STRATEGY MEMO SITUATION: LAUNCH OF TOYOTA PRIUS – WORLD’S FIRST HYBRID CAR BPSM PGDM: 2009-11 TEAM: A9‚ MICHAEL PORTER MEMBERS: 9020: KASTURAY ADITYA MANOHAR 9025: MOLKANTI PARIMAL 9036: PURNA CHANDRA SHEKAR 9076: GOKUL KRISHNAN B V 9100: ROHIT N 9103: SANTHOSH K.S. SUBMITTED TO: Prof. GOVINDA SHARMA DATE: 27-JULY-2010 Table of Contents COMPANY DESCRIPTION 3 Toyota: History and Growth 3 Toyota Mission 5 McKinsey 7S Model for Toyota 6 THE ENVIRONMENT ANALYSIS OF JAPAN
Premium Toyota Plug-in hybrid Hybrid electric vehicle
• INTRODUCTION Toyota Motor Corporation (TMC) origin in Japan is the largest world’s largest auto manufacturer‚ offering a full range of models. Toyota has International presence in 170 countries and employs over 3‚15‚000 employees worldwide. It has Lexus‚ Daihatsu and Hino sub brands under its ownership. Toyota manufactured around 9 million vehicles in the year 2008 including these sub brands. TOYOTA AS A BRAND: The positioning of a brand is done keeping in mind where the company wants the
Premium
Seat Problems In early 1992‚ TMM became the sole source of new Camry wagons with more than 41 seat variations exported over the world. Doug Friesen‚ manager of assembly for TMM‚ confronted seat problems resulting in drop of run ratio (production level) and in increase of overtime works‚ lead- time and off-line vehicle inventory. Assumptions First‚ reduction of seat variance is not considered as an alternative because Doug is a manager of assembly without control over sales decisions. Second
Premium Problem solving Car seat Assembly line
how the macro environment impacts upon industries 1. Introduction To answer this question‚ I will use Toyota as an example of an automotible industry within South Africa. An industry can be defined as a group of companies that satisfies a specific customer need. 2. Economic forces Since economic forces can change the health of the economy‚ they also have a direct impact on the broader industrial competitive environment. The four most important of these forces are: • the growth rate
Premium Inflation International trade Economics
Compared Study‚ of the cultural organization‚ of Toyota and Ford. Advantages and Disadvantages. Executive Summary We can see two different corporations in the automobile industries with different culture and different results. In these pages we can see five points 1.Guidance Management‚ 2.Alignment Leadership‚ 3. Decision Making‚ 4. Responsibility for the Problems and 5. Entrepreneurship‚ in each corporation
Premium Ford Motor Company Corporation Leadership
Chapter- One Renaissance: Automobile Industry 1.1 Introduction There was a time in India when the portly Ambassador was India’s most coveted and popular car. The Indian car buyer had to wait for months on end and even years before he could lay his hands on an ambassador or a Fiat Padmini which was usually handed over by nonchalant‚ supercilious salesmen. It was the Maruti 800‚ a product of the Japanese car giant Suzuki collaborating
Premium Maruti Suzuki Suzuki Automobile industry in India
Toyota Motor Manufacturing‚ USA‚ Inc. Problem Definition: Deficiency in matching with the Seat Variations requirements Possible Causes: There were 23 Sedan & Wagon Models‚ 11 exterior colors‚ 29 interior variations & 30 other options like a moonroof. Thus number of possible combination reached several thousands. The challenge for the seat supplier-KFS was to match the seat with the above thousands of combinations. There were around 5 pieces of the same seat and the challenge lied
Premium Lean manufacturing Manufacturing Toyota
Case Study – JIT Failure at Sony Ericsson Once one of the world’s leading cell-phone manufacturers‚ Ericsson knows only too well how painful a disruption in the supply chain can be. It is a story that has become something of a legend in supplychain circles. In March 2000‚ a lightning bolt struck a Philips Electronics semiconductor plant in Albuquerque‚ N.M.‚ triggering a small fire in a chip-processing machine that took the plant offline for months. Although the plant was Ericsson’s sole supplier
Premium Management Supply chain Supply chain management
A Brief Understanding of IBS ‐‐A Case Study of Toyota A Brief Understanding of International Business Strategy --A Case Study of Toyota by Peter LIU‚ peterliu@acculine‐mfg.com MSc International Business P14B45 International Business Strategy Lecturer: Dr Yee Kwan Tang Sponsored by 10 May 2010 Acculine Precision Manufacturing Company Tel: 0086-574-28887315‚ Fax: 0086-574-28875303‚ Web: www.acculine-mfg.com‚ email: info@acculine-mfg.com A Brief Understanding of IBS --A Case Study
Premium Automotive industry The Toyota Way International trade
About Toyota For more than 50 years‚ Toyota Motor Corporation has been one of the world’s leading manufacturers of motor vehicles in the United States. It was born a Japanese company in 1935 and came to America in 1957. Now headquartered in Toyota City‚ Japan‚ it employs more than 300 thousand employees globally (Toyota Motor Corporation Company Profile‚ 2012). In addition Toyota is a global marketing organization. It strategically operates primarily through Japan‚ Asia‚ Europe‚ and North America;
Premium Toyota Toyota Production System