Change: An Empirical Study On Nokia Presented by: Debleena Dutt Ravula Gayathri Ankita Bhattacharya Rahul Sekhar OLS. Group V. Sem IV “To improve is to change; to be perfect is to change often.” Winston Churchill (1874-1965) Why Nokia’s Organizational Changes Is Necessary ? Q3 2011 Market Share 23.9 22 2012 Market Share 2013 Market Share 24.6 18.7 19.1 13.9 8.3 3.2 S am s ung Nok i a A ppl e Source: Gartner (2014) 7.5 Major Organizational Changes In Nokia 199 0 Core Strategy 200
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problem two weeks into my internship with Raffles Hotel Marketing Communications. After my orientation week‚ it was finally time for me to take on projects on my own and start communicating with some of the clients and media the department would follow up from time to time. One of the projects that I was tasked was to prepare the Arabic version of Raffles Hotel’s fact sheet for the Saudi Arabia sales trip that the Director of Sales and Marketing will be doing at the end of the week. This request came
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• Where do we want to be? • How do we get there? With a 5% market share before the takeover of Somerfield‚ which had a market share of 5% as well‚ resulting in a new market share for the group of 10% the feel is that with the correct marketing strategy‚ the Co-operative group can overtake Morrison’s‚ who have a share of 11%‚ and become one of the top 4 players in the UK food and drink retail market. To do this‚ brand image must be improved from its current down-market image to widen the
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Nokia vs. Nikon In the National Geographic magazine‚ there are two advertisements for similar cameras: a Nokia Lumia 1020 and a Nikon D800. Although both devices were made for the same purpose‚ they differ in at least three ways. The first difference between a Nokia camera and a Nikon camera is the appearance of each device. A Nikon D800 camera has a bulky rigged built to it giving it a hard to use vibe. The brand name is engraved in big white bold letters on the front of the camera. In contrary
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Terminology[edit] An integrated circuit is defined as:[2] A circuit in which all or some of the circuit elements are inseparably associated and electrically interconnected so that it is considered to be indivisible for the purposes of construction and commerce. Circuits meeting this definition can be constructed using many different technologies – see for example thin-film transistor‚ thick film technology‚ or hybrid integrated circuit. However‚ in general usage integrated circuit has since come
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Tesla’s Integration of Marketing Communications Tesla Motors Inc. gained widespread attention by producing the Tesla Roadster in 2008‚ the first federally-compliant electric vehicle. The roadster is also impressive because of its sports car design. Tesla then followed in summer of 2012 with the release of the Model S in the United States‚ which is a fully electric luxury sedan. Tesla Motors was founded in 2003 by a group of intrepid Silicon Valley engineers who set out to prove that electric
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GAC012: Business Studies Assessment Event 3 Recommending a Marketing Mix for a Service ‘Lumia’ 800 of NOKIA Mobile Company’ Student: Zhou Siyan ‘Effie’ ID number: ZMSC22222 Tutor: Maqui Due Date: November 19‚ 2012 Date submitted: November 19‚ 2012 Word Count: 1249 words Table of Contents Executive Summary 1.0 Introduction 2.0 Research Methodology 3.0 Research Findings 4.0 Discussion 5.0 Conclusion and recommendations Reference List
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PEST ANALYSIS The market environment is a marketing term and it refers to all of the forces outside of marketing that affect marketing management’s ability to build and maintain successful relationships with target customers. Company‚ its suppliers‚ distributors‚ and its competitors are also impacted by what is happening in the world. To succeed therefore‚ it is necessary to continuously monitor‚ anticipate‚ and adapt‚ to that environment‚ and wherever possible‚ shape that environment. The
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content I. Introduction II. Context of Nokia business strategy and the significance of stakeholder 1. Vision 2. Mission 3. Objectives 4. Stakeholders a. Internal (Employees) b. Connected (Customers and suppliers) c. External (Government) III. External environment and organizational audit 1. PESTEL (located in Finland) 2. Five force 3. Organizational audit IV. SWOT analysis of company and strategic positioning techniques to the analysis of Nokia 1. Value chain 2. SWOT · Strength ·
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The Deal and its implications: Nokia will be selling its mobile phone business to Microsoft for $5.0bn. Microsoft will be paying Nokia an additional $2.1bn to license Nokia’s patents‚ which will bring the total value of the deal to $7.1bn in cash. 1. How will it affect Nokia? The overall impact seems to be Positive • The mobile phone business had generated 51% of Nokia’s 2012 revenues. The unit which was once the most profitable mobile phone manufacturer in the world made an operating margin of
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