4.2 External Factors External factors are a number of influencing factors which are not controlled by the company but will impact pricing decisions. It includes of legal‚ consumer trends‚ technological‚ and competitors. Our company focuses on technological and competitor as external factors that influencing price setting on matcha collagen biscuits. 4.2.1 Competitor Competition factors can look into three areas which are monopoly competition‚ perfect competition and oligopoly competition. Monopolistic
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People’s health is a result of internal and external factors. Describe two factors and explain their effects on people’s health. This assignment will be looking at how a person’s health is affected by both internal and external factors. Health can be affected by several different causes and may vary for each person due to the influence and nature of these factors. However‚ this assignment will be looking specifically into the biological aspect discussing topics such as obesity and genetics as the
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External assessment Political‚ governmental and legal forces: * Political forces As the current situation in Egypt is not stable and there is a lot of political issues that affect directly the business in Egypt‚ also the revolution and the security instability‚ and the decline in the Egyptian pound price which affect negatively the prices in Egypt all of this is a threat for the center as the customer numbers decline and the prices become higher‚ and it becomes difficult to forecast the
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BP: The Oil and Energy Company BP is an oil company whose roots start back in Cleveland‚ Ohio in the 1870 ’s. BP has grown from a local oil company to now being a global energy group employing over 80‚000 people and operating in over 100 countries worldwide. BP provides fuel for transportation‚ energy for heat and light‚ retail services‚ and petrochemical products for everyday items. They are all about finding oil and natural gas and have several brands that might sound familiar: BP‚ Castrol
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{draw:a} A Complete Analysis of the External Environment and eBay Table of Contents The Remote Environment Analysis of trends in the legal environment_ 4_ Analysis of trends in the social environment_ 5_ _ Analysis of trends in the technological environment__ 5_ The Industry Major competitors_ 6_ _ Product innovations and barriers__ 6_ Bargaining power of buyer / suppliers_ 7_ Nature of rivalry_ 8_ _ Substitute products__ 8_ _ Industry problems and issues__
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The decision whether to close the Lima‚ OH plant has not been easy to make. There have been many arguments as to why and why not the plant should remain open or be closed. As the VP of Finance for BP‚ I have kept an open mind and looked at the advantages and disadvantages of closing the plant. I will now discuss some of these arguments in the following paragraphs. The first argument as to why the plant should remain open is the 30% increase in productivity. Lima‚ Ohio has a population of 48‚000
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Strategic Case Analysis: COSTCO (Nasdaq: COST) Strategic Management MGT4340 Table of Contents 1.0.0. Executive Summary………………………………………………… 2.0.0. Company History……………………………………………………. 2.1.0. Background……………………………………………………. 2.2.0. Purpose of this study …………………………………………. 3.0.0. External Analysis …………………………………………………. 3.1.0. General Environmental Analysis …………………………. 3.1.1. Demographic Segment ………………………………. 3.1.2. Economic Segment ………………………………… 3.1.3. Political/Legal Segment ……………………………
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BP is a multi-national oil company based out of London‚ England. Truly an "oil supermajor‚" BP has more than 115‚000 (2006) employees with operations in more than one-hundred countries throughout the world. BP has a corporate slogan that says "beyond petroleum" and such has been the corporation’s nature since it adopted the slogan in 2000. They are driven not to simply provide petroleum at a reasonable price‚ but to go beyond that‚ researching new forms of energy and providing to customers beyond
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I. CASE SYNOPSIS TNK–BP is a joint venture company between TNK (Tyyumen Oil Company) and BP (British Petroleoum) in Russia. British Petroleum‚ was the world’s third largest oil and gas supermajor who was founded as the Anglo Persia Oil Company. BP’s upstream business operated in various countries (USA‚ UK‚ Australia‚ Angola‚ Azerbaijan‚ Canada‚ Egypt‚ Russia‚ Trinidad‚ Tobago and Indonesia). BP’s production growth was constrained by its mature oil fields‚ so BP was aggressively looking for new
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Market structure : there are a number of different buyers and sellers in the marketplace. This means that we have competition in the market‚ which allows price to change in response to changes in supply and demand. Furthermore‚ for almost every product there are substitutes‚ so if one product becomes too expensive‚ a buyer can choose a cheaper substitute instead. In a market with many buyers and sellers‚ both the consumer and the supplier have equal ability to influence price. In some industries
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