rigidities of Sony In their own success‚ Sony created a problem for themselves – resisting changing‚ and failing to recognize that changes were happening rapidly. All core competencies have the potential to become core rigidities (死板). Core rigidities inhibit Sony’s ability to access and develop new capabilities‚ and it prevents Sony from responding appropriately to changes‚ in particular the rapid changes in technology‚ thus losing their competitiveness. The culture for Sony appears to be
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Micro vs. Macro Economics Micro-indiidual consumers/firms Macro-economic aggregates-GDP‚ inflations‚ unemployment Markets-opportunity for exchange 1) Opportunity Costs-value of the next best for gone alternative when a decision is made -all decisions involve an opportunity cost (assuming the firm operates efficiently) 2) Marginal Analysis-analyze situations involving incremental change -marginal: something is changing by a small amount (incremental/one-unit change) 3) Laws of supply and
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Study: Sony: managing the international R&D network 1. How did Sony internationalize its R&D activities? Sony started to internationalize its activities in the 1950’s. For this‚ it used an incremental and cautious way. They followed the Morita’s strategy which is: first to learn about the market‚ to learn how to sell to it and to build up its corporate confidence before to commit itself. He also says that when you have confidence‚ you should commit yourself wholeheartedly. So Sony started
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SONY CASE STUDY QUESTION Outline and evaluate Sony’s strategic position at the end of the case study‚ including its management of change. What strategic changes (if any) would you now recommend to Sony’s Management? Introduction 1.1 Sony’s fate through the 1990s has been characterised by grave vagaries of events in its fifty years of operation. Enormous successes from 1946 has been attributed to the collaborative venture between
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THEIR HELPING HAND IN THIS VENTURE. CONTENTS TOPICS | PAGE NO. | INTRODUCTION OF SONY VAIO | 3 | HISTORY | 3 | MISSION‚ VISION‚ GOAL | 4 | MARKET SHARE | 6 | SONY VAIO AND ITS COMPETITORS IN THE LIGHT OF 4Ps-COMPARATIVE STUDY | 7 | COMPETIIVE ADVANTAGE | 8 | PROBLEMS FACED BY SONY VAIO | 8 | RECOMMENDED MARKETING STRATEGIES | 9 | FUTURE PLANS | 14 | BIBLIOGRAPHY | 14 | INTRODUCION Sony is known as one of the most comprehensive entertainment and technology companies in the
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Strength Electronics - Sony is a well-recognized and respected brand with consumers‚ and its products cover a wide spectrum of the entertainment and industrial markets Threats Electronics - new entrants are threatening sony’s position due to the industry shift from analog to digital technology. In the analog era‚ complicated functionality of electronics products was made possible through the combination of several complex parts‚ and Sony held a competitive advantage in the design and manufacture
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Importance of the Eye Toy product for Sony The Eye Toy was a revolutionary product because the underlying technology to interpret incoming video signals was clearly the first in the market. The case indicates that the Eye Toy Play appealed to a broad audience both in terms of demographics as well as gaming experience. Based on the consolidated income statements for Sony Corporation in Exhibit 2 of (Harvard Case 9-505-024 page 13) the game business segment accounted for 61.5%
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Case Study #3 Sony de Mexico It was a hot‚ dry afternoon in Mexico’s northern Sonora Desert and Rey was in a sour mood. Rey Uribe‚ the nor¬mally energetic and optimistic president of Sony de Mexico‚ had just received the news that Sony’s Mexican operations were to be shut down in a cost-cutting move. Corporate had decided that to remain competi¬tive‚ capacity should be shifted to Southeast Asia‚ where labor costs were a fraction of Mexico’s fully bur¬dened hourly labor rates of $3.50. Of course
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Sony Eye Toy 1 G R OUP 2 : DA N I K USW A NTO ( 12 400036 7 1) DENNY J C HANDR A ( 12 40002 611 ) FR A N S I S C US A SI NG G I H ( 12 40003 71 5) S I R EG A R SI DDI K ( 12 400036 3 3 ) VI TA HEL I A DESY ( 12 40002 78 2 ) Table of Content 2 Background Business & Industry Backround Sony Eye Toy Product Analysis Concept Development Marketing Strategy Market Performance Product Development Pipeline Future of EyeToy $62 billion annual sales (2004) • Sony Computer Entertainment
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Why Sony fail? When I read “Leading Change Why Transformation Efforts Fail”‚ I directly linked Sony with the transformation fail. Sony‚ the previous electrical giant‚ announced a record annual net loss of $6.4 billion for fiscal year 2011 in May 22 2012. This marks the fourth consecutive year that Sony reported substantial losses. Transformation efforts couldn’t turnaround the bad situation of Sony due to the mistakes that made by Sony in those transformation. First‚ Sony did not establishing a
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