1.0 Introduction The Swedish home furnishing retailer IKEA was founded by Ingvar Kamprad in the region of Smaland in Sweden in 1943 (Hultman‚ et al.‚ 2011). It is regarded as one of the most respected and reliable companies in Sweden (Gronvius‚ Lernborg‚ 2009). Today‚ IKEA is a global company which has operations in 41 countries around the world for over six decades. It has 29 trading offices located in 25 countries and the remaining 16 countries are 11 customer distribution centers and 26 distribution
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05/21/2012 IKEA Supply Chain Analysis Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Business Administration Yanjing Ge Youyou Zhang Yi Xie Pengfei Zhao College of Business and Public Management Catalogue Abstract ...3 Introduction.3-4 IKEA Supply Chain Strategy..4-6 Supply Chain Management of IKEA..6-9 3.1. Supplier Management..6-7 3.2. Store Design.7-8 3.3. Warehouse Management..8-9 4. IKEA Supply Chain9-13 4.1. IKEA Supply Chain System.9-11 4.2
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ESC Rennes school of business Supply chain management of IKEA IKEA Table of content Executive summary 2 IKEA supply chain and background 2‚ 3 Strategy and market 4 Process structure in terms
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6. Information Management system of IKEA………………………...(6~10) 7. Shopping at IKEA Franchises……………………………………..(10~13) 8. Summary……………………………………………………………….(14) 9. References……………………………………………………………..(15) History and background IKEA is a privately held‚ international home products company that designs and sells ready-to-assemble furniture. Ikea is made up of two other businesses‚ INGKA Holding B.V; which is the "parent company" for all of IKEA ’s group companies and Swedwood industrial
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identified that IKEA has been usingVERTICAL INTEGRATION to the Global furniture industry. Managers use corporate levelstrategy in VERTICAL INTEGRATION to identify which industries their company shouldcompete in to maximize its long run profitability. There are two types of vertical integration:1. Forward vertical integration 2. Backward vertical integration. So far we found that IKEA using backward vertical integration to expand their business and to make profit. Here are some benefits of IKEA to have vertical
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1) Looking at Ikeas challenges.. -low cost replacement for wood -global warming -deforestation - new sources of supply to support more store openings Option: Fabricating material Eco Friendly Substitute‚ still low cost… look a like 2) those countries match Ikeas target market -college students -budget -standard of living -income Challenge: -known for stylish‚ low-cost -other firms see Ikea as a threat and to compete and sustain they have developed new low cost furnishing
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consumers strategy cannot help IKEA achieve that aim. The reasons are that Scandinavian design and style is just a niche‚ that the market segmentation is narrow and that the target consumers are also just a small portion of the mass furniture buyers. These 3 aspects cannot help IKEA appeal broader consumers. So we need to reevaluate and redesign the three aspects. We can introduce more popular product and style‚ increase target market size and consumers size to help IKEA realize its aim. IKEA’s
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following is an analysis of the IKEA case study found in the Strategic Management Text book. This analyses the strategies used by IKEA to gain competitive advantage in markets outside its original area. The report begins by providing a background into IKEA. It studies International Business Level Strategy and the three international corporate level strategies. The case study goes into informing its target market and pricing strategy‚ which is already discussed. This case study further says how different
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STRATEGY section 1 116 CASE£JKEA: D E S I G N AN D P RI C I N G T h e Swedish retailer dominates markets in 32 countries‚ and now it’s poised to conquer North America. Its battle plan: Keep making its offerings less expensive‚ without making them cheap. Above all else‚ one factor accounts for IKEA’s success: good quality at a low price. IKEA sells household items that are cheap but not cheapo‚ at prices that typically run 30 to 50 percent below the competition’s. While
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development‚ corporate attributes that allowed IKEA to lower its prices by an average of two to three percent over the decade to 2010 during a period of global expansion.[8] As of October 2011‚ IKEA owns and operates 332 stores in 38 countries. In fiscal year 2010‚ US$23.1 billion worth of goods were sold‚ a total that represented a 7.7 percent increase over 2009.[9] The IKEA website contains about 12‚000 products and is the closest representation of the entire IKEA range. There were over 470 million visitors
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