Vertical Integration vs. Outsourcing “Following the Crowd” Collaboration issues in an SCM context Table of Content 1. Thesis and Introduction 1.1 Thesis 1.2 Purpose 1.3 Introduction into the topic 2. Logical Problems and Sub-questions 3. Methodology and Justification of Sections 4. Literature Review 4.1 Literature Concerning the Terminology 4.2 Literature Concerning the Main Theories of Outsourcing and Vertical Integration and the Examples
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Knowledge Management Group 4: Others Miscellaneous‚ Other Qualitative Criteria 1. Long term relationship potential 2. Research and Development 3. Training approach 4. Implementation/Education/Change Management Methodology 5. Understanding Harley?s requirement 6. Enabling the SMS 7. Out of the box fit 8. Financial Viability 9. Cost 10. Technical Support Offerings 11. Overall functionality 12. Number of partners included in Solution Proposal 13. Architecture Compatibility 14.
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Strategic Management and Policy Case Study of Harley-Davidson‚ Inc. August 19‚ 2006 Introduction In 1903‚ a legendary motorcycle company was formed when William S. Harley and the Davidson brothers‚ William D.‚ Arthur and Walter‚ handcrafted their first three motorcycles. In 1909‚ Harley-Davidson introduced the first V-Twin engine‚ which is still the company standard to this day. From 1917-1918‚ the company supplied 20‚000 motorcycles for the military during World War I‚ and during this time
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general public an expanding line of motorcycles‚ branded products and services in selected market segments Vision Statement “Harley-Davidson is an action-oriented‚ international company‚ a leader in its commitment to continuously improve [its] mutually beneficial relationships with stakeholders (customers‚ suppliers‚ employees‚ shareholders‚ Government‚ and society). Harley-Davidson believes the key to success is to balance stakeholders’ interests through the empowerment of all employees to focus on value-added
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The video case “Harley Davidson: More Than Just a Motorcycle” briefly explains how the company Harley Davidson‚ was able to reshape‚ recreate and expand their products while also encouraging‚ enlightening‚ and mentoring both female and male customers at the same time for the past 100 years. The Harley-Davidson company creates and designs motorcycles fit for any and everybody. Although the company uses special marketing variables in trying to reach a specific target market‚ they do not limit their
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Case Study: Vertical Integration and the Effect on the Travel and Tourism Industry When two similar companies such as two hotels‚ are offering very similar products and are in a strong competing situation‚ integration is a popular move. It can be a voluntary decision by both companies or it can be the take-over of one company by another. Benefits include greater sales‚ which result in larger revenue and expansion opportunities. Complimentary reasons tend to be the realisation that one hotel offers
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Specialization The definition of specialization is‚ “the degree to which organizational tasks are subdivided into separate jobs” (Daft‚ 2013). Perdue Farms uses vertical integration in its management of tasks. “As a vertically integrated agribusiness‚ the company is able to ensure quality at every step in the supply chain” (Perdue Inc.‚ 2008). Perdue breeds and hatches all of its eggs‚ hand-picks their growers‚ designs/builds chicken houses based on individual engineering formulates and manufactures
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The purpose of vertical integration is to expand a business operation with different steps on the same production path. Although it may be considered a strategic business move for some corporations‚ vertical integration tends to raise costs of supplies and products. For the vet industry in particular‚ pharmaceutical medicines and vet supplies are becoming more expensive
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1. Oil companies do not allow dealers (franchisees) to buy gas from distributors. Dealers must buy gas from the central oil company. Dealers often complain that this is unfair. The practice has been the subject of antitrust lawsuits. Oil company executives argue that this policy is important because it limits free-riding on the part of the distributors. Explain the executives’ arguments in more detail. The Oil Company executives argue that allowing dealers to buy gas from distributors would be
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Recommendations: 1.Harley-Davidson should continue to sponsor HOG‚ and the Posse Rides. 2.More resources should be spent on the Posse Rides to meet the rising expectations of participants. 3.Dealerships should be more integrated into the Posse Rides. 4.The Posse Rides should not be seen as direct profit centers. Reasoning: 1.HOG has been phenomenally successful at attracting members and chapters. From nothing in 1983 it has grown to half a million members in 1‚160 chapters. This is the core of Harley-Davidson’s
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