Case Brief No. 1 – General Electric Medical Systems‚ 2002 1. What is the underlying logic behind the global product idea? What are the costs and benefits that are expected? GPC’s logic is to concentrate manufacturing and ultimately other activities – wherever in the world to keep the same standards across the boards. Benefit – Maintain the quality and reputation of the product globally - Existing similar operation model to implement in different regions Cost - Major internal and
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Case Analysis Healthymagination at GE Healthcare Systems Table of Contents 1. Executive Summary The key issue facing GEHS today is that despite high potential growth in both the developed and developing markets traditional B2B marketing lines are slow; the buyers control the power and the end consumer (patients) sees GEHS and its competitors as “faceless” corporations and their countries health care services as lacking. End users
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GE Energy and GE Healthcare Case Study 1. What are the business benefits of using information technology to build strategic customer relationships for GE Energy and GE Healthcare? What are the business benefits for their customers? Technology is no longer an afterthought in forming business strategy‚ but the actual cause and driver. Networking and data storage & analysis technologies enabled GE to gain a competitive advantage by providing unique products and services to their customers. What
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Ajaya Tachajanta 2011 General Electric Medical Systems‚ 2002 Overview GEMS is the world’s leading manufacturer of diagnostic imaging equipment and part of Milwaukee-based GE. It is the leader in MR and CT imaging in all regions. According to Immelt’s strategy‚ GEMS evolves from taking joint-venture and acquisition as the first step where business’s size is matter. Secondly‚ Global Product Company (GPC) concept is introduced aiming at cutting cost by shifting the manufacturing activities from high-cost
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As is known to all‚ most successful medical equipment manufacturing companies like GE Healthcare satisfy customers ’ need as possible as they can and they are still on the way to improve their supply chains to attract more customers and make themselves more competitive. From this‚ we can see that customer value which can be defined as "the customer ’s overall assessment of the utility of a product based on perceptions of what is received and what is given" (Zeithaml‚ 1988‚ p. 14) plays a very important
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support the idea that GE Healthcare‚ which is one of the biggest conglomerates globally‚ took the right step in acquiring the business Amersham in order to expand the business and restructure its core business into becoming a global standardized business aiming to provide products that answers the needs of consumers in the market today. The following advantages below are what General Electric Health Care would gain after taking over Amersham in UK. Expand its core business further: Since both companies
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Brief Contents Objective: Lambin (2000) states that ’ marketing is a business philosophy and an action-oriented process which is valid for every organization in contact with its constituency of users. ’ ’ He make the distinction between marketing as a ’system of thought ’ ’ (or strategic marketing) and as an ’active process ’ ’ (or operational marketing). (Lambin‚ J-J.‚ (2000)‚ Market-Driven Management: Strategic and operational Marketing‚ Macmillan). With reference to academic literature
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Australian National University July 2009 Corporate Strategy Analysis: General Electric Co. (1981–present) Stanislav Bucifal Introduction The General Electric Company (GE) is widely regarded as one of the world’s most successful corporations of the 20th century. This paper aims to critically analyse the corporate strategy of GE during the period from 1981 to present under the leadership of two very different but equally influential CEOs—Jack Welch and Jeff Immelt. The essay is organised in four
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Abstract This paper analyzes the: strengths‚ weaknesses‚ opportunities‚ and threats (SWOT) for General Electric Corp (GE). A SWOT analysis is an outline for producing strategic alternatives from the study of a company’s situation. The General Electric Growth Council used this form of analysis in the 1980 ’s because it concentrates on the issues that potentially have the most impact on a company. SWOT analyses tend to generalize the circumstances. They are often divided into two categories: Internal
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time‚ but instead‚ it came after the Renaissance period. It is an economic system‚ in which major and minor distribution or production companies can be owned privately (Williams). It is the opposite of socialism‚ in which companies come under the umbrella of public property. All the businesses ranging from transportation industries‚ bank institutions or even insurance corporations can all be owned privately. Every economic system has its positive impacts and negative impacts. A similar case is with capitalism
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