customers fall into any logical groups based on needs‚ motivations‚ or characteristics? Please make clear what your answers are based on and state used sources. In the past Nokia customers are consist of high-end‚ mid-end‚ and lower-end customers. But when the market was penetrated by IOS from Apple and Android from Google slowly Nokia is losing their market share. Now their biggest customers are rural China‚ Nigeria‚ Kenya and even Norway‚ Poland and New Zealand have boosted Nokia’s market share recently
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I feel that alcohol causes problems not only to the user/drinker but also to their spouses‚ children‚ and other family members. Problem drinking can change the roles played by family members in relation to one another and the relationships that surround them. As a family member develops this problem‚ the drinker may fail to perform his or her functions as a breadwinner‚ to the support their children or to complete chores. These things get done by another person‚ often times‚ the spouse. However
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Nokia Corporation is a Finnish multinational communications and information technology organization that originated and is headquartered in Finland. Its main products are mobile phones and portable information technology devices. It also offers Internet services such as games‚ music‚ media‚ messaging‚ applications‚ as well as free map information and navigations tools through its exclusively owned subsidiary Navteq. Nokia also has a joint venture with Siemens‚ and Nokia Siemens Networks‚ a telecommunications
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References: http://www.learnmarketing.net/product.htm http://saunderslog.com/2008/02/17/nokias-evolving-product-strategy/ http://www.google.com http://www.wikipedia.com
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elsevier.com / locate / econbase A theory of joint venture life-cycles Indrani Roy Chowdhury a ‚ Prabal Roy Chowdhury b ‚ * b a Jadavpur University‚ Jadavpur‚ India CSDILE‚ School of International Studies ( SIS)‚ Jawaharlal Nehru University ( JNU)‚ New Delhi‚ 110067‚ India Received 1 May 1998; received in revised form 1 February 1999; accepted 1 May 1999 Abstract In this paper we provide a dynamic theory of joint venture life cycle that relies on synergy‚ organisational learning and moral
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Nokia Corporation The Nokia Story Nokia was set up in 1865 by a mining engineer named Fredrik Idestam at the Tammerkoski Rapids in South-Western Finland. The company started as a wood pulp mill‚ and in 1960‚ the company started a mobile phone manufacturing business. In 1998‚ Nokia produced 100 million mobile phones and became the world’s largest phone makers. Now‚ Nokia is a leading multinational company engaged in producing mobile communication products‚ and is the
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Communication plays a very important role in our life. Nowadays‚ cellphone is one of the “must-haves” in our day to day living. With its large target market‚ different mobile telecommunication companies have been trying to penetrate the markets to offer their latest innovative mobile products. One of the famous and successful mobile phone manufacturers in the world is Nokia. Like any other companies‚ Nokia has been able to use strategies and approaches to meet the needs and demands of their target
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Brand Audit: Nokia... What’s Next? Introduction Click on the Nokia Philippines website and you will get the image above. This pretty much sums up Nokia at the end of 2014. A long history of dominance in mobile communication has succumbed to the pressures of innovation (and lack thereof). Nokia will go down in history as a case of “What not to do!”. Beset with declining sales‚ Nokia merged with Microsoft and licensed its Lumia and Asha line to the software giant. By the end of 2014‚ Microsoft dropped
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133 Link manufacturing process and product life cycles Focusing on the process gives a new dimension to strategy Robert H. Hayes and Steven C. Wheelwright Although the product life cycle concept may have value for managers‚ its emphasis on marketing can make it inadequate for strategic planners. These authors point out that using a process life cycle can help a company choose among its various manufacturing and marketing options. Using the concept of a "product-process matrix‚" they show
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The Deal and its implications: Nokia will be selling its mobile phone business to Microsoft for $5.0bn. Microsoft will be paying Nokia an additional $2.1bn to license Nokia’s patents‚ which will bring the total value of the deal to $7.1bn in cash. 1. How will it affect Nokia? The overall impact seems to be Positive • The mobile phone business had generated 51% of Nokia’s 2012 revenues. The unit which was once the most profitable mobile phone manufacturer in the world made an operating margin of
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