Case: the LEGO Group: Publish or Protect? Publish‚ Patent or Trade secret? Introduction: The LEGO Group are maintaining their competitive advantage through two main direction which are having more intelligence modular design and product introduction‚ such as new product line and having manufacturing process innovation that can reduce cost‚ shorten manufacturing cycle and improve the product quality. For manufacturing innovation LEGO are introducing new technology into their process. The project
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such as The Lego Group and its’ competition‚ to give any downward variability in quality‚ price and how much their customers value their toys for entertainment. The toy industry is a very saturated market with little room for a drop off in market share. Most organizations within this industry had to find ways to cut cost through their multiple channels in order to make the largest return on the slim margins that this market has for “luxury items” such as toys. This meant that The Lego Group had to focus
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The Lego Group: Building Strategy‚ Case 10 Overview LEGO‚ the brand of toy that has been played with by multiple generations of people was founded during the Great Depression in 1932 by Ole Kirk Kristiansen‚ a Danish carpenter. Kristiansen started making toys out of wood and had 12 employees under him. The word LEGO combines two Danish words leg and godt‚ which mean “play well” and in Latin‚ fittingly means “to put together”. It’s ironic that LEGO was given that name because it was only later
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Summary of the case The LEGO Group’s vision was to “inspire children to explore and challenge their own creative potential”. Its motto‚ “Only the Best is Good Enough‚” had stuck with company since 1932 when Ole Kirk Christiansen‚ a Danish carpenter‚ established the company in the small town of Billund in Jutland‚ Denmark‚ to manufacture his wooden toy designs. As the company itself stipulated it: “It is LEGO philosophy that “good play” enriches a child’s life — and its subsequent adulthood. With
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Assignment 1 LEGO Case Study The LEGO Group was founded by Ole Kirk Christiansen in 1932 in Billund‚ Denmark. LEGO started by manufacturing wooden toys‚ today‚ the company’s main product is the LEGO brick with its unique principle of interlocking tubes. Today‚ the LEGO Group had grown
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Case Study: Lego is still playing‚ but have the rules changed? Nearly everyone around the world knows what Legos are‚ which certainly isn’t because of luck or happenstance. Lego expanded in to the global market long before other toys manufactures were even off the ground. The Lego brand started with simple blocks that snapped together‚ they create whatever the child’s mind could image. The simple toy is developmental appropriate from toddler through teens. Most toys on the market cater to a much
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LEGO Group Threshold Capabilities Threshold Resources Tangible Intangible Physical Finance HRM Threshold Competence Primary Inbound logistics‚ operations‚ outbound logistics‚ marketing & sales Support/Secondary HRM‚ general administration Unique Capabilities for Competitive Advantage 1) Corporate Function - Strong financial control 2) Management Information - Comprehensive‚ integrated MIS network linked to managerial decision making 3) Research and Development
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The Lego Group Case: The Crisis Prior to finalizing a strategic recommendation for Knudstorp and the Lego Group‚ I needed to gain perspective on the industry and internal factors that have historically interfered with Lego’s business model‚ and thus lead them to the point of bankruptcy. In Exhibit A‚ I used the Porter’s five forces model to help identify and label the threats‚ demands‚ trends and opportunities of the toy industry. While Lego faced many different types of challenges‚ market trends
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There are about 915 million ways to combine six LEGO® bricks . But how many ways are there to keep a company on the right track? Kjeld Kirk Kristiansen‚ current owner of the LEGO Group‚ was faced with this question in 2004. On the surface it did not become known that LEGO was in trouble in those days. The small bricks were welcome all over the world and the British Association of Toy Retailers joined Fortune magazine in naming the company’s classic bricks the toy of the century. But the fifth-largest
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an organization‚ followed by the strategic choices for the future and turning strategy into action. Beginning with strategic position the LEGO group faced different objectives which influenced the development of strategy. The level of technology and preferences concerning materials changed over the time and the company was able to found a niche market for LEGO movies and created new innovations like plastic bricks. Also - like in all markets - the internationalization has affected the strategy of
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