A CASE STUDY ON THE INDIAN SMALL CAR INDUSTRY Prof. Tapan Panda A Case Study on the Indian Small Car Industry A BRIEF OVERVIEW ON THE INDIAN SMALL CAR INDUSTRY If there is one big market that is forcing the global auto majors to think small‚ it is India. Until yesterday‚ all the world’s auto-manufacturers expected to create success out of their midsize products. There were as many as five players in the mid car segment and just one--the Rs 7‚956-crore Maruti Udyog Ltd (MUL)--in the
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QUESTION 1 Ms. Apple Ang‚ who comes late for work is showing high consistency. This attributes to high internal and low external factors. Internal factors might be due to her attitude or habit while external factors might be due to traffic‚ sick or emergency. Madam May May should find out that is really Miss Apple Ang‘s lateness is due to external cause. This is because‚ sometimes‚ Madam May May may engage in Fundamentals Attribution Error which means underestimate the external factors and overestimate
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Spring 2014 Organizational Behavior MG6013 The exploration of the theories‚ research and practices that allow a better understanding of human behavior in organizations. Topics include motivation and job satisfaction; decision making; group dynamics; work teams; leadership; communication; power‚ politics and conflict; organization culture‚ structure and design; impact of technology; management of work
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Telephone Customer Service Representatives 1. How do you interpret the reliability results for the clerical test and work sample? Are they favorable enough for the company to consider using them “for keeps” in selecting job applicants? A. Clerical Test Coefficient alpha is high (.85‚ .86). This is a positive sign. Test-retest reliability is also high (.92). B. Work Sample (T) Inter-rater agreement is relatively high (88%‚ 79%) C. Work Sample (C) Inter-rater agreement
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Globalization “The Cemex Way” Case Analysis The cement industry and its players made first steps in the direction to Global integration only in the 1970s. It could be seen as somewhat paradoxical‚ because if we apply the matrix of Global Integration and Local Responsiveness pressures to the cement industry‚ we can clearly identify that the industry scores high on most of the factors that should have pushed it to globalization much earlier Factors These factors include large investment
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1 CONSUMER BUYING BEHAVIOUR 3 1.1 Introduction 3 1.2 Types of Consumer Buying Behaviour 3 1.3 The Consumer Buying Decision Process 4 1.4 Personal factors influencing the buying decision process 5 1.5 Psychological factors influencing the buying decision process 6 1.6 Social factors influencing the buying decision process 7 1.7 Understanding consumer behaviour 8 2 ORGANISATIONAL MARKETS AND BUYING BEHAVIOUR 8 2.1 Introduction 8 2.2 Types of organisational markets 8 2.3 Dimensions of organisational
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Explain the place of anonymity in theories of crowd behaviour. Is it always associated with a ‘loss of self’? Crowd behaviour has long been a point of interest for social psychologists. Psychologists have looked at how people exhibit different behaviours when they are part of a crowd. The anonymity of a crowd allows people to assume a mask which permits them to behave in a manner which is untypical for them. This can be demonstrated in both negative and positive roles‚ such as people rioting
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Compare two explanations for criminal behaviour. Crime is simply the behaviour that breaks the law. However‚ as Standen points out‚ “the understanding of what actually constitutes crime varies according to historical‚ cultural and power dimensions which may rule different behaviours as criminal at different times”‚ (n.d‚ p. 1). The most obvious example of this is when the law changes. For example from viewing the list of criminal offences by the Legal Services Commission‚ aiding suicide became
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“A major proportion of deaths could be prevented if people were to change their health-behaviours” Human behaviour plays a central role in the maintenance of health and the prevention of disease. Health-risk behaviour can be defined as any activity undertaken by people with a frequency or intensity that increases risk of disease or injury (Steptoe & Wardle‚ 2004). The health risk behaviours might cluster together into a risky lifestyle. Much of the mortality and morbidity is caused by individual
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SUBMITTED BY‚ DHANUSREE P ROLL NO : 19 MBA(IB) TOPIC How organisational behaviour is related to human resource management. INTRODUCTION In todays competitive world‚ companies have come to recognize that their employees are their most valuable asset. Their profitability and competitiveness depends critically on the skills
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