MNE The Case IKEA 1 IHRM: A Key Factor For Success Of A MNE – An Introduction 1.1 The three components of IHRM – a description 1.2 Key elements concerning IHRM – the details 1.2.1 Recruitment 1.2.2 Training and Development 1.2.3 Performance measurement 1.2.4 Compensation 2 The expansion of a Swedish MNE to China – an example 2.1 Sweden and China – a comparison 2.2 The “IKEA way” – an international company from Sweden 2.3 Changes due to an expansion of IKEA to China – the
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Case Study IKEA: FURNITURE RETAILER TO THE WORLD INTRODUCTION IKEA is one of the world ’s most successful global retailers. In 2007‚ IKEA had 300 home furnishing superstores in 35 and was visited by some 583 million shoppers. IKEA ’s low-priced‚ elegantly designed merchandise‚ displayed in large warehouse stores‚ generated sales of €21.2 billion in 2008‚ up from €4.4 billion in 1994. Although the privately held company refuses to publish figures on profitability‚ its net profit margins were
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Ikea Case Study 1) Ikea largely follows a standardization approach. Every IKEA market all over the world is similar. A typical IKEA market has a grocery store‚ a Swedish cuisine restaurant and a supervised play area for kids. This I’ve seen myself in Dubai too. The store is a self-service store. The product is taken home and assembled by the customer himself. IKEA produces its furniture or parts of the furniture in a particular few places and send them worldwide for sale. This approach leads to
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IKEA INVADES AMERICA IKEA is a major competitor in the home furnishing and home goods operations with operations in more than 30 countries. IKEA unique brand identity is its unassembled products that require consumer assembling. The IKEA Group‚ one of the world’s top furniture retailers‚ has emerged as the fastest-growing furniture retailer in the US. To become one of the leading furniture retailers in such huge and promising market‚ it has set an ambitious goal to have 50 stores around the US by
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threat of entry: The furniture market is already highly competitive. The risk of new entrants is not extremely high because of the huge capital needed to start the business. Demand of household furniture is high. IKEA furnitures don’t have a such significant competitor but other areas like textile and kitchenware have. Alongside Kodin Ykkönen becomes one competitor as a full department store but it doesn’t compete in price. Buyers‚ bargaining power: Ikea ensure that their customers in all
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IKEA Case Study BY: MARGARET NICHOLSON February 8‚ 2015 Keller Graduate School Professor: Timothy Schauer Course: MKTG-522-20775 Marketing Management Analysis of the Current Situation Strengths Weaknesses -There are a number of competitors who have low priced furniture to sell to buyers. Some competition like Walmart is cheaper than IKEA‚ but furniture packaged is not high quality. - There are a number of competitors. -Difficult establishing stores in new cities. -Stay with today’s trends
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Introduction. The IKEA Group‚ one of the world’s top furniture retailers‚ has emerged as the fastest-growing furniture retailer in America. From 1997 to 2001‚ the revenues of IKEA doubled from $600 million to $1.27 billion in five years so the history proofed that it seems possible for IKEA to reach this goal. However‚ IKEA faced several challenges with the market entrance: American’s mind-set‚ competition from established furniture retailer and different customer’s preference etc. To address to
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CONTENTS 1. THE INDUSTRY STATUS QUO………………………………1 1.1 THE INDUSTRY PROFILE ……………………………1 1.1.1 The current industry profile ………………………1 1.1.2 The industry volume and growth……………………1 1.2 THE INDUSTRY CHAIN…………………………………2 1.3 MARKET OVERVIEW……………………………………4 2. INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT………………………………5 2.1 LABOR RESOURCE………………………………………5 2.2 INFRASTRUCTURE………………………………………6 2.3 LOGISTICS ………………………………………………7 2.3.1 Railway transportation……………………………7 2.3.2 Highway transporation……………………………9 2.3.3 Waterway transportation……………………………10
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Background Ikea was founded in 1943 when Ingvar Kamprad was given the Ikea name by his father. Ikea stands for; Ingvar Kamprad elmtaryd Agunnaryd‚ the son ’s first and last name and the farm and village where he grew up. The first Ikea sold small items such as pencils‚ table runners and nylon stockings‚ all for exceptionally affordable prices. Ingvar knew he had found a system that worked‚ by 1945 he had expanded. Ingvar started advertising in local newspapers and began a do-it-yourself mail
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Questions: 1. What are the core competencies and end products of IKEA? How are they linked with each other? The core competencies of IKEA are the “assemble it yourself” products and the “space friendly packaging”. Because of this they save costs on employees. The employees are not needed to collect and build the furniture‚ because the costumers do this by them selfs. The end product of IKEA is high quality design furniture‚ and the in-house products that complete the interior. The core competencies
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