Annual Report 2011 The LEGO Group FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS Financial Highlights The LEGO Group (mDKK) 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 18‚731 (13‚065) 5‚666 (124) 5‚542 4‚160 16‚014 (10‚899) 4‚973 (84) 4‚889 3‚718 11‚661 (8‚659) 2‚902 (15) 2‚887 2‚204 9‚526 (7‚522) 2‚100 (248) 1‚852 1‚352 8‚027 (6‚556) 1‚449 (35) 1‚414 1‚028 12‚904 6‚975 5‚929 10‚972 5‚473 5‚499 7‚788 3‚291 4‚497 6‚496 2‚066 4‚430 6‚009 1‚679 4‚330 3
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There are about 915 million ways to combine six LEGO® bricks . But how many ways are there to keep a company on the right track? Kjeld Kirk Kristiansen‚ current owner of the LEGO Group‚ was faced with this question in 2004. On the surface it did not become known that LEGO was in trouble in those days. The small bricks were welcome all over the world and the British Association of Toy Retailers joined Fortune magazine in naming the company’s classic bricks the toy of the century. But the fifth-largest
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Strategic Analysis of the 2004 LEGO Group Crisis Abstract LEGO Group is a worldwide‚ well-known toy manufacturing company. In 2004‚ the company was faced with a major financial crisis and a major decision to make. Do they try to save the business or not? Through strategic analysis of the company’s external and internal environments‚ many contributing factors became evident. External Analysis The external environment facing LEGO “consists of many external conditions and forces that have the potential
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entire Arctic ecosystem by exacerbating the melting of the ice caps and releasing toxins into the environment that would be difficult to clean (“The Dangers”). Ultimately they won by attacking Shell’s highly-credible and well-liked partner‚ Lego‚ in hopes that if Lego would turn against them‚ so would Lego’s supporters. The advertisement Greenpeace created for this purpose was the emotionally-striking piece‚ “Everything is Not Awesome‚” whose development team was particularly successful in creating an
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1- HISTORY OF LEGO I will be responsible for starting the presentation. In my part‚ I will begin by introducing the group’s members and saying what everyone is going to talk about. Secondly‚ I will begin by introducing our partners in LEGO to have a global information of the company‚ short but clear. I will talk about the history of the company‚ beginning‚ growth‚ expansion and current affairs. Later I’ll do a little description of their products‚ kind of them‚ why kids likes them‚ what
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Discussion Questions for “LEGO” 1. What led the LEGO group to the edge of bankruptcy by 2004? Please focus on the management moves during “the growth period that wasn’t” (1993-98) and “the fix that wasn’t” (1999-2004). 2. Why did Knudstorp’s turnaround strategy work? In your opinion‚ which actions were the most effective? Which actions were the least effective? Be specific. 3. Should LEGO launch the new line of board games? ------------------------
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ENVIRONMENTAL ANALYSIS MICRO - Michael Porter’s Five Forces Analysis 1) Threat of New Entrants: The toy industry is highly competitive. Further‚ the existence of established competitors combined with the need for huge capital investment‚ economies of scale and strong distribution network; keep the threat of new entrants into the traditional games industry is relatively low. 2) Threat of Substitutes: The highest pressure faced by Lego comes from substitutes. A substitute is anything which competes
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Jessy LEGO Group‚ 28‚ Jalan Senget‚ 10350 Kuala Lumpur. Dear Ms. Jessy‚ Enclosed is a report detailing the preparation steps needed to do before launching the products in the domestic market. As discussed during our meeting‚ I have also made recommendations tailored specially to your business’s need. The report provides background to the company and industry as well. Benefit and features of the product lines are also briefly explained. The report also provides in-depth analysis on the external
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STEPS TO LEGO GROUP FINANCIAL TURNAROUND Easy‚ Fast & Quick Results EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Rivkin‚ Thomke and Beyersdorfer (2013) suggested in 2004‚ the market size of the toy industry is worth $61% billion in the wholesales revenue‚ with a steady growth of 4% per year in the retail market for toys. Thousands of toymakers flourish the market to serve global demand while keeping track of the 3 new trends in the industry which are toys demand rise while product life cycles decline‚ children has less
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LEGO: Building for the future A Comprehensive Case Abrar Ahmad Shakeel Anjum Ali Qurashi Group Members Khuram Shahzad Fahad Insha Figure Outline Introduction Situation Analysis Problem Identification (Main & Sub) We will be approaching this case by first analyzing situation broadly and then narrowing down our focus right to the problem and conclusion stage Alternative Development Evaluation Selection Implementa tion Recomm endation Time Of Case •Year 1999
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