The current issue and full text archive of this journal is available at www.emeraldinsight.com/0309-0566.htm The effect of corporate branding dimensions on consumers’ product evaluation A cross-cultural analysis Nizar Souiden ´ Faculty of Business Administration‚ Laval University‚ Quebec‚ Canada Corporate branding dimensions 825 Received October 2004 Revised September 2005 Accepted January 2006 Norizan M. Kassim Department of Management and Marketing‚ College of Business and Economics
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Task 3 - Understanding approaches to strategy evaluation and selection Organisations may be made up of several divisions or business units. Therefore‚ when devising their strategies may well decide to adopt differing strategies – substantive growth‚ limited growth or retrenchment for different business units. a) Virgin is an example of a large and diverse organization. Describe conditions‚ which might lead them into adopting each of these three strategies. Growth in a business is described
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TABLE OF CONTENT PAGE NUMBER 1.0 Executive Summary 2 2.0 Company Background 2 2.1 Mission 2 2.2 Vision 2 3.0 Environmental Analysis 2 3.1 PEST analyses 2 3.1.1 Political 2 3.1.2 Economical 3 3.1.3 Social 3 3.1.4Technological 4 3.2 Porter’s five forces 4 3.2.1The Bargaining Power of Customer 4 3.2.2 The Bargaining Power of Suppliers 5 3
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Exploring Corporate Strategy CLASSIC CASE STUDIES Nokia: The Consumer Electronics Business Martin Lindell and Leif Melin The case describes the entry of the Finnish company‚ Nokia‚ into the consumer electronics market – resulting in a significant reorientation of the company. It describes the internationalisation of the Nokia Group from a Finnish company‚ to a Nordic company‚ to a European company and finally to a global player in world markets. The case raises three main questions. Why and how
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How can you tell if your company is really more than the sum of its partsl CREATING CORPORATE ADVANTAGE BY DAVID J. COLLIS AND CYNTHIA A. MONTGOMERY M OST MULTIBUSINESS COMPANIES ARE the sum of their parts and nothing more. ^ Although executives have become more sophisticated in their understanding of what it takes to achieve competitive advantage at the level of individual businesses‚ when it comes to creating corporate advantage across multiple businesses‚ the news is far less encouraging
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NEWELL / RUBBERMAID Analysis BACKGROUND In October 1998‚ Newell Company was considering a merger with Rubbermaid Incorporated to form a new company‚ Newell Rubbermaid Incorporated. The amalgamation would be through a tax-free exchange of shares valued at $5.8 billion. Newell had three major product groupings: Hardware and Home Furnishings‚ Office Products‚ and Housewares. Rubbermaid is a renowned manufacturer of a wide range of plastic products ranging from children’s toys through housewares.
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VENTURE STRATEGY AND EXTERNAL VENTURE STRATEGY by: Mary Ynde O. Araño STATEGIC VARIATIONS EXPANSION INTERNAL EXTERNAL UNRELATED HORIZONTAL VERTICAL ACTIVE PASSIVE WHY VENTURE STRATEGIES? The most successful companies are those that have developed aggressive venture strategies and have made ventures critical components of their strategic and operating success. Venture strategy can be… • Internal venture strategy • External venture strategy INTERNAL VENTURE STRATEGY • A vehicle
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Strengths: BP is ranked at the world’s 3rd largest energy company and is positioned as a multinational oil company headquartered in London that: Operates petrochemical businesses worldwide through the network of its subsidiaries and retail brands(Amoco; ARCO; BP Express‚ BP Connect; BP Travel Centre; ampm; Burmah Castrol etc) Participates in London Stock Exchange‚ IPO in New York Stock Exchange. and is listed in the FTSE 100 Index; BP Amoco strong brand loyalty for oil; Strong brand
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1. Does Newell have a parenting advantage? Yes‚ good handle on cost structure – how to make high volume low-cost products and relate to volume sellers; operational efficiency and profitability – Newellization‚ solve fundamentals of cost structures to bring operating margins to 15% Also M&As‚ Centralized support processes‚ access to large retailers • What does it mean to be a good corporate parent? (look at MGTO article) • What is Newell’s corporate strategy? Why is each word
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Newell Company: Corporate Strategy Newell‚ manufacturer and marketer of basic home and hardware products‚ is a rather unrelated diversified company with more than 30 operating businesses. Grown over the years through many acquisitions‚ the company is facing one of her most important challenge: the acquisition of Calphalon (high-quality cookware) and Rubbermaid (plastic products). Both the acquisition were part of that period’s CEO’s plan to increase Newell’s strength on the market‚ and to boost
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