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A functional strategy that deals with pricing, selling, and distributing a product. |
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A marketing functional strategy in which a company or business unit captures a larger share of an existing market or current products through market penetration or develops new markets for current products. |
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A marketing strategy in which a company or unit develops new products for existing markets or develops new products for new markets. |
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A functional strategy to make the best use of corporate monetary assets. |
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An acquisition in which a company is acquired in a transaction financed largely by debt - usually obtained from a third party, such as an insurance company or an investment banker. |
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A functional strategy to make the best use of corporate monetary assets. |
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A functional strategy that determines how and where a product or service is to be manufactured, the level of vertical integration in the production process, and the deployment of physical resources. |
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A functional strategy that deals with obtaining the raw materials, parts, and supplies needed to perform the operations functions. |
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A functional strategy that deals with the flow of products into and out of the manufacturing process. |
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HRM Strategy (Human Resources Management Strategy) |
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A functional strategy that uses information systems technology to provide competitive advantage. |
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Information Technology Strategy |
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A functional strategy that uses information systems technology to provide competitive advantage. |
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A process in which resources are purchased from others through long-term contracts instead of being made within the company. |
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The outsourcing of an activity or function to a provider in another country. |
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Follow the Leader
Hit Another Home Run
Arms Race
Do Everything
Losing Hand |
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Imitating a leading competitor's strategy might seem to be a good idea, but it ignores a firm's particular strentghs and wekanesses and the possibility that the leader may be wrong. |
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If a company is successful because it pioneered an extremely successful product, it tends to search for another super product that will ensure growth and prosperity. |
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Entering into a spirited battle with another firm fro increased market share might increases sales revenue but that increase will probably be more than onset by increase in advertising, promotion, R&D, and manufacturing costs. |
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When faced with several interesting opportunities, management might tend to leap at all of them. |
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A corporation might have invested so much in a particular strategy that top management is unwilling to accept its failure. |
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A statement of the activities or steps needed to accomplish a single-use plan I strategy implementation. |
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A statement of a corporation's program in terms of money required. |
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A list of sequential steps that describe in detail how a particular task or job is to be done. |
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A concept that states that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts; that two units will achieve more together than they could separately. |
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Shared Know How
Coordinated Strategies
Shared Tangible Resources
Economies of Scale or Scope
Pooled Negotiating Power
New Business Creation |
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Combined units often benefit from sharing knowledge or skills, a leveraging of core competencies. |
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Aligning the business strategies of two or more business units may provide a corporation significant advantage by deducing the inter-unit competition and developing a coordinated response to common competitors (horizontal strategy). |
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Shared Tangible Resources |
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Combined units can sometimes save money by sharing resources, such as common manufacturing facility or R&D lab. |
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Economies of Scale or Scope |
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Coordinating the flow of products or services of one unit with that of another unit can reduce inventory, increasing capacity utilization, and improve market access. |
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Combined units can combine their purchasing to gain bargaining power over common suppliers to reduce costs and improve quality. |
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Exchanging knowledge and skills can facilitate new products or services by extracting discrete activities to various units and combining them in a new unit or by establishing joint ventures among internal units. |
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A structure for new entrepreneurial firm in which the employees tend to be generalists and jack-of-all-trades. |
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An organizational structure in which employees tend to be specialists in the business functions important to that industry, such as manufacturing, sales, or finance. |
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An organizational structure in which employees tend to be functional specialists organized according to product/market distinctions. |
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A structure in which functional and product forms are combined simultaneously at the same level of the organization. |
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An organization (virtual organization) that outsources most of its business functions. |
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An organizational structure that is composed of a series of project groups or collaborations linked by changing nonhierarchical, cobweb-like networks. |
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The radical redesign of business proceses to achieve major gains in cost, service, or time. |
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A statistically based program developed to identify and improve a poorly performing process. |
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The design of individual task in an attempt to make them more relevant to the company and more motivating to the employee. |
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Combining tasks to give a worker more of the same type of duties to perform. |
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Moving workers through several jobs to increase variety |
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Altering jobs by giving the worker more autonomy and control over activities. |
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The process of grooming and replacing key top managerment. |
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Planned elimination of positions or jobs |
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A process that involves a relatively balanced give and take of cultural and managerial practives between merger partners, with no strong impositions of cultural change on either company. |
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A strategy that involves the domination of one corporate culture over another. |
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A method of managing the culture of an acquired firm in which the two companies are structurally divided, without cultural exchange. |
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The disintegration of one company's culture resulting from unwanted and extreme pressure from another to impose its culture and practices. |
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MBO (Management By Objective) |
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An organization wide appraoch ensuring purposeful action toward mutually agreed upon objectives. |
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TQM (Total Quality Management) |
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An operational philosophy that is committed to customer satisfaction and continuous improvement. |
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