soru |
cevap |
Disclosure limit of shareholding for financial statement in the UK. öğrenmeye başla
|
|
|
|
|
öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Strategic drift can be defined as a gradual deterioration of competitive action that results in the failure of an organization to acknowledge and respond to changes in the business environment. Homogeneous mindset at managerial and board levels.
|
|
|
Key factor to consider in PESTEL – political öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Changes to government policy
|
|
|
Key factor to consider in PESTEL – economic öğrenmeye başla
|
|
|
|
|
Key factor to consider in PESTEL – social öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Changes to taste and fashion
|
|
|
Key factor to consider in PESTEL – technological öğrenmeye başla
|
|
New hardware and software capabilities.
|
|
|
Key factor to consider in PESTEL – environmental 2 öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Geographic location.| Use of resources.
|
|
|
Key factor to consider in PESTEL – legal öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Restriction or extra regulations
|
|
|
What instrument is used to analyse potential impacts on future growth? It identifies the main drivers in the external environment. öğrenmeye başla
|
|
|
|
|
What instrument is used to analyse potential impacts of future margins? öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Porter's 5 Forces analysis.
|
|
|
What instrument is used to analyse potential new foreign markets for expansion? öğrenmeye başla
|
|
|
|
|
What instrument is used to analyse the ability to cope with changes in the external environment? öğrenmeye başla
|
|
|
|
|
What instrument is used to determine the source of competitive advantage or disadvantage? öğrenmeye başla
|
|
|
|
|
What instrument is used to bring together the internal and external analysis in order to understand overall strategic position? öğrenmeye başla
|
|
|
|
|
Porter’s diamond factor conditions examples öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Basic factors: weather, local raw materials. Advanced: telecommunications, education system.
|
|
|
öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Strategic Focus (Leadership, Management, Planning); People (Personnel, Staff, Learning, Development); Operations (Processes, Work); Marketing (Customer Relations, Sales, Responsiveness); Finances (Assets, Facilities, Equipment).
|
|
|
öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Human Resources Management
|
|
|
öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Continuing professional development
|
|
|
What is an Organisational Profile in case of Baldrige performance excellence? öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Relationships, Environment, Challenges.
|
|
|
2 [Competitive strategy] öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Finding cheaper alternatives | Eliminating all waste.
|
|
|
2 [Competitive strategy ] öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Changes in buyer preferences | Loss of barriers to entry.
|
|
|
3 [Competitive strategy] öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Economies of scale | A focus on cost reduction | Eliminating all wastes
|
|
|
[Competitive strategy] öğrenmeye başla
|
|
e.g. international
|
|
|
3 [Competitive strategy] öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Economies of scale | Branding | Service levels.
|
|
|
3 [Competitive strategy] öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Loss of brand | Difficult to achieve | Target for all rivals
|
|
|
3 [Competitive strategy] öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Innovation | Branding | Marketing.
|
|
|
Differentiation key threats: 2 [Competitive strategy ] öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Being copied by rivals. || New technology.
|
|
|
Focused differentiation CSFs 2 [Competitive strategy ] öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Market knowledge | Unique products and services.
|
|
|
Focused differentiation key threats: 3 [Competitive strategy ] öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Recession | Small market size | Few barriers
|
|
|
Existing product and existing market. (growth strategy) öğrenmeye başla
|
|
|
|
|
Market penetration best use when...? 2 öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Best used when market is growing | Introduce a new or improved product
|
|
|
Market penetration risks: 2 öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Competitors will react | Can lead to stagnation.
|
|
|
New product and existing market growth strategy öğrenmeye başla
|
|
|
|
|
Product development is used when we have...? 2 [growth strategy] öğrenmeye başla
|
|
New and improved products | Copy rivals.
|
|
|
Product development risks: 2 [Growth strategy ] öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Unknown demand | Can cannibalise existing products
|
|
|
Existing product and new market. [growth strategy] öğrenmeye başla
|
|
|
|
|
Strategic alliances are often used to...? öğrenmeye başla
|
|
|
|
|
Market development risks: 2 öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Puts a strain on stratigic capabilities. | Need new external analysis.
|
|
|
New product and new market growth strategy öğrenmeye başla
|
|
|
|
|
3 [growth strategy] öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Very different CSFs | Need new external analysis | Can reduce flexibility.
|
|
|
Forward diversification examples: öğrenmeye başla
|
|
A farmer who directly sells his crops at a local grocery rather than to a distribution center that controls the placement of foodstuffs to various supermarkets. Or, a clothing label that opens up its own boutiques, selling its designs directly. Forward integration is a business strategy that involves a form of vertical integration whereby business activities are expanded to include control of the direct distribution or supply of a company's products.
|
|
|
Backward diversification example öğrenmeye başla
|
|
A company might buy their supplier. Companies often complete backward integration by acquiring or merging with these other businesses, but they can also establish their own subsidiary to accomplish the task. BD is a form of vertical integration in which a company expands its role to fulfill tasks formerly completed by businesses up the supply chain. It is when a company buys another company that supplies the products or services needed for production.
|
|
|
Horizontal diversification öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Horizontal diversification is the acquisition of a business operating at the same level of the value chain in the same industry. Procter and Gamble’s 2005 acquisition of Gillette is a good example which realized economies of scope. Because both companies produced hundreds of hygiene-related products the merger reduced the marketing and product development costs per product.
|
|
|
Conglomerate diversification öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Conglomerate diversification is unrelated diversification: the businesses which are joined together have no connection whatsoever. An example would be a supermarket joining with a car manufacturing company. Little or no synergy with its core business or technology.
|
|
|
öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Global Reporting Initiative
|
|
|
Corporate Social Responsibility short definition and goals. 2 öğrenmeye başla
|
|
International private business self-regulation. | Goals of a philanthropic and charitable nature. CSR
|
|
|
öğrenmeye başla
|
|
This is when an executive director of Company A serves as a NED in Company B and, at the same time, an executive director of Company B serves as a NED at Company A. Such a relationship is considered to make the two boards too intimately involved witheach other and potentially reduces the quality of the scrutiny that the two NEDs involved in the cross-directorship can bring.
|
|
|
Environmental footprint accounting öğrenmeye başla
|
|
It measures the demand on and supply of nature. On the demand side, the Ecological Footprint measures the ecological assets that a given population requires to produce the natural resources it consumes (like food). On the supply side, a city, state or nation’s biocapacity represents the productivity of its ecological assets (e.g. cropland). These areas, especially if left unharvested, can also absorb much of the waste we generate, especially carbon emissions.
|
|
|
Organic growth characteristics 3 (development method) öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Popular with employees. | Slow but less risky. | no valuation problem 3) you are not buying goodwill which could be destroyed later or which may never have existed.
|
|
|
Acquisition characteristic öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Useful if you are expanding into another country or product line | You have to pay for goodwil but it is usually difficult to value | There is an asymmetry of information: sellers usually knowing more than buyers. This increases the risk to the buyer.
|
|
|
Leader definition by Buchman and Huczynski: öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Someone who exercises influence over other people.
|
|
|
Leadership traditional definition öğrenmeye başla
|
|
An interpersonal influence directed toward the achievement of goals.
|
|
|
3 keywords from leadership definition: öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Interpersonal | influence | goal
|
|
|
from leadership definition öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Interpersonal means between persons. Thus, a leader has more than one person to lead.
|
|
|
from leadership definition öğrenmeye başla
|
|
The power to affect others.
|
|
|
from leadership definition öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Goal is the end one strives to attain.
|
|
|
Problems with traits theories: öğrenmeye başla
|
|
There will always be counter-arguments - one theorist will say a leader should always be courteous whereas another will say that a rude and effective leader was identified.
|
|
|
Behaviour / style theories: 2 öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Theory focuses on how leaders behave, and assumes that these traits can be copied by other leaders. | It suggests that leaders aren’t born successful, but can be created based on learnable behavior.
|
|
|
Tells (autocratic) management style: öğrenmeye başla
|
|
The manager makes all the decisions and issues instructions which are to be obeyed without question.
|
|
|
Sells (persuasive) management style: öğrenmeye başla
|
|
The manager still makes all the decisions, but believes that team members must be motivated to accept them in order to carry then out properly.
|
|
|
Consults (participative) management style: öğrenmeye başla
|
|
The manager confers with the team and takes their views into account, although still retains the final say.
|
|
|
Joins (democratic) management style: öğrenmeye başla
|
|
The leader and the team members make the decision together on the basis of consensus.
|
|
|
Problems with behavioural theories: öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Unfortunately, as with trait theories, it is possible to find counter examples. E.g. Steve Jobs demonstrating the least effective style (autocratic) but running the largest technology company in the World.
|
|
|
Contingency / contextual theories: öğrenmeye başla
|
|
The modern consensus is that there is no one best style of leadership that is equally effective for all circumstances. | A theory that is a mixture of both trait and behavioural is the situational approach.
|
|
|
What instrument it is used to respond a risk? öğrenmeye başla
|
|
|
|
|
3 öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Insurance. | Outsource operations. | Joint ventures (partial transferring).
|
|
|
TARA framework öğrenmeye başla
|
|
The risk has been assessed as being so serious that all possibility of the event occurring should be avoided.
|
|
|
risk response – Reduce. Give one example. TARA framework öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Take steps to mitigate the risk. For example, instead of installing a new computer system in every branch over one weekend, run a pilot operation then gradually extend.
|
|
|
TARA framework öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Don’t do anything about the risk. It’s just part of everyday business.
|
|
|
öğrenmeye başla
|
|
To oversee the appointment and remuneration of executive directors.
|
|
|
Join venture, Strategic Alliance, Partnering characteristic 3 öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Share skills | and costs | but difficult to agree.
|
|
|
3; [BGC matrix] öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Strong position in a low growth (therefore unattractive) market. | Little threat from rivals. | Just keep the product ticking over and collect the cash.
|
|
|
öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Tells us the highest acceptable cost of capital.
|
|
|
öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Relies on a cost of capital estimate.
|
|
|
Payback period key disadvantage: öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Requires a target or benchmark.
|
|
|
öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Profits are easily manipulated.
|
|
|
öğrenmeye başla
|
|
It is not useful for comparing projects.
|
|
|
Dealing with risk in decision making. An expected value summarises all the different possible outcomes by calculating a...? öğrenmeye başla
|
|
_a single weighted average It is the long run average (though not necessarily the most likely result).
|
|
|
Complicated scenarios in dealing with risk in decision making could be represented as...? öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Decision trees force the decision maker to consider the logical sequence of events.
|
|
|
Key limitations in dealing with risk in decision making: 3 öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Useful only for one-off decisions. | Based on subjective information. | Ignores attitudes to risk.
|
|
|
Who is the ultimate principal in the public organizations? öğrenmeye başla
|
|
2. e.g. Railway passengers.
|
|
|
Ultimate difference between CEO and chairman. 2 öğrenmeye başla
|
|
The chairman has the ultimate role of leading the board, | whilst the CEO leads the business.
|
|
|
unimportant öğrenmeye başla
|
|
Working with lower costs to make more profit. The usual way is to employ fewer staff by making staff redundant.
|
|
|
The distinction between CSR strategy and strategic CSR with examples. öğrenmeye başla
|
|
CSR strategy is to have set of policies which guide CSR activities. | E.g. a company might have a policy to invest in some particular communities. | Strategic CSR is when company support the main business areas. | Bank might favour financial education. It would be seen as strategically wasteful to use CSR to support activities which are not aligned to the core activities.
|
|
|
Environmental risk example: öğrenmeye başla
|
|
the release of dangerous chemicals into the local river.
|
|
|
öğrenmeye başla
|
|
a competitor launches a fantastic product.
|
|
|
öğrenmeye başla
|
|
you launch a poor product
|
|
|
öğrenmeye başla
|
|
interest rates being increased so that consumer demand is suppressed.
|
|
|
öğrenmeye başla
|
|
the supply and price of raw materials change adversely.
|
|
|
Political, cultural and legal risk example: öğrenmeye başla
|
|
becoming illegal or unpopular
|
|
|
öğrenmeye başla
|
|
you are exporting and the buyer’s currency weakens before you are paid.
|
|
|
öğrenmeye başla
|
|
subsidiary is bought but it turns out that it isn’t as good as you thought it would be.
|
|
|
Remuneration committee öğrenmeye başla
|
|
|
|
|