The Nokia Revolution The story of an extraordinary company that transformed an industry Dan Steinbock Presentation by: Selina Beelaerts & Meena Mallipeddi 1 *Note: It should be understood that the company now known as “Nokia” did not exist in its present form until the 1990s. However‚ for simplicity’s sake‚ we will be referring to the predecessor companies as “Nokia” as well. Outline • Introduction • Background: Nordic Cooperation & Nokia’s Postwar Consolidation • Nordic Cooperation
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Nokia is a well known brand in the world of mobile communication and it is the world leader in the industry because of its history‚ name‚ reliability and unique products and provision of protected solutions. It is one of the most well-known companies and it has offices all over the world. The main product of Nokia is mobile phones and it also deals in household items. Nokia recognizes its corporate responsibility and states that “in all parts of business it makes corporate responsibility a part of
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develops into a butterfly. Stage five is when the butterfly comes out of the chrysalis with wings and a few hours later they become fully fledge butter butterflies ready to fly up to sky. Mosquito life cycle One mosquito can lay more than 50-300 hundred eggs and they can lay eggs 1-7 times in one life time. The mosquito lays eggs in still water and at first the colour of the egg is white which changes to brown and then black. At the next stage we call them larva because they have a body and siphon
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What are the trends in the mobile handset industry? What is Nokia’s strategy and how has globalization changed its way of operation? Trends: · Demand for phones in US and Europe are decreasing · High demand for cheaper phone models in Middle East‚ Southeast Asia‚ Africa‚ China‚ India o Low-cost handsets=reduced Average Selling Price o Growing market for $25 and $10 phones · Companies moving manufacturing plants to low-cost Asian countries * Rising
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EAstern Institute for Integrated Learning in Management Project Report on “Why Nokia Handsets are preferred over other Handsets?” Prepared by: Kaizer KAIZER Team Members: NAME ROLL NO. | 1. Abhijit Sarkar 1 | 2. Arindam Chakrobourty
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Case study: Finland and Nokia 1. How was Finland able to move from a sleepy economy to one of the most competitive nations in the world by the end of the 1990’s? Finland was considered a sleepy country even after their independence from Sweden‚ depending its economy mainly on the Soviet Union by exporting its natural resources. Finland however slowly but constantly developed its economy up to the OECD average‚ following the models of its Nordic neighbors to invest highly in social welfare and
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System Development life cycle‚ (SDLC) is the development of custom information system for large IT projects. With the right information input on an organizations needs it will develop a system from start to finish. The phases of this process are‚ * System investigation‚ this is where professionals gather information on what problems a business may have‚ the software and programs that are needed‚ and what problems that may occur. * System analysis‚ this stage defines in detail the problem
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process of creating systems required a system to do systems. This is the SDLC. It is the system used to build and maintain software systems. The System Development Life Cycle is the process of developing information systems through investigation‚ analysis‚ design‚ implementation‚ and maintenance. The systems development life cycle (SDLC) is a conceptual model used in project management that describes the stages involved in an information system development project‚ from an initial feasibility study
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The systems development life cycle‚ also known as the waterfall model‚ consists of seven phases. Those phases are planning‚ systems analysis‚ system design‚ development‚ testing‚ implementation‚ and maintenance. When this model is being used by a company they will usually complete one phase before beginning on the next. During the planning phase a systems analyst‚ who may or may not work for the company‚ will outline a proposed system‚ develop a budget‚ and create a detailed development schedule
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The Product Life Cycle [pic] In Introduction stage‚ most companies invest in advertising to make consumers aware of a product. If it faces only limited competition‚ it might use a skimming-pricing approach. Typically‚ because it will sell only a relatively small quantity of the product it will distribute to just a few channel. Because sales are low and advertising and other costs are high‚ the company tends to lose money during this stage. In Growth stage‚ as the company focuses on building
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