Management Chapter 6 Structure: Levels of strategy: Superior performance Competitive advantages Corporate strategy---what business/industry Business strategy—how to compete Functional strategy---execute to support Business strategic goals by @ all department 1. Superior performance: the ability to generate high profitability and increase profits over time High profitability Superior performance Requires eg. Specific strategy‚ Technology‚ capabilities etc Growth in profits
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A business-level strategy is an integrated and coordinated set of commitments and actions that firms use to gain a competitive advantage by exploiting core competencies in specific product market. Only firms that continuously upgrade their competitive advantages over time are able to achieve long-term success with their business-level strategy. Effective management of customer relationships help the firms answer questions related to the issues of who‚ what‚ and how. Customers are the foundation
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JetBlue: Managing the Future In the airline industry‚ few players have managed to build a unique brand identity and achieve brand differentiation. JetBlue‚ however‚ has done so by taking up the niche position of a low-cost provider that also offers a top-notch experience that legacy airlines don ’t deliver. JetBlue will maximize opportunity by maintaining its theory of the business and incorporating innovation as a core value through entrepreneurial management of resources resulting in new strategy
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Hi everybody we are going to present you our subjet which is Global value chains and patterns of value added trade and invesments. To present you our topic i am going to give you a definition of Global value chains. So the GVCs describes the full range of operations that multiple firms and workers do to bring a product from its conception to its end use and beyond. Nowadays global value chains are the core notion of international trade and investment policy. Now i present to you the trade which
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APPENDIX 1 EXHIBIT 1- Layers of the business environment 1. The macro - environment – (using the PESTEL model) 2. Industry (or sector) – (using 5 forces model) 3. Competitors ( using strategic groups‚ market segments and critical success factors) EXHIBIT 2 - PESTEL ANALYSIS Political Hungary in 2004 joined EU Strong government power in US to ban/regulate alcohol and distribution Hungarian government did not offer any trade support to the nation’s wineries Economic Exchange rates Duties and import
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380-01 Dr. William Brent February 3rd 2009 JetBlue Airways: IPO Valuation Table of Content I. Statement of Problem II. Alternative Solutions III. Analysis of the Alternatives IV. Final Recommendation V. Appendix I. STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM David Neeleman‚ CEO of JetBlue Airways and his management team have realized that JetBlue is still making profit despite the many challenges facing the airline industry after the September 11th 2001 terrorist
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for JetBlue Airway Societal environment After September 2001‚ air travel decreased sharply and major airline companies had lost the money. This makes those airline companies to increase the debt by tapping their credit lines and/or issuing bonds. These actions were vital to help the carriers survive the dramatic decline in passenger levels and fares‚ and the sharp increase in losses‚ but left most of the major airlines burdened with huge debt loads . Moreover‚ there are some airline companies
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JetBlue Study New York based JetBlue Airways Corporation‚ entered the airline travel business in 1998 with the goal of “making the experience of flying happier and easier for everyone.” They were succeeding and thriving in their goal up until Wednesday‚ February 14‚ 2007‚ when they suffered through a severe winter storm at the JFK International Airport. Their operations were jumbled forcing the airline to cancel more than half of their flights along the east coast‚ and it forced them to give
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1. In assessing Newell Company’s corporate-level strategy and whether the company adds value to the businesses within its portfolio‚ it is necessary to identify its overarching strategy and then explain it with context to how it affects the various businesses within the larger corporate body. Newell Company’s main corporate-level strategy as defined by Dan Fergurson was “build on what we do best”. The company focused on growth through strategic acquisitions of firms that sold low cost and high
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References: (1970). "The Social Responsibility of Business Is to Increase Its Profits." New York Time. Reprinted in Harvard Business Review: Ethics for Executives Series. (1991). "The Pyramid of Corporate Social Responsibility: Towards the Moral Management of Organizational Stakeholders". Business Horizon. August/July‚ pp. 39-48. Adam Smith (The Theory of Moral Sentiments (1759)‚ and‚ An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations
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