Questions: 1. Propose an organizational structure for the IT department that you feel would support the transformation of AgCredit into a process-centric organization. Recognition of business ownership will be vital to the organizational structure. Having the business sign on and join the conversation about IT and related projects will be instrumental. A steering committee will be need to be part of the approval process of all projects is needed to make sure an enterprise view is taken. The
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Andy Chew at Siemens Nixdorf By Group 4 (LM Consulting – Aldo‚ Fanny‚ Jan and Jaya) Siemens Nixdorf Informationsysteme AG * Formed in 1990 by the merger of: Nixdorf Computer AG and Siemens Data Information Services (DIS) division * Business of SNI: Service‚ Solutions (SAP/R3)‚ Product * Products from SNI: PC‚ Mainframes‚ Support services * Largest IT company in Europe once Siemens Nixdorf Informationsysteme AG facing crisis – Losses continue * Losses ever since merger
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SIEMENS: 1. Identify four benefits to Siemens of its in-depth training and development of workers. Ans. Training refers to increasing the knowledge‚ skills and attitude of employees or extending those the employees already have. Siemens as the top three electrical and electronic companies has been running various effective training programs for their employees in order to build a strong work force and thus contribute better services to the society. In order to do that‚ they are providing their
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Unqualified Audit Report An opinion is said to be unqualified when the Auditor concludes that the Financial Statements give a true and fair view in accordance with the financial reporting framework used for the preparation and presentation of the Financial Statements. An Auditor gives a clean opinion or Unqualified Opinion when he or she does not have any significant reservation in respect of matters contained in the Financial Statements. The most frequent type of report is referred to as the "Unqualified
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The case study of Siemens’simple structure-not Question 1 Based on the case’s description‚ Siemens has a long history. It means that it took for a long time to form the current structure. It is truly global company offering a portfolio of technological solutions in the areas of water‚ energy‚ environment‚ healthcare‚ productivity‚ mobility‚ safe and security. The changing is a big revolution which involves the many departments. The issue of departmentalization is a key consideration in any restructure
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electronic gadget for the first time. There is absolutely no question that consumer technology sparks imagination like nothing else. The Consumer-Electronics industry is the world of entertainment‚ communication and office products. Currently‚ the global consumer electronics industry is dominated by the South Korean‚ Japanese and American companies. One of these South Korean companies is LG Electronics Inc. Originally being established in 1958‚ LG Group is the merger of two Korean companies‚ Lucky
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CASE: SM-153 DATE: 08/08/06 SAP AG IN 2006: DRIVING CORPORATE TRANSFORMATION Success can be seductive. It can trick us into focusing too rigidly on long-established patterns of thought. That’s why it is often so tempting to recycle yesterday’s ideas to form the guidelines and dogmas of tomorrow. I hope that we can use the right vision and strategy to avoid this trap. ⎯Henning Kagermann‚ CEO‚ SAP AG INTRODUCTION On a windy April evening in Walldorf‚ Germany‚ Henning Kagermann took a sip of his tea
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Index Introduction: A network that covers a broad area (i.e.‚ any telecommunications network that links across metropolitan‚ regional‚ national or international boundaries) using leased telecommunication lines. Related terms for other types of networks are personal area networks (PANs)‚ local area networks(LANs)‚ campus area networks (CANs)‚ or metropolitan area networks (MANs) which are usually limited to a room‚ building‚ campus or specific metropolitan area (e.g.‚ a city) respectively
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1) What explains the high level of corruption at Siemens was how it was legal at one point in time to offer bribes‚ but once the law changed‚ Siemens continued to do brides that was once legal but now illegal. Also‚ when the company continued bribery‚ Siemens transferred money into a hard-to-trace bank in Switzerland to protect their business and help them win contracts. Managers rationalized it as the bribes being useful money‚ but in a way they were still making profit‚ and bribes were used as
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SCANDAL IN SIEMENS (2006) In November 2006‚ Siemens company the Germany’s industrial giant had been involved in the largest bribery scandal that Germany had never experienced before. Managers used to secure abroad contracts by paying bribes to their clients. Is this an unethical behaviour or just a way to make profits for their company as they pretend that they didn’t make any personal gain? Is this behaviour could be considered as a sort of lobbying? What are the lessons Siemens had learned
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