organization to concentrate its resources on the optimal opportunities with the goals of increasing sales and achieving a sustainable competitive advantage. Marketing strategy includes all basic and long-term activities in the field of marketing that deal with the analysis of the strategic initial situation of a company and the formulation‚ evaluation and selection of market-oriented strategies and therefore contributes to the goals of the company and its marketing objectives. The first problem the
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St. John’s University Student Managed Investment Research Equity Research NIKE (NKE) April 4‚ 2004 Recommendation: Sector: Industry: BUY Consumer Cyclical Footwear 76.64 78.56 49.60 263.12M .80 20.17B 10‚697M 21.66% $94.85 Price: 52 – Week High: 52 – Week Low: Shares Out (mil): Dividend: Market Cap: 2003 Revenue: Project EPS Growth: 2005 Target Price: Highlights Rudy Dermesropian rdermes@hotmail.com Jason A. Drago Jdrag636@stjohns.edu Gintare Grigaite Gintare.grigaite01@stjohns.edu
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OBS 320: Chapter 4‚ Exploring the External Environment: Macro and Industry Dynamics Leave out: The Value Curve (P. 152-156); and When industry Divide and Collide (P.163-164) 1. Explain the importance of the external context for strategy and firm performance (P. 130-132) A. The External Context of Strategy (Figure 4.1) B. The External Context of Strategy (Explained) It is crucial that the external environment is thoroughly understood in order to formulate an effective
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Rigid profit margin expectations handed down by corporate headquarters created an environment that encouraged the sale of Nike’s high-margin products to high-end customers. Regardless of the low cost of the World Shoes‚ they were still slapped with a high profit margin‚ resulting in overpriced products compared to local Chinese products. Second‚ because of the current distribution network and infrastructure that Nike had in place for its high-end footwear‚ the World Shoes‚ distributed through the
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Abstract 2. Introduction 3. External Business Environment 3.1 PESTEL Analysis of chocolate industry 3.2 Porter’s Five Forces 3.3 Industry life cycle analysis 3.4 S.W.O.T analysis (Opportunities and Threats) 4. Internal Business Environment 4.1 Internal capabilities: resources and competences 4.2 S.W.O.T analysis (Strengths and Weaknesses) 5. Conclusion 6. References 1. Abstract This essay is a case study of analyzing the UK biggest chocolate company Thorntons’ existing strategy
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Executive Summary The company strategy that Nike uses is an ingenious one. A strategy that founder Phil Knight thought of while still in school at Stanford. Instead of paying Americans to put together Nike’s shoes‚ Knight thought that it would be a better idea to take manufacturing plants overseas to places where labor is much cheaper than in the U.S.‚ places like Taiwan and South Korea. With 86% of its products being produced in one of those two countries and Nike employing a large number of people
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Nike (NKE) In the 1950’s‚ Bill Bowerman‚ a track and field coach at the University of Oregon‚ began cobbling shoes for his runners. Bowerman and one of his runners Phil Knight formed Blue Ribbon Sports and sold shoes for Tiger shoes in 1964. While Knight was selling the shoes‚ Bowerman was ripping them apart to see how he could make them lighter and made his runners test his improved shoes. Their first full-time employee‚ Jeff Johnson‚ was an early designer of shoes and came up with the name Nike
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY There is little or no doubt that India today has emerged as a powerhouse in the automotive industry. Tata Nano‚ the world’s cheapest car is sold in its native country for approximately Rs 1-lakh ($2‚198). Tata Nano is manufactured entirely in India by Tata Motor Limited. When the Nano was launched in March 2009‚ it accomplished Tata Group Chairman Ratan Tata’s vision of making a “people’s car”. The aim was to produce a car that is safe and affordable to almost everyone in India
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1. Introduction P. 1 2. Company Background P. 1 3. Macro-environment i. Political-Legal Environment P. 1 - 2 ii. Economic Environment P. 2 iii. Social Environment P. 2 iv. Ecological Environment P. 2 4. Difficulty i. Political-Legal Factor P. 2 - 3 ii. Economic Factor P. 3 iii. Social Environment P. 3 iv. Ecological Environment P. 3 5. Suggestion
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do you do as a company if bad publicity ruins your whole image? Do you give up or do you fight with everything you have in order to change the bad publicity? If that is the case‚ then how do you turn the negative publicity into positive? “Innovate for a better world” is Nike’s CSR slogan which is about reaching their potential. Their biggest challenges are also their biggest opportunities and seeing these challenges as something positive instead of something negative – opportunities‚ is innovation
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