier luxury jewelry and retailers. It is a public company having headquarters in New York City‚ NY‚ United States. Tiffany sells jewelry‚ sterling silver‚ crystal‚ stationery‚ fragrances‚ personal accessories‚ as well as some leather goods. The company
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Tiffany & Co Case Study Background Tiffany & Co. was founded in 1837 in New York City by Charles Lewis Tiffany and John B. Young. After decades of development‚ the company has grown to an internationally famous designer and retailer of fine jewelry‚ diamonds‚ timepieces and other luxury accessories. In July 1993‚ Tiffany made a decision to directly operate sales in Japan‚ rather than profiting from medium corporation Mitsukoshi. According to this decision‚ Tiffany will pay Mitsukoshi 27% of net
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1837 Charles Lewis Tiffany and John F. Young opened Tiffany & Young‚ with $1‚000 in backing from Tiffany’s father. This store was located on Broadway and was opposite of Manhattan’s City Hall Park. The first store sold stationery and a variety of "fancy goods‚" including costume jewelry. Unlike other stores of the time‚ Tiffany featured plainly marked prices that were strictly enforced to‚ sparing the customer the usual practice of haggling with the owner or sales man. Tiffany also departed from
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I. Introduction The Tiffany & Company is introducing a new product line by the name of Tiffany ’s Essentials. The line will offer authentic luxury designer handbags along the lines of Gucci‚ Chloe‚ Dior‚ Fendi‚ Prada and many more. As concept of luxury changes‚ marketers of high-end products are wrestling with the challenges of maintaining exclusivity while obtaining higher sales. Having a well-known name as Tiffany and Company we have no limitations to create luxury pieces for the luxury lifestyles
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Tiffany http://www.bdc.ca/Resources%20Manager/study_2013/consumer_trends_BDC_report.pdf http://www.sbctc.ctc.edu/docs/education/workforce/environmental_scanning_trend_doc.pdf http://prezi.com/aneu_hnhouba/copy-of-copy-of-tiffany-and-co-product-presentation-the-glamazons/ http://investor.tiffany.com/overview.cfm http://investor.tiffany.com/overview.cfm http://wenku.baidu.com/link?url=wlVOIXzaSB9Q1IMEXFiySIW5RAPYvXHJQg8lnr9R44zgLgFkSZLeTtxZA3Y33qWaUBdeZSniV53Gx5wN4H4y6GVhjBy1A1VLSm9bDm66U63
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TIFFANY & CO. ® Introduction Tiffany & Co. is a leading US luxury jewelry company. For more than 150 years‚ Tiffany & Co. have been designing exquisite jewelry that highlights the incomparable beauty of diamonds. The designations TIFFANY ® and TIFFANY & CO. ® are the principal trademarks of Tiffany‚ as well as serving as trade names. Through its subsidiaries‚ the Company has obtained and is the proprietor of trademark registrations for TIFFANY ® and TIFFANY & CO. ®‚ as well as the TIFFANY BLUE
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I. EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT A. Societal Environment 1. Economy Low-negative growth in economy/financial markets (T) Reduced discretionary spending on goods that are‚ or are perceived to be‚ luxuries (T) Unsettled regional/global conflicts e.g. military and/or terrorist activities (T) Weak economic conditions in Japan (T) Global competition (T) Wholesale market for high quality cut diamonds will provide continuity of supply and pricing (O) Soft employment market (T)
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way(s) is Tiffany exposed to exchange-rate risk subsequent to its new distribution agreement with Mitsukoshi? How serious are these risks? . 1) Transaction Exposure‚ the probability of loss associated with a business transaction denominated in a foreign currency‚ due to changes in the exchange rate . 2) Operating exposure is the degree of risk that a company is exposed to when there is some type of change in varying currency values that are relevant to the operation of the company. Tiffany is exposed
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Tiffany Case Amy Simmons Regis University With the recent restructure of Tiffany Japan‚ the profits earned by our Japanese division are now exposed to foreign exchange risks that were previously not a concern. In light of this new exposure‚ it has become imperative that we needed to determine whether or not Tiffany should implement a risk management program using financial derivatives to hedge against this risk. The first step in this evaluation was to determine the amount of profits
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1. Exchange rate point of view. From the story‚ Tiffany bought the property and inventory from Japan Mitsukosi. It will expose to the exchange rate translation risk. So it should do the risk management. The analysis structure will be that: (1) Define the risk source: the exchange rate flucturation‚ the cash flows of different currencies from asset change‚ account receivable and account payable. (2) Define the scope of risk control: the natural currency settlement hedging‚ the overflow exchange
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