trade reform. Globalization has a descriptive component‚ as well as a prescriptive one‚ with the latter more important than the former. The former is simply a factual statement. Over a period of time‚ globalization has increased in importance and countries have become less insular. It is possible to argue that one encountered such globalization also in the 19th century. There are however two differences between earlier phases of globalization and the present one. First‚ the speed of change is faster
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY GLOBAL LOGISTICS AND RISK MANAGEMENT Global supply chain enables companies to expand beyond their domestic markets and expand globally .International supply chain could be viewed as an extension of the domestic supply chain if managed well .There are several forces which determines the success of international supply chain. Global market forces involves pressures and opportunities created by the foreign companies and customers .Overseas business sometimes is a defensive mechanism
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Managing Global Expansion: A Conceptual Framework. Business Horizons | March 01‚ 2000 | Gupta‚ Anil K.; Govindarajan‚ Vijay | COPYRIGHT 1989 JAI Press‚ Inc. (Hide copyright information)Copyright [pic] There are at least five reasons why the need to become global has ceased to be a discretionary option and become a strategic imperative for virtually any medium-sized to large corporation. 1. The Growth Imperative. Companies have no choice but to persist in a neverending quest for growth if they
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Introducing logistics 1.1 Definition of logistics According to a widespread definition‚ logistics (from the Greek term l´ gos‚ which o means ‘order’‚ or from the French loger‚ which means ‘allocate’) is the discipline that studies the functional activities determining the flow of materials (and of the relative information) in a company‚ from their origin at the suppliers up to delivery of the finished products to the customers and to the post-sales service. The origins of logistics are of a
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MANAGING GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT (continuation) The World Trade Organization (WTO) * Evolved from the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) in 1995. * Functions as the only global organization dealing with the rules of trade among nations. * Has 145 member nations. * Monitors and promotes world trade. Different Types of Global Organizations * Multinational Corporation (MNC) * A firm which maintains operations in multiple countries but manages the operations from
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Managing A Global Team Team 6 In the “Managing a Global Team” case study‚ Greg James is the global manager at Sun Microsystems‚ Inc. who provides companies with complete information technology solutions. He leads a customer implementation team composed of 45 members from India‚ France‚ UAE‚ and the U.S. Greg James assembled this team to solve problems and interact with customers on a global scale‚ with all of the expected benefits of a cultural diverse team. However‚ this hastily assembled
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MGS32015E Global Human Resource Management Spring 2012 MANAGING A GLOBAL TEAM: GREG JAMES AT SUN MICROSYSTEMS‚ INC. Overview of SUN Microsystems Inc. Sun Microsystems I nc. (SUN) provided companies with complete information technology (IT) solutions that included hardware‚ software‚ storage and services. One of Sun ’ s competitive strategies had been to form global teams in order to provide excellent and prompt support to its client at any hour of the day. Greg James is the global manager
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UNIVERSITY OF LA VERNE La Verne‚ California Hollister Co. Business Feasibility Study Bus 581 – Managing in a Global Economy Dr. Omid E. Furutan Group 2 Wenjia Li Li Ji Kun-Yi Lin Hsiang-Yi Liu Xing Long October‚ 2012 Table of content Hollister Co. Business Overview 4 Foreign market expanding motivation 4 Three countries study: Japan‚ Singapore and Hong Kong 6 Japan 6 Singapore 9
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Logistics Information System (LO-LIS) Release 4.6C HELP.LOLIS Logistics Information System (LO-LIS) SAP AG Copyright © Copyright 2001 SAP AG. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or for any purpose without the express permission of SAP AG. The information contained herein may be changed without prior notice. Some software products marketed by SAP AG and its distributors contain proprietary software components of other software
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Managing product returns for reverse logistics This paper provides a framework to manage product returns for reverse logistics. It takes a specific product catalog in India as an example. It utilizes an integrated framework to estimate returns of products. Next step‚ it makes decisions on operations‚ such as disposition‚ location and capacity of facilities. After that‚ take strategic‚ operational and customer service-related constraints into to consideration to give a time horizon for returned
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