1. Micro Environmental The microenvironment consists of five components. The first is the organization’s internal environment—its several departments and management levels—as it affects marketing management’s decision making. The second component includes the marketing channel firms that cooperate to create value: the suppliers and marketing intermediaries (middlemen‚ physical distribution firms‚ marketing-service agencies‚ financial intermediaries). The third component consists of the five types
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Macro environment of apple company. Macro environment is a far environment which comprise of several forces that raise strategic issue to Apple. These forces are social force‚ economic force‚ politic force‚ and technology force which well known as PEST (figure 3). Figure 3 Macro Environment Technology forces The first force that influences computer industry structure is rapid and sustained technical progress. Each year‚ integrated circuits and other electronic components become better
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Micro Environment Notes • The forces within an organisation’s industry that affect its ability to serve its customers and clients – target markets‚ partners and competitors. (Marketing 2nd Edition by Elliott‚ Rundle-Thiele Waller) - Customers - Clients - Partners - Competitors • All factors in the micro environment affect the marketing. Marketing managers‚ during the marketing process‚ must account for all factors in relation to marketing‚ specifically within the micro environment. Customers
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The following is a full environmental analysis of yupiepet.co.za starting with the micro environment‚ followed by the market environment and ending in the macro environment. The layout for each of the environments was taken from page 17 of the Business Studies grade 10 Learners Book‚ third edition 2018‚ Authored by Estie Meyer and Zain Strydom‚ and published by Consumo Publishers. Micro Environment: Micro environment factors‚ are factors close to a business that have a direct impact on its business
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Definition The economic environment consists of external factors in a business’ market and the broader economy that can influence a business. You can divide the economic environment into the microeconomic environment‚ which affects business decision-making such as individual actions of firms and consumers‚ and the macroeconomic environment‚ which affects an entire economy and all of its participants. Many economic factors act as external constraints on your business‚ which means that you have little
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The wider macro-environment Changes in the wider macro-environment may not be as close to the marketing firm’s day-to-day operations‚ but they are just as important. The main factors making up these wider macro-environmental forces fall into four groups. Political and legal factors Economic factors Social and cultural factors Technological factors (Often referred to as the ‘PEST’ factors in the marketing analytical context‚ a useful aide-memoire‚ although in some texts it is sometimes referred
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Introduction The swatch group was formed in Switzerland in the year 1983 under the leadership of Nicolas G. Hayek. Originally the company was founded by a merger of two Swiss watch manufacturing division’s which are ASUAG and SSIH which was named SMH (Swiss Corporation for Microelectronics and Watchmaking Industries Ltd). The group was renamed as Swatch group in the year 1998. Nicolas G. Hayek (CEO)‚ strongly constructed new opportunities and rooted a new culture. In the coming decade‚ SMG Group
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Swatch Revolutionises Watch Manufacture Answer 1. What do you think has been the contribution of the marketing function‚ the product design function and the operations function to the success of Swatch? Swatch is a good example of the way three sets of competitive abilities in a company relate to each other. The three key contributions to Swatch’s success (or the three important micro operations) are • the way they have developed their products and services. • the way they have positioned
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ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND INNOVATION INSTRUCTOR: Jose Lejarraga Case Report: Birth of the Swatch Prepared By: Sachin Agarwala 1. Why was Swatch successful? In what ways was Swatch different from any other watch the industry had ever seen? A number of factors attributed to Swatch’s success and differentiated it from any other watch the industry had seen. There were factors on the manufacturing‚ branding and marketing‚ and designing side. Manufacturing: Hayek wanted complete
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Distribution Swatch Group products are distributed mainly via a global distribution networkthat has been carefully selected by Group subsidiaries. The network is developed through shops in its own name or under the Tourbillion brand. However‚ in order to maintain a direct link with end consumers‚ the Swatch Group has created a retail section that develops global retail strategies and new approaches to consumer markets‚ including monobrand stores and a network of multibrand prestige watch and jewelry
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