1. How does Ikea generate customer loyalty? In marketing practice ‚ customer loyalty is defined as continuity of customers’ buying behavior . It refers to the dependence and recognition that customer received from products or services. The behavior that consumers adhere to have long-term purchase or use of the products or services to exhibited a high degree of trust and loyalty of the extent of the thoughts and emotions. It is a client of enterprise products in the long term evaluation competitive
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IKEA (Ingvar Kamprad Elmtaryd Agunnaryd) is a privately held‚ international home products Swedish corporation that designs and sells ready-to-assemble furniture‚ appliances and home accessories. The company is now the world’s largest furniture retailer.[2] IKEA was founded in 1943 by 17-year-old Ingvar Kamprad in Sweden‚ named as an acronym comprising the initials of the founder’s name (Ingvar Kamprad)‚ the farm where he grew up (Elmtaryd)‚ and his home parish (Agunnaryd‚ in Småland‚ South Sweden)
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IKEA has varieties of items‚ and therefore I can hardly find any direct competitor of IKEA. However‚ I can still find several less direct competitors of IKEA‚ they are Japanhome‚ Pricerite and DSC. Japanhome provides housewares only‚ it has a comprehensive range of housewares. The varieties of housewares it sold are more than that of IKEA. IKEA sells utensils‚ cookwares and clothes-racks‚ but no moisture proof bag and washing-up liquid can be found at IKEA. Actually‚ some of the IKEA’s utensils
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Case Study: Just in Time for the Holidays Problem: North Pole Workshops’ production capacity cannot meet the surging demand for Timmy CDs on Christmas Eve. The management team gets stuck in mapping a solution to fulfill such demand because team members have their own solutions and they oppose the others’ solution. Reasons: - Weak demand forecast ability (the actual demand is 20% over the company’s assumption) - Weak production planning ability - No links between demand and production planning
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Just-in-Time is an inventory management philosophy that aims to reduce inventories by implementing systems and processes to supply a product or service exactly when it is needed‚ and how it is needed in the production process. The concept of JIT is widely accepted today by many American manufacturing companies‚ and it is a means of controlling costs through striving to maintain lean inventories—in fact‚ the concept of JIT was introduced in the early 1980’s to the U.S. as a concept know as “zero
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IKEA associated with manufacturers in foreign countries that provided goods for a lower cost to the company. IKEA bought rugs from India at a cheaper price‚ “To create a better everyday life for the many people‚ however IKEA did not know that India was using child labor. They gained success by selling furniture to the public for a lower price. Unfortunately‚ IKEA was accused for child labor in India. IKEA was told that their producers were using child labor‚ which means that there were children working
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SOUTHEAST UNIVERSITY A summary of the case study: IKEA invades America Submitted to: Nazmus Sadekin Lecturer‚ Dept. of Economics‚ Southeast University Submitted by: Tasnuva Amreen Khan - 2011020106012 (Group Leader) Sayeed ahmed Khan - 2011020106023 (Group coordinator) Amit Roy - 2011020106027 Ferdousy Rahman - 2011020106021 Md. Anis Uzzaman - 2011020106016
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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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Just in Time Production at Hewlett-Packard‚ Personal Office Computer Division Question 1: Should it be easier to run JIT effectively on the 150 than on the 120? Explain. It would be easier to run JIT effectively on HP-150 referring to the information given in the beginning of the case. HP-150 needs less number of parts and in the end it will be need less inventory. There are 20000 active part numbers for HP-120 and its options vs 450 part numbers for HP-150. HP-150 also needs less suppliers (200
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STRATEGIC ANALYSIS OF IKEA POLITICAL-Foreign investment restrictions-Companies as charity for tax avoidance-VAT increase to 20%-Globalization has eased import rules.-Government regulation climate change act 2008) | Ref13119 | ECONOMICAL-Economic crisis in North America.-Rising raw material and transport cost in 2009-Low spending power due to recession.-Recession in Russia-High import tax in japan | Ref2‚34677 | SOCIAL-Requirements on wood supplier-Brand image-Does not accept child labour-Women
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