Seminar Global Marketing Exam Questions from Textbook 1 case Day 1 - World is far from globalized‚ not thaaat many multi-national firms (100‚000 firms) according to the UN Global Marketing Can compare market - How to firms differ in actions (Swiss vs. French‚ etc) - Relationship between business behavior in different countries International Trading Trading firms usually not producers Buy stuff locally‚ sell it internationally - Oil‚ minerals‚ etc - Trading is raw materials‚ product
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Culture Change at Nissan Case Study For Organizational Behavior Course Dr. Rabaa Amr Presented by Nadeen Khedr Marwa El Masry Mohamed Nabhan Culture Change at Nissan Case Study Introduction Nissan is an originally Japanese company that markets both locally and in the UK and USA and is one of the world’s most leading manufacturers of cars. Nissan’s vision is ‘enriching people’s lives’ and the mission statement is ‘Nissan provides unique and innovative automotive products and
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Chapter 15: Turnaround Decision Making at Liz Claiborne Ashley Scott West Georgia Technical College Chapter 15: Turnaround Decision Making at Liz Clairborne Liz Claiborne was once the largest women’s brand on the market. It took less than a decade from the brand being founded to make it into the Fortune 500‚ where it continued to set all kinds of firsts. Even throughout the company’s rough times‚ it always found a way to reinvent itself (Just Style). By 2005‚ the company had grown
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Case Study Harnischfeger Corporation 1. Identify all the accounting policy changes and accounting estimates that Harnischfeger made during 1984. Estimate‚ as accurately as possible‚ the effect of these on the company’s 1984 reported profits. Net sales products purchased overseas and sold by the corporation. Change in the depreciation method. Before 1984 the company conducted accelerated method for its operating plans and after 1984‚ the straight-line method is used (Note 2). As a result‚ this
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QUESTIONS REGARDING THE CASE “WESTJET AIRLINES: THE CULTURE THAT BREEDS A PASSION TO SUCCEED” 1. What is WestJet’s competitive advantage? What are the sources of the competitive advantage? Their main competitive advantages are low prices and exceptional customer service. The low prices can be offered because they offer no meals‚ no frequent fliers and have a very fast turnaround at the gate‚ landed on airports that have low landing fees. in addition to this WestJet’s
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Information systems for managers Case study: Outrigger Hotels and Resort The solution is here… Magic Data The solution is here… Fama NDIAYE Question 1-The current IS resources of Outriggers: 1. Technical Resources: * Hardware(Personal computers; Routing equipment). * Software (Stellex‚ in 1987; Stellex 2.0‚ in 1992; centralized IT systems; E.Piphany; JD Edwards). – Appendix 1 * Networking comportments of IT infrastructure (XML interface; Electronic interface; IBM AS
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maintenance and roadside assistance. Used car inventories are composed of trade ins and off-lease vehicles for sale in March‚ with financing coming in as low as 0.9 percent. Updated CPO offers from mainstream brands such as Chevrolet‚ Ford‚ Hyundai‚ Nissan‚ and Volkswagen‚ highlight March’s deals. Chevrolet’s offer provides 1.9 percent financing on four models‚ including the Equinox compact SUV. Ford’s plan covers all CPO models and supplies 2.9 percent financing. If you’re considering a pre-owned
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The Cornell Company was in Chicago‚ Illinois USA It was the country’s leading manufacturers of special purpose metal fasteners and metal fastening systems Paula Ruiz was the vice president of marketing for the company The problem was regarding the appointment of suitable person as Sales Manager Two leading prospective candidate for the post were: Gordon Price:- a prominent sales rep of Cornell Company Janice Wilson:- sales manager of Electronic instrumentation Company Maintaining
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HKU833 STEPHEN KO AIRASIA: FLYING LOW-COST WITH HIGH HOPES AirAsia started out as a Malaysian government-controlled‚ full-service regional airline that offered slightly lower fares than its number-one competitor‚ Malaysia Airlines (“MAS”). In December 2001‚ private entrepreneur Tony Fernandes took over the debt-ridden airline for the symbolic sum of US$0.26. Despite the air-travel downturn following the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks‚ Fernandes believed that the timing for entering
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CASE 2/ Fiat Chrysler alliance 1/ Strengths and weaknesses of Fiat GM alliance Fiat was close to bankruptcy (no sustainable position) ; GM took 20% and Fiat received a put option ; explain ? Relations deteriorated (operations phase)‚ GM became less interested : Alliance was not equal ; The gross of the company has been different (different cycle and country) ; 2/ Strengths and weaknesses of Chrysler Daimler alliance Merger of equals‚ however Daimler baught Chrysler for bn$ 36 ; isnt’ it surprising
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