Case Study : Fighting for the next billion shoppers The eternal battle between Procter & Gamble and Unilever Jun 30th 2012 A TRIP to Paris is not usually a miserable way to celebrate your birthday‚ but so it was this year for Bob McDonald. On June 20th‚ as he turned 59‚ the chief executive of Procter & Gamble (P&G) for the past three years gave a faltering and apologetic speech at a conference there hosted by Deutsche Bank‚ in which he predicted lower-than-expected profits in the coming
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What strategy was Unilever pursuing before its early 1990s reorganization? What kind of structure did the company have? Were Unilever’s strategy and structure consistent with each other? What were the benefits of this strategy and structure? What were the drawbacks? For decades‚ Unilever managed its worldwide detergents activities in an arm’s length manner. A subsidiary was set up in each major national market and allowed to operate largely autonomously‚ with each subsidiary carrying out the
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Transaction analysis Problem # 1 Mr. Abul operates premium service‚ which has the following assets: Cash tk. 40‚000‚ supplies tk. 2‚000‚ delivery van tk. 30‚000 and truck tk. 60‚000. The business owes tk. 12‚000 for supplies previously purchased. The following transactions occur in the month of March 2004: March 01: Paid office rent for 3 month’s advance tk. 6‚000. 02: Purchased delivery van for cash tk. 20‚000. 04: Purchased supplies on account tk. 2‚500.
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Discussion 4 IV. Analysis 7 SWOT Analysis V. Conclusion 12 VI. References 13 VII. Appendix 15 12 principles by the Responsible Sourcing Policy 5 Levers for change Global Reporting Initiative G3 Index Millenium Development Goals Table of Figures Figure 1 - Unilever ’s Sustainable Living Plan with turnovers from 2009‚ 2010* and 2020** 3 Figure 2 - Unilever ’s Greenhouse Gas Footprint 5 Figure 3 - Leaders in sustainability‚ % of analysts polled 6 Figure 4 - Kraljic ’s Matrix of Unilever ’s Supply Positioning
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REVIEW OF ARTICLE USING EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENTAL SCANNING AND FORECASTING TO IMPROVE STRATEGIS PLANNING BY Joel D. Lapin The Community College of Baltimore County Journal of Applied Research in the Community College‚ Vol.11‚ No.2‚ Spring 2004‚ pg 105-113 Joel D. Lapin is a professor of Sociology at The Community College of Baltimore County (Maryland)‚ Catonsville Campus‚ and Vice President and lead consultant in external environmental scanning and forecasting for The Clements Group which
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Management Planning 168 CHAPTER 20 numbers and categories of suitable employees to undertake the task of producing the organisation’s goods or services to the standards expected by the end-users. Even organisations that rarely plan far ahead usually have to make some assessment of their present employee situation‚ so as to ensure that an appropriate range of skills is available for all the mainstream activities of the organisation. This chapter assumes that a systematic and planned view of
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Unilever and P&G – Comparative Analysis Executive Summary The Consumer Products Industry is the biggest industry in the world at the moment‚ with total revenues amounting to about 50% of all goods sold. It is comparable to the GDP of the 4th biggest economy in the world‚ and entails most of the products we use in our every day lives. There are 3 key factors that drive the industry today: developing markets‚ the emerging middle-class of developing countries and the millions of baby boomers in
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Draft Rationale Statement. Raven Investment Consultants has selected two stocks that would be excellent additions to your investment portfolio. Firstly we recommend Unilever a multinational food company‚ which has known growth in both revenue and volume in the third quarter thanks to strong demand from emerging markets‚ respectively a sales growth of 6 percent and a volume growth of 3.4 percent. The stock was the strongest climber on the Amsterdam Exchange Index. These results are largely due
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Hindustan Unilever Ltd: The Wheel Saga MM I Individual Assignment 1. Based on the case study above‚ critically examine HUL’s Marketing strategy (STP) for Wheel since its inception and the reasons for the success of the brand. The core reason of the introduction of the “Wheel” brand from the Hindustan Unilever Pvt. Ltd. (HUL) was to damage control the loss of market share due to the short-sightedness and the complacent attitude of the senior level managers to the potential of low income
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Q2. What was the motivation for the Shakti initiative? Was it a CSR activity? SHAKTI is HUL’s sales and distribution initiative that combines social responsibility‚ sustainability‚ and business strategy. India has more than 6‚ 30‚000 villages‚ most of these are ’hard to reach’ and offer relatively lower business potential. Hence‚ reaching them through the conventional distribution system is a challenge. By promoting micro-enterprises‚ HUL’s initiative not only made great business sense‚ but
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