Case #14 Coke vs. Pepsi‚ 2001 Synopsis and Objectives Set in December 2000‚ immediately after the merger announcement between PepsiCo‚ Inc.‚ and the Quaker Oats Company‚ this case asks to examine the implications of the merger for the rivalry between the Coca-Cola Company and PepsiCo and for value creation by each firm. Because the merger would allow PepsiCo to control Gatorade‚ which held an 83% share in the sports-drink market‚ PepsiCo would further strengthen its already wide lead
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CASE STUDY Title: Pepsi-Cola Manufacturing International Ltd. Azwan Shah bin Aminuddin 1. Identify and discuss the business process redesign principles that have been applied by the BR project team. In business process redesign‚ the organization need to be have a guidance or principles to make sure that their redesign process is on the right track. In Pepsi –Cola Manufacturing International Ltd (PCMIL)‚ there are based on several principles to ensure they are on the
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UNFAIR DISTRIBUTION OF RESOURCES Resources in the world are distributed differently amongst different people. The developed countries are granted with more resources than the developing countries such as countries in Africa. They have to of thrive on the resources of their own countries‚ most of the time they have no resources at all that can be useful. North Korea has a lack of food and because of that they support their families by eating grass‚ while the people with power and wealth get
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The distribution of the earth’s population across the globe is uneven. The earth contains many different environments with only few parts suitable for human habitation. Around 70% of the earth’s surface is covered in water‚ leaving only 30% as land; however within this portion exist many physical features that restrict human habitation. Only around 11% of the earth’s surface poses no serious threat to human settlement and 80% of the world’s 6.7 billion people live on 10% of the earth’s surface
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Rural Retailing in India-The Road Ahead Shikhar Das Srivastava* ABSTRACT The decision to liberalize the Indian Economy in 1991 had far reaching consequences‚ which is still continued into the new millennium also. On the marketing front‚ there was the arrival of many well-known Multi National Companies especially FMCG product dealers. In the initial years the focus was on the easily accessible well developed urban markets but soon it got saturated because of proliferation of brands and intense
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Coke v. Pepsi – 5 Forces Analysis Industry concentrate produces High intensity (depends on price/advertising cost/ high number of substitutes(low calorie drinks/no carb drinks/ not carbonated drinks like orange juice) Pepsi products /Coke products New Entrants (barriers/rivalry) High Intensity-Brand recognition dominant market/ patents on style and colors Network relationships & high cost of entry established such as distribution‚ warehouse‚ bottlers‚ and shelf-location high marketing
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solve k = 20.275 d) P ( 17 < X < 21) P ( (17 -18)/2.5 < Z < ( 21-18)/2.5) P ( -0.4 < Z < 1.2) = 0.8849 – 0.3446 = 0.5403 ( 4 decimal places) 4. In a sample of 25 observations from a Normal Distribution with mean 98.6 and standard deviation 17.2‚ find: Ans: a) n = 25‚ [pic] = ( = 98.6‚ [pic] = /n = 17.2/(25 = 3.44 [pic]( N
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RURAL NON-FARM EMPLOYMENT IN INDIA: MACRO-TRENDS‚ MICROEVIDENCES AND POLICY OPTIONS Brajesh Jha Agricultural Economics Unit Institute of Economic Growth University Enclave‚ Delhi-110007 Gram: Growth-110007 Phones: 91-11-27667101‚ 27667288‚ 27667365 Fax: 91-11-27667410 E-mail: brajesh@ieg.ernet.in Website: www.ieg.nic.in RURAL NON-FARM EMPLOYMENT IN INDIA: MACROTRENDS‚ MICRO-EVIDENCES AND POLICY OPTIONS Brajesh Jha* ABSTRACT Towards the end of the 1990s‚ the incidence of unemployment
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is dominant company of the soft drink industry and boasts a global market share of around 44%‚ followed by PepsiCo at about 31%‚ and Cadbury Schweppes at 14.7% (Exhibit 3). Separately from these major players‚ smaller companies such as Cott Corporation and Royal Crown form the remaining market share. Coke and Pepsi are the main pieces of this market. They struggle for over a century to conquer the number one position in the market‚ competing fiercely in last few years‚ following each one’s strategic
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these are just raw data‚ finish them. Characteristics of rural areas used Rural areas are large and isolated areas of an open country with low population density ECONOMIC GROWTH used Economic growth can simply be defined as A positive change in the level of production of goods and services by a country over a certain period of time Economic growth is the increase of per capita gross domestic product (GDP) or other measure of aggregate income‚ typically reported as the annual rate of change
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