00% Tutor J Whiteley Submission Deadline 25/11/2013 Coursework is receipted on the understanding that it is the student’s own work and that it has not‚ in whole or part‚ been presented elsewhere for assessment. Where material has been used from other sources it has been properly acknowledged in accordance with the University’s Regulations regarding Cheating and Plagiarism. 000718551 Tutor’s comments Grade
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ZARA IT for Fast Fashion ( Case Analysis) 1) Please describe three most important competitive advantages of ZARA (Inditex) over its main competitor. How sustainable is this advantage? 2) Assume that ZARA is considering to enter the US market. Please recommend actions for ZARA. Please make clear assumptions when necessary. After reading and analyzing the Zara case we came several conclusions when it comes to Zara’s competitive advantage over its competitors. We understood that Zara is using
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The Business Model of FACEBOOK Business model is the mechanism by which a business intends to generate revenue and profits. It is a summary of how a company plans to serve its customers. It involves both strategy and implementation. It is the totality of: • How it will select its customers • How it defines and differentiates its product offerings • How it creates utility for its customers • How it acquires and keeps customers • How it goes to the market (promotion strategy and distribution
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Case Study: Zara-Fast Fashion Case Summary: Inditex is the parent company of six different apparel retailing chains that includes Massimo Dutti‚ Pull and Bear‚ Bershka‚ Stradivarius‚ Oysho‚ and‚ most importantly‚ Zara. Zara has historically been the most profitable of the chains‚ operating 282 stores in 32 countries at the end of 2001 (Ghemawat & Nueno‚ 2006). The other five chains that are operated by Inditex have not matched the growth capabilities or revenue of Zara. Zara’s apparel offers
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The NFL’s Current Business Model and the Potential 2011 Lockout Jake I. Fisher Economics 1630: The Economics of Sports and Entertainment Professor Stanley Engerman May 4‚ 2010 1 Introduction In March 2010‚ Roger Goodell‚ the Commissioner of the National Football League (NFL)‚ announced an aggressive goal for his business: $25 billion in yearly revenue by 2027.1 To put that figure in perspective‚ the countries of Panama‚ Jordan‚ Ghana‚ and Iceland all had nominal GDPs less than $25 billion
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Describe the business using the BMC • Customer segments From the map above‚ the organisation can focus on their customers’ area‚ which is mass markets model for customer segments. Groupon Company (2013) states that we have 39.5 million customers in the world‚ and they also will recommend friends and family to join in Groupon deal activities. Therefore‚ the public who includes women‚ student and singles will create a lager number of value for this organisation. Furthermore‚ Gil (2013) claims
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apply to different conditions and measurement standards‚ the new standard AASB 9 simplify the classification and measurement of financial assets base on two categories: the objective of the entity’s business model for managing the financial assets; and the characteristics of the contractual cash flow. Under AASB 9‚ the entity’s business model for managing the financial assets is a new accounting concept‚ which applying to classify the financial instruments. The evaluation of this model is based
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1. What does it take to succeed in the global apparel industry? Is that different from what it takes a regional player to succeed? 2. What elements of Zara’s value chain help/hurt its ability to grow? Do you think Zara should grow 3. How would you advise Salgado to proceed on the issue of upgrading Zara’s POS systems? Intro - Inditex (Industria de Diseño Textil) of Spain‚ the owner of Zara and five other apparel retailing chains * Global Apparel Chain - Characterized as a prototypical
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1 – Explain the LinkedIn Business Model LinkedIn follows a platform model; multiple parties perform transactions across the linkedin.com site. The three-sided market is made up of (1) Companies (recruiters‚ HR‚ employment agencies) (2) Advertisers and (3) Job Placement (job seekers‚ professional groups). LinkedIn’s model exemplifies a virtuous cycle feedback loop as its user base grows. It attracted users by providing free (subsidized) tool to individual users (not recruiters or advertisers)
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CASE STUDY Zara The case describes how Zara‚ operating out of the Galician port of La Coruña in north-west Spain has managed to become a benchmark for speed and flexibility in the garment industry. The case offers an illustration of a fast-response global supply‚ production and retail network. In 2003 Zara was the only retailer that could deliver garments to its stores worldwide (507 in 33 countries) in just fifteen days after they were designed. It could do that because of its unique systems
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