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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IKEA is a well-known global brand with hundreds of stores across the world. In order to improve performance‚ it must assess its external and competitive environment. This will reveal the key opportunities it can take advantage of and the threats it must deal with. IKEA responds to both internal and external issues in a proactive and dynamic manner by using its strengths and reducing its weaknesses. Through this‚ IKEA is able to generate the strong growth it needs to retain a strong identity in the
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IKEA 1. A firm advantage of IKEA is they have a dedicated supplier network so they are able to offer quality furniture at low prices. IKEA reaps huge economies of scale from the size of its stores and the big production runs necessary to stock them since the same furniture is sold all over the world. Since IKEA saves‚ they are able to match their rivals on quality and still manage to undercut their furniture by 30 percent. A country advantage is they have more than 2‚300 suppliers in 67 countries
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Developing a learning Organisation has its advantages‚ - The company not only gets to modify its behaviour to suit the requirements of the changing environment but it can also keep ahead of the competition by introducing innovative products and services. - Learning organisations are better equipped to retain employees as they provide opportunities for growth and development. - These organisations not only provide an opportunity to learn‚ they also do away with the outdated bureaucratic procedures
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MANAGEMENT TOPIC IKEA CASE STUDY SUBMITTED TO: MARILYN MAY STUDENT NO: C0362023 1.0 INTRODUCTION: Ingvar Kamprad Elmtaryd Agunnaryd (IKEA) was founded by a 17year old boy Ingvar Kamprad in a small town of Smaland in Sweden. IKEA is now the largest furniture retailer in the world. As of October 2010‚ IKEA has 313 stores in 38 countries most of them in North America‚ Europe‚ Asia and Australia. The IKEA group owns 276 stores in 25 countries and 37 stores run by franchisees outside the IKEA group in
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detail below with reference made to the global business IKEA. 1 Outline the reasons for global expansion: 1.1 Increase sales and find new markets. In a simple economy there are only so many customers to whom a business can sell its products to. With more than 6 billion potential customers around the world compared to the millions IKEA could sell to in Sweden‚ expansion was crucial to continue their growth. With over 200 stores worldwide IKEA has truly become a global business. 1.2 Acquire
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We have analysed the IKEA case study "Managing cultural diversity" .Our analysis of key problems‚ recommendations and their limitations are summarised in the following document. HEADING Key problem #1: IKEA suffers from a lack of innovation and faces the possibility of offering a very similar product base. This is due in part to the lack of fresh blood in the organisation. IKEA’s policy of hiring the same genre of people leads to inhibiting diversity and innovation to meet change in new markets
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COUNTRY: TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO NAME : AMRIT AMAR MARAJ SUBJECT: STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT STUDENT NUMBER : 12236975 TOPIC : IKEA TABLE OF CONTENTS *INTRODUCTION *TARGET MARKET *ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE *MARKETING MIX *PORTERS FIVE FORCES *STRENGHTS‚ WEAKNESSESS‚ OPPERTUNITIES‚ THREATS *POLITICAL‚ ECONOMICAL‚ SOCIAL‚ TECHNOLOGICAL‚ ENIROMENTAL‚ LEGISLATIVE *BOWMAN STRATEGY CLOCK *CONCLUSION
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responsibilities that extend beyond a return for their shareholder. The Swedish furniture giant IKEA has received much respect from the entire world with regards to its CSR philosophy. The things that makes IKEA stand out is that despite its aggressive focus on cost cutting it has been able to combine this with global CSR issues which most companies find near impossible to do. The organisation alongside cost effectiveness has added an element of altruism‚ so that its guiding philosophy is to
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IKEA: how the Swedish retailer ;: became a global cult brand A hybrid strategy (point 3 on the strategy clock - Exhibit 6.2) can be vety successful and difficult competitors to imitate. However‚ there is a danger that the organisation can drift into a ’stuck in the middl position - being ’out-flanked’ by both low-priced and differentiating competitors at the same time. ••• Since IKEA began in 1943 it has grown into a successful global network of stores with its unique retailing concept
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