CASE STUDY ANSWER FOR ISMS EXAM
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Master Program in Business Administration (MBA)
Note :- Solve any 4 Case Study
All Case
Carry equal Marks.
CASE I
Sunder Singh
Sunder Singh had studied only up to high school. He was
32-years of age, lived alone in a rented room, and worked eight-hour shift at
one petrol pump, then went to the other one for another eight-hour shift. He
had a girl friend and was planning to marry.
One day when he returned from work, he got a note from his
girl friend that she was getting married to someone else and he need not bother
her. This was a terrible shock to Sunder Singh and he fell apart. He stopped
going to work, spent sleepless nights, and was very depressed. After a month,
he was running Iowan his savings and approached his earlier employers to get
back his job, but they would not give him a second chance. He had to quit his
rented room, and sold few things that he had. He would do some odd jobs at the
railway station or the bus terminal.
One day, nearly two years ago, he was very hungry and did
not have any money and saw a young man selling newspapers. He asked him what he
was selling and he told him about Guzara (an independent, non-profit,
independent newspaper sold by the homeless, and economically disadvantaged men
and women of this metro city). Sunder Singh approached the office and started
selling the newspaper. He did not make a lot of money, but was good at saving
it. He started saving money for a warm jacket for next winter.
He was reasonably happy; he had money to buy food, and no
longer homeless and shared a room with two others. One day, with his savings he
bought a pair of second-hand Nike shoes from flea market.
Sunder Singh is not unique among low-income consumers,
especially in large cities, in wanting and buying Nike shoes. Some experts
believe that low-income consumers too want the same products and service that
other consumers want.
The working poor are forced to spend a disproportionate
percent of their income on food, housing, utilities, and healthcare. They
solely rely on public transportation, spend very little on entertainment of any
kind, and have no security of any kind. Their fight is mainly day-to-day survival.
QUESTIONS
1. What does
the purchase of a product like Nike mean to Sunder Singh?
2. What does
the story say about our society and the impact of marketing on consumer
behavior?
CASE II
Key to Buyers' Minds
Consumer buying research has turned a new leaf in India. The
era of demographics seems to be on the backbench. Now, Marketing Research
people are less likely to first ask you about your age, income, and education
etc. Instead, there is a distinct shift towards inquiries about attitudes, interests,
lifestyles, and behaviour - in short towards a study of consumers' minds called
psychographics.
Pathfinders, the marketing research wing of Lintas,
occasionally came out with its highly respected "Study on Nation's
Attitudes and Psychographics (P:SNAP). The first in this series was released in
1987 with an objective to develop a database of lifestyles and psychographics
information on the modem Indian women. The second was in 1993, and the third in
1998. Pathfinders choose woman for the study because of the belief that more
often than not, in urban areas, it is the woman who makes buying decision.
The Pathfinders' study involves interviewing over 10,000
women over the entire country and segmenting them in clusters according to
their beliefs, attitudes, lifestyles, and lastly their demographics profile.
The idea is to identify groups of consumers with similar lifestyles who are
likely to behave towards products or services.
For advertisers and advertising agencies, this profile helps
enormously. For example, an advertiser may want to give a westernised touch to
a commercial. The profile of the target customer, as revealed by this study,
tells the advertising people the perimeter within which she/he must stay,
otherwise the ad may become an exaggerated version of westernised India.
For the purpose of this study, Pathfinders divided the
Indian women in 8 distinct cluster of varying values and lifestyles. Figures
from two studies are available publicly and are given below:
Cluster 1987 (%) 1993 (%)
Troubled homebody 15.9 18.3
Tight-fisted traditionalist 14.8 10.0
Contended conservative 7.0 9.3
Archetypal provider 13.0 8.8
Anxious rebel 14.1 15.8
Contemporary housewife 19.2 22.1
Gregarious hedonist 8.7 6.6
Affluent sophisticate 7.3 9.1
The studies seek to track the macro level changes and
movements within these 8 clusters in a period of time.
We note from the table that in 1987, 8.7% of the women could
be classified as "gregarious hedonist" - those who consider their own
pleasure to be supreme in life. 'In 1993, this figure fell to 6.6%. The
"troubled homebody" segment - those with large families and low-income,
increased from 15.9% in 1987 to 18.3% in 1993.
Information, such as this, is obviously useful to assess the
collective mood. That's why Pathfinders have an impressive list of clients fort
heir P:SNAP, which includes Hindustan Lever, Cadbury, Johnson and Johnson, and
Gillette.
SOME PSYCHOGRAPHICS PROFILES OF INDIAN WOMEN
Rama Devi, the Contended Conservative
The lady lives a 'good' life - she is a devoted wife, a
dotting mother of two school-going sons, and a God fearing housewife. She has
been living her life by the traditional values she cherishes - getting up at
the crack of dawn, getting the house cleaned up, having the breakfast of 'Aloo
Parathas' ready in time before the children's school-bus honks its horn, laying
down the dress her 'government servant' husband will put on after his bath, and
doing her daily one-hour Puja. She fasts every Monday for the welfare of her
family, looks at the 'freely mixing' and 'sexually liberal' youngsters with
deep disdain and cannot understand the modem young woman' s 19reed' for money,
jewellery, and jobs.
Her one abiding interest outside the household is the Ganesh
Mandir that she has visited every Wednesday, ever since she got married. She
lacks higher education and hence has little appreciation for the arts, the
literature, and the sciences. Her ample spare time is spent watching the TV,
which is her prime source of entertainment and information.
Shobha, the Troubled Homebody
Shobha married young to the first person she fell in love
with, Prakash. Four children came quickly before she was quite ready to raise a
family. Now, she is unhappy. She
is having trouble in making ends meet on her husband's
salary who is employed as clerk in a private business and is often required to
work up to late hours. She is frustrated, as her desire for an idyllic life has
turned sour. She could not get education beyond high school and hence there are
hardly any job opportunities for her. Her husband also keeps on complaining of
the long hours of backbreaking work he has to put in. He consumes country-made
liquor routinely.
Shobha finds escape in Black and White TV soap operas and
films that transport her into the world of her dreams. She watches TV almost
all through the day and her children roam around in the locality streets and
cannot expect any help from their' ever-grumbling' mother. Purchases are mostly
limited to 'essentials' and any discretionary purchases are postponed till it
becomes possible.
Neeru, the Archetypal Provider
Neeru epitomises simplicity. Her life is untangled. It runs
on a set timetable with almost clockwork precision. She works as a primary
school teacher in a rural government school about 50 kilometers from her
district town residence. She is married to a social worker in an NGO whose
income is erratic. Her three children, two teenaged sons and l0-year old
daughter are getting school education.
The day begins with the lady getting up before anybody else
and finishing the household chores as fast as she can. There is no room for
delay as the State government 'Express' bus, on which she ravels to her school
will be at the bus stop across the road precisely at 8.00 A.M. If she misses
that, the next ordinary bus comes at 11.15 A.M, quite useless as it will reach
her school only at 1.00 P.M. The school closes at 2.00 P.M. There are private
Jeeps running sporadically, but the fare is high and Neeru does not believe in
wasting hard earned money. Besides, she travels on husband's 'free pass'. Neeru
prides herself on her monthly savings ofRs.1000 for the last many years. The
money will go toward the wedding of her daughter.
Vandana, the tight-fisted traditionalist
For Vandana, saving money is 'in-born' discipline. When she
was young and unmarried, she remembers her mother was extremely tight-fisted
and ran the household in under Rs.800 per month. It was the necessity of those
times as her father retired at a princely salary of Rs.1800 per month. All
through her childhood, she saw deprivation and hardship. She would not join the
annual class picnic in her school days as it meant' avoidable expenditure'.
Now she is married and mother of two school going children.
The husband works in a bank as a clerk. He has taken all the loans that he
could from the bank and invested the money in real estate. As a result of
monthly deductions toward repayment of loans, his take home salary is now very
little. But Vandana can manage. The school dresses are sewn by her at home, the
stationary required comes from a wholesale market, and the books are
second-hand from 'friends', cultivated for the purpose. On birthdays, Vandana
prepares a sweet dish at home and they spend on a film. There is a cow and calf
at home, being kept as a source of revenue and milk. She sells half the milk to
a neighbour and the family consumes the rest. Life in general is hard and
frugal. There is a colour TV at home, but they disconnected the cable
connection ever since the rates went up. Now they watch Doordarshan only.
Aditi, the Anxious Rebel
Daughter of a Freedom Fighter, Aditi has always fought her
values and principles.
People still remember when she walked out of the exam half
in a huff as a mark of protest against mass cheating' sanctioned' by the centre
superintendent in a tough paper. While every body else passed with high marks,
Aditi failed.
Even though she repeated the paper, Aditi never learned to
swim along the flow. She always swam against the current. She joined the
Communist Party in her college and gave rousing speeches against the teachers
and authorities. This resulted in her getting very poor marks and left her
jobless.
Later, Aditi joined an NGO and now works on social issues.
She says she is a creature of the mind, not materialism. Her favourite dress is
a long flowing Kurta, and slacks. She wears loosened hair and chappals. She
reads voraciously. Financially, she is independent and lives with her parents.
Her disdain for the institution of marriage and contempt for the modern Indian
male keep her single and unattached. She will continue-to be so as she prefers
this status, but may adopt a baby later in life.
Reema, the Gregarious Hedonist
Just 19, and Reema is already divorced. Her father is a
wealthy businessman. During Reema's childhood, her father was mostly away in
Dubai and Africa, trying to amass a fortune. That he did but he lost on his
chance to be a good father. Both his children started feeling like' orphans'
after their mother got involved with another man.
Reema was ever longing for her family when alone came Harsh,
her private high school tuition teacher. Harsh was all of 22 and very caring.
He was tall, handsome, and very popular in school and many girls had a crush on
him. Reema was sixteen then and a great fan of Harsh. For her, Harsh was a
prize catch as he combined the loving qualities of a father with a mix of being
a good teacher. She was soon dazzled and surrendered in a physical
relationship.
Marriage followed. She never understood how Harsh changed
overnight from a caring father figure to a demanding husband. And she could
never cope with the six hours she had to spend in the kitchen everyday. Why
should she do the cooking, she asked Harsh, as it was something that the 'Ayas'
did? The reality of a humdrum middle-class existence hit her hard and she soon
walked out of 'the hell'.
Her father understood her need to recover and made her
allowance rather generous. He bought her a Red Sports Car and got her an
admission in a private college.
College is entertainment for her. She attends college only
on days when there is some function like a cultural evening or the sports meet.
Now, Reema spends on alcohol, dresses, parties, and holidays. She consumes a
mood elevating drug every evening and keeps sending SMS messages on her mobile
to her friends all through the night. For her, life means 'buying pleasure
endlessly'.
Shruti, the Contemporary Housewife
Shruti is an urbane woman. She is well educated and genteel.
She is an officer in a national bank, and active in her club affairs and
community activities. Socialising is an important part of her life. She is a
doer, interested in watching cricket, politics, and current affairs. Her life
is hectic as she has a lot to do for home and office everyday. Still she often
enjoys viewing movies on TV every week.
Shruti shops for Sarees, jewellery, and cosmetics for
herself on a regular basis. However, family needs come before her own needs.
Her home is a double income household and she has one kid. All the modern
gadgets are present and the standard of living is upper middle-class.
Momeeta, the Affluent Sophisticate
Momeeta was born Mamta, but elevated herself to Momeeta
after marriage to a business tycoon. Momeeta is an elegant woman with style.
She lives in Mumbai because that is where she wants to be. She likes the
economic and social aspects of big city living and takes advantage of her'
contacts'. She has built up friendship and cultivated the city bigwigs by
inviting them to the numerous parties she throws in her luxurious penthouse.
Momeeta is a self-confident, on-the-go woman, and not a
homebody. She is fashion conscious and clothes herself in the latest designer
dresses. Even at 40, she can carry off a mini with aplomb. She is financial
very secure and hence does not shop with care. She shops for quality,
exclusivity, and the brand name, not the price. She frequently travels abroad,
buys expensive gifts for friends, and has an international understanding on
what is "chic" at the moment.
Three psychographics profiles of Indian women and their food
shopping habits:
Type I Type II Type III
Money conscious Careful
shopper Gourmet/satisfaction
Food shopping is done
on necessity and is postponed as long as possible.
Makes
out shopping lists and makes weekly/ monthly purchases. General liking for food shopping and food related
activities.
Minimum amount of money spent. This is enabled through
comparative evaluation of many shops, even if it takes more time. Can purchase larger quantities if there is
an incentive like lower prices or a gift scheme. Food budget is flexible. Collects and files food recipes.
Experiments with new food products and methods of cooking. Likes to exhibit her
culinary skills to her friends and family.
Operates within the food budget. Does not buy larger
quantities to save money.
Checks
labelling for price, nutrition and expiry date information Spends a lot of time in kitchen
as preparing food is an enjoyable activity.
Price and immediate outflow of cash is the dominant purchase
concern. Goes for tried and
trusted brands even if they cost a little more. This is an important purchase
concern. Food items are bought either
based on the past satisfaction from them or for their novelty value. Unknown
food items are purchased if they excite the senses. This is the dominant
purchase concern.
Who fits in where?
Shobha, Neeru, and Vandana,
Shruti, Aditi, and
Rama Devi
Momeeta (she is a food lover).
(Prof Deepak Khanna, colleague, has developed these profiles
based on his perceptions of certain personality types).
QUESTIONS
1. Explain
how the above-mentioned information is likely to benefit a marketer?
2. Which of
the above mentioned types are likely to respond to sales promotion? Explain.
3. A
manufacturer of personal care products in the premium segment starts frequent
sales promotions. What is likely to be the impact on the above-mentioned types?
Case III
Star Airways
Star Airways offered passengers air services within the
country and served a territory of 18, 000 sq. miles with an expanding
population of over 70 lakh of people who are potential users of the airline
services. The geographic diversity and scattered business and commercial cities
have led to steady increase in the number of people who use air travel. The
clientele includes business people, as well as individuals on non-business
trips, holidays, and leisure trips etc. As a result, the passenger traffic had been
increasing steadily since the firm started operations in 1983. In the last
three years, however, the growth has not been consistent with the growth
pattern showed by the company in the last fifteen years - as against a healthy
growth of 13 per cent, the sales have marginally improved, registering a growth
of 6 per cent.
The company's early success was due to the pioneering
concepts used by it in the airline industry, which was dominated by large
private and government operators with little market orientation. The launch of
the company's services coincided with a boom in the aviation sector and reduced
government dominance, which opened up the skies for private operators. Besides
this, the company offered a host of innovations in the customer service functions
such as smaller and newer planes, convenient schedules, free gifts, comfortable
seats, exclusive terminals, express baggage-check, and airport-to hotel transit
for its first and business class clients. In turn the fares charged by the
company were premium in the category and almost 15 per cent higher than the
industry average. The company president in the following words justified this
move: ''We are selling entirely on the basis of providing quality experience to
our clients. Our services, ambience, and commitment to safety and time-bound
schedule, all surpass the standards of the industry."
During the first ten years of operations the company faced
no direct competition. The only problems faced by the marketing staff were (a)
the price, (2) the need to convince clients that air service was more efficient
than other alternatives, (c) identifying the customers, and more importantly
(d) developing the image of a dependable service. The consumers, who till now
were forced to put up indifferent service offered by large government
operators, did not offer much resistance and were agreeable to try out new
company. Once customers were convinced, retaining them was very easy. Hence the
company enjoyed immense
loyalty from its clients with almost 40 per cent of them
being regular users. Sales were handled by the sales division as well as by
some independent sales representatives.
In early 1990s the company faced direct competition for the
first time with a new company coming up with smaller planes and all other
advantages which were previously associated with Star Airways. The growing
business had made the market very lucrative and hence in the next three years,
four major competitors were also vying for the market share. The company slowly
lost to these competitors and could manage to retain only 30 per cent of market
share by the end of 1994. All the competitors were engaged in aggressive
promotion and soon started a 'price war' in order to outdo one another. For the
next six months, each of them offered big discounts and gifts (such as TV /
audio systems) with the return ticket on different routes. The most profitable
and commercia1ly viable routes were the major targets of these price related
competitions. The consumer was the ultimate beneficiary and in short time, the
companies started facing losses due to this price-cutting.
Star
Airways had so far remained out of this ‘price-war’ and lost its market share
on the competitive routes very rapidly.
It was able to retain the clients on other routes, which were not a part
of this intense competition. Unhappy an
anxious about this state of affairs, the company vice president, marketing,
developed a marketing plan with several components. The initial part of the plan consisted of a
market research done on a cross-section of existing clients as well as the
clients of competitors and the following observations were made :
• Star
Airways was considered a quality-oriented company but many felt that it was
getting stodgy.
• The
satisfaction with crew and schedules had declined over the last 5 years amongst
regular customers.
• The
clients felt that the airline was losing its edge over customer service because
it was non¬flexible.
• The
prices offered by competitors are less and they provide only a fraction of
services offered by Star Airways. This was the main reason of clients switching
over to competitors. As many as 70 per cent respondents considered the costs as
the most important factor in deciding on the airline.
• Some
deciding factors and their relative importance to clients were found to be
following this pattern.
•
Feature offered by airline Importance
of feature as the deciding factor Rank
of feature in decision making influence
Price 67% 1
Ambience and food 9% 3
Punctuality 14% 2
Services & convenience 7% 4
Free gifts etc. 3% 5
The second phase of the plan included a massive advertising
and promotion plan. The VP marketing, Anil Saxena, felt that the company needed
to advertise it's dedication to quality and rebuild an image of being a customer-oriented
airline. He began discussions with the advertising agency to launch a campaign
in the near future.
After a month, the agency came out with the following
recommendations:
• The
campaign is to be completed in four months time and the budget will be 351akh.
• The
company would reach 85% of target audience, once in a month by direct mail.
• Four
times a month a TV commercial will be aired on a business show time. The
audience TRP is consistent and highest in this category of shows.
• Star
Airways would build the campaign theme around 'quality and customer service
initiatives' .
• The
direct mail letter would be sent to a database of 85,000 clients in four
months. The letter will contain information on the airline and again stress on
the same theme of' quality and customer service'.
QUESTIONS
1. What is
likely to be the decision process in case of choosing an airline?
2. Would
this plan suggested by the vice president help in convincing the customers to
use Star Airways? Give your reasons.
Case IV
Mouse-Rid
One hot May morning, Shobha, general manager of Innotrap
India Ltd., entered her office in Delhi. She paused for a moment to contemplate
the quote, which she had framed and hung on a wall facing her table.
"If a man can make a better mousetrap than his
neighbour, the world will make a beaten path to his door." She vaguely
recalled that probably it was Ralph Waldo Emerson who said this. Perhaps, she
wondered, Emerson knew something that she didn't. She had the better mousetrap
- Mouse¬-Rid - but the world didn't seem all that excited about it.
Shobha had just returned from a Trade Fair in Kolkata.
Standing in the trade show display booth for long hours and answering the same
questions hundreds of times had been tiring. Yet, this show had excited her.
The Trade Fair officials held a contest to select the best new product
introduced at the show. Of the more than 150 new products, her mousetrap had
won first place. Two women's magazines had written small articles about this
innovative mousetrap, however, the expected demand for the trap had not
materialised. Shobha hoped that this award might stimulate increased interest
and sales.
A group of investors who had obtained rights to market this
innovative mousetrap in India had formed Innotrap India in January 2001. In
return for marketing rights, the group agreed to pay the inventor and patent
holder, a retired engineer, a royalty fee for each trap sold. The group then appointed
Shobha as the general manager to develop and manage Innotrap India Ltd.
The Mouse-Rid, a simple yet clever device, is manufactured
by a plastics firm under contract with Innotrap India Ltd. It consists of a
square, plastic tube measuring about 6 inches long and one and one-half inches-
square. The tube bends in the middle at a 30-degree angle, so that when the
front part of the tube rests on a flat surface, the other end is elevated. The
elevated end holds a removable cap into which the user places bait (piece of
bread, or some other titbit). A hinged door is attached to the front endofthe
tube. When the trap is "open", this door rests on two narrow
"stills" attached to the two bottom corners of the door.
The trap works with simple efficiency. A mouse, smelling the
bait enters the tube through the open end. As it moves up the angled bottom
toward the bait, its weight makes the elevated end of the trap drop downward.
This elevates the open end, allowing the hinged door to swing closed, trapping
the mouse. Small teeth on the ends of stills catch in a groove on the bottom of
the trap, locking the door closed. The mouse can be disposed of live, or it can
be left alone for a few hours to suffocate in the trap.
Shobha felt the trap had many advantages for the consumer
when compared with traditional spring-loaded traps or poisons. Consumers can
use it safely and easily with no risk for catching their fingers while loading.
It poses no injury or poisoning threat to children or pets.
Shobha's personal and informal inquiries with acquaintances
and friends suggested that women are the best target market for the Mouse-Rid.
Most women stay at home and take care of household chores and their children.
Thus, they want a means of dealing with the mouse problem that avoids any kind
of risks. To reach this market,
Shobha decided to distribute Mouse-Rid through grocery
stores, and kitchenware stores. She personally contacted a supermarket and some
departmental stores to persuade them to carry the product, but they refused
saying that they did not sell such contraptions. She avoided any wholesalers
and other middlemen.
The traps were packaged in a simple cardboard, with a
suggested retail price ofRs.150 for a piece. Although this price made Mouse-Rid
about five 1;0 six times more expensive than standard traps, those who bought
it showed little price resistance.
To promote the product, Shobha had budgeted approximately
Rs. 300,000 toward advertising in different women's magazines, such as Grah
Shobha, and Good Housekeeping. Shobha was the company's only salesperson, but
planed to employ sales people soon.
Shobha had forecasted Mouse-Rid's first year sales at 2
million units. Through Aril, however, the company had sold only few thousand
units. She wondered if most new products got to such slow start, or if she was
doing something wrong.
Shobha knew that the investor group believed that Innotrap
India Ltd. had a "once-in-a¬ lifetime chance" with its innovative
mousetrap. She sensed the group's impatience. To keep the investors happy, the
company needed to sell enough traps to cover costs and make a profit.
QUESTIONS
1. Has
Shobha identified the best target market for Mouse-Rid? Why or why not?
2. Does
Shobha have enough needed data on consumer behaviour? What type of consumer
research should Shobha conduct?
3. What type
of advertising can influence consumers for this type of product?
Case V
Golden Glow Soap
Anil Mahajan absent -mindedly ran his finger over the cake
of soap before him. He traced the name 'Golden Glow' embossed on the soap as he
inhaled its unmistakable sesame fragrance. It was a small soap, almost like a
bar of gold. There were no frills, no coloured packaging, and no fancy shape.
Just a golden glow and the fragrance of sesame and Lucida font that quietly
stated' Golden Glow'.
Mahajan smiled wanly and clasped the soap in his hands, as
if protecting it from an unseen predator. He was wondering with quiet concern
if the 30-year-old brand would last long. Sensi India, where Mahajan was
marketing manager, was taking a long, hard look at the soap, as it was proving
to be a strain on resources.
There were varying stories about how Golden Glow was
launched. Some said the brand was a 'gift' from the departing English parent
company. Others claimed that it was created for the then chairman's British
wife, as the Indian climate did not agree with her skin. They also claimed that
the lady also coined the copy "The honest soap that loves your skin"
was also coined by the lady. The line had stuck through three decades. Only the
visuals had changed, with newer models replacing the older ones.
Zeni was basically a speciality products company producing
household hygiene, fabricare, and dental care products. Golden Glow was the
only soap in its product mix, produced and marketed by Sensi. Its reliable
quality and value delivery had earned it a lot of respect in the market. Golden
Glow equity was such that Sensi was known as the Golden Glow Company. Indeed,
the brand name Golden Glow denoted purity, reliability, and gentle skincare.
In 1994, Sensi UK increased its stake in the Indian
subsidiary to 51%. Within months, all of Sensi's products were given a
facelift, thanks to the inflow of foreign capital. New packaging, new
fragrances, new formulations and more variants were introduced.
Only Golden Glow was left untouched. For, although it had a
growing skincare business following some strategic acquisitions in Europe in
the early eighties, Sensi UK was not a soap company. The UK marketing team ran
an audit of every brand and product in the company's portfolio. But when it
came to Golden Glow, it faltered. "We don't know this one," officials
at the parent company said.
"We don't want this one to be touched," Mahajan
had said protectively, a sentiment tliat was endorsed by the managing director,
Rajan Sharma. "Golden Glow is too sacred, we will leave it as it is,"
he said.
But the UK marketing team was confounded. What was a lone
soap doing in the midst of toilet cleaners and fabric protectors; they
wondered, however they somehow agreed that their proposed revamp strategy would
only look at up-gradation, not tinkering with what wasn't broken.
Indeed, for 30 long years no one had tampered with the
Golden Glow brand. And Mahajan felt there was no reason to start now. Golden
Glow, in his view, was a self-sustaining brand. That was a bit of an
understatement because advertising for the brand was moderate and Sensi India
had never used any promotional gimmick for it.
Now, after four years of nurturing the other categories,
Sensi UK had decided to launch its Vio range of skincare products in India. But
Golden Glow's presence and profile was a major roadblock to Vio's success.
"It will create dissonance, confuse our skincare equity and deter the
articulation of Vio's credo. It will stand out as a genetic flaw," argued
the UK marketing head. "You need to do a rethink on Golden Glow."
Mahajan protested. "Why? It has such a strong equity
and loyal following. So much has been invested in it all these years. Why give
up all that?"
Rajan, however, had another idea. "Let us then extend
the Golden Glow brand." He said It was the simplest solution. Companies
were now investing heavily in creating new equities for their brands. But in
Golden Glow's case, Sensi was already sitting on a brand with a terrific
equity. He felt that extending this equity to other categories, such as
skincare products would be successful.
But Golden Glow needed a new positioning before it could be
extended. Till a few years ago, it had been in premium category, priced at
Rs.15. Then new brands with specific positioning and higher price tags entered
the market. This created a level above Rs.15 soaps and pushed Golden Glow down
to the mid-priced range. So Golden Glow's price was not commensurate with its
premium position and image.
Over the years, Golden Glow had become so sacred that Sensi
India had been too scared to do anything to it. As a result, the soap was left
with niche category of loyal users. This category neither shrank or increased,
just kept getting older and older, and with it the brand also kept growing
older. For example, when Mahajan's wife had her first baby at 25, her mother
had recommended Golden Glow for her dry skin and also for baby's tender skin
because it contained sesame oil. That was in 1979. Today, Mahajan's daughter
had turned 21 and was being wooed by Dove, Camay, even Santoor, and Lifebuoy
Gold, with their aggressive advertising. Golden Glow had begun to lose its
image of being contemporary as newer brands came in with newer values.
Today, at 46, Mahajan's wife still used Golden Glow, but
when she recommended Golden Glow to her daughter, she said, "But Golden
Glow is a soap for mothers, for older people."
That was a major problem. The Golden Glow brand had aged,
and Sensi India hadn't even been aware of it. While its equity had grown with
its users, its personality had aged considerably in the last 30 years. "I
don't think you can keep the personality young, unless you keep renewing the
brand. The objective now is to widen your equity so that your image becomes
young," continued Rajan. "For instance, if today you were to
personify a Golden Glow user now, it would be a woman of 45 years using the
same brand for many years, who is aver-se to experimenting, very skincare
conscious, very trusting, and very one-dimensional. As you can see, this is not
a very competitive personality. These are the strengths of our Golden Glow, but
these are also its weaknesses," he analysed.
The context had changed. Today, youth demanded brands that
stood for freedom and fearlessness. They demanded bold brands that dared to
cure, not just p;eserve. "Preservation is for old people. Those are the
attributes being presented in evolved markets," said Rajan. To make Golden
Glow contemporary, the attributes had to be re-framed, he felt. "You can't
make a young brand trusting caring, loving, without adding other attributes to
it. Today, youth stands for freedom, for laughter, for frankness, for
forthrightness. That's what Close Up, Lifebuoy Gold, Vatika, and other brands
propagate. So, either come clean and say it is for older skin which needs trust
and kindness, or reposition the brand," said Rajan.
Repositioning was also necessary to address another anomaly
in Golden Glow's image: its perceived premium. Sensi India had been unable to
do anything about Golden Glow slipping into the mid-price range following the
entry of more expensive brands. Now, as Rajan mulled over the brand extension
plan, Mahajan felt that Golden Glow's premium positioning was its core equity
and that had to be maintained.
"If you are premium priced in the consumer's mind, your
extensions are automatically perceived as premium. So, if you don't present the
other products as premium, the consumer will not see them as extensions of the
brand," he said. "For example, if you are to launch a shampoo which
is priced lower than Sunsilk, but higher than Nyle and Ayur, then whatever the
rationale, the consumer will not accept your product. "It is not the
Golden Glow I know," will be the feeling," he said.
Mahajan felt that since premium positioning was one of
Golden Glow's equity values, it would be very difficult to convince consumers
that the brand was being extended without hanging on to this particular value.
"Will they buy your rationale that the very same values and equity would
now be available at a low price? To be in the premium segment now, you have to
price it at Rs 35 or 40, almost on a par with Dove," he said. "With
Dove retailing at Rs 45, Golden Glow will be perceived as a cheaper
option."
"We can't simply raise the price," said Rajan.
"What are we offering for that increase? You can 't add value because you
don't want to tamper with the brand. The consumers will then ask, "Golden
Glow used to be so cheap, what has happened now? The user will forget that 15
years ago, Rsl0 was expensive, because all her comparisons would be in today' s
context," said Rajan.
"So what's the option?" asked Mahajan. "You
don't have to be expensive to be premium," said Rajan. Golden Glow already
has the image of a premium brand, thanks to its time-tested core values of
purity, credibility, and reliability. What we can do is reinforce the premium
through communication and positioning. In fact) we should have tinkered with
Golden Glow long ago. That is what HLL did with Lux. It also launched a bridge
brand, Lux International, in the premium category," said Rajan.
"How could we have done anything to the brand?"
asked Mahajan. "The product had such a strong following. It stood for
gold, for sesame oil, for its subtle earthy perfume. We changed the packaging
periodically, but that's all we could do. Remember the time we brought out a
transparent green Golden Glow with the fragrance of lime? It bombed in the
market."
Rajan was not in favour of the premium positioning. It
appeared very short sighted to him, given the bigger plan to extend the brand.
"Where are the volumes in the premium segment? He asked. "For some
reason, every manufacturer feels that skincare can be an indulgence of only the
moneyed class. As a result, there is a crowd in the premium end of the market.
Do we want to be yet another player in the segment?"
Fifteen years ago, Golden Glow was perceived as a premium
product. But today, globa1brands like Revlon, Coty, and Oriflame were
delivering specific premium platforms. Golden Glow did not have a global
equity. 'Let us revisit the brand and examine what it stood for 15 years ago
and examine the relevance of those attributes in today's context,"
suggested Rajan. "Golden Glow stood for care, consciousness, love, quality
and all that. But today, are these enough to justify a premium position?"
he asked Mahajan. "These attributes are viable in the mid-priced
segment." He said.
"The mid-priced brand is the proverbial washer-man's
dog," said Mahajan. "You don't know whether you are at the bottom end
of the premium range or at the top-end of the low-priced range. You end up
creating an image of being on the opportunity fence. It is a mere pricing ploy,
with no strategic value."
QUESTIONS
1. Discuss
the nature of problem(s) in this case?
2. Suggest
the kind of consumer research needed?
3. How
should Golden Glow be positioned/ repositioned to bring about the desired
change among consumers? Give your reasons.
CASE VI
Impact of Retail Promotions on Consumers
Shoppers' Delight, a large retail store, had above-average
quality and competitive prices. It advertised its retail promotions in local
newspapers. Its TV advertising was mainly aimed at building store image and did
not address retail promotions. The management knew it well that they had to
advertise their retail promotions more, but they did not feel comfortable with
the effectiveness of present efforts and wanted to better understand the impact
of their present promotions.
To better understand the effectiveness of present efforts, a
study of advertising exposure, interpretation, and purchases was undertaken.
Researchers conducted 50 in-depth interviews with customers of the store's
target market to determine the appropriate product mix, price, ad copy and
media for the test. In addition, the store's image and that of its two
competitors were measured.
Based on the research findings, different product lines that
would appeal to the target customers were selected. The retail promotion was
run for a full week. Full-page advertisements were released each day in the two
local Hindi newspapers, and also in one English newspaper that devotes six
pages to the coverage of the state.
Each evening, a sample of 100 target market customers were
interviewed by telephone as follows:
1. Target
customers were asked if they had read the newspaper that day. This was done to
determine their exposure to advertisement.
2. After a
general description of the product lines, the respondents were asked to recall
any related retail advertisements they had seen or read.
3, If the
respondents were able to recall, they were asked to describe the ad, the
promoted products, sale prices, and the name of the sponsoring store.
4. If the
respondents were accurate in their ad interpretation, they were asked to
express their intentions to purchase.
5. Respondents
were also asked for suggestions to be incorporated in future promotions
targeted at this consumer segment.
Immediately after the close of promotion, 500 target market
customers were surveyed to determine what percentage of the target market
actually purchased the promoted products. It also determined which sources of
information influenced them in their decision to purchase and the amount of
their purchase.
Results of the study showed that ad exposure was 75 per cent
and ad awareness level was 68 per cent and was considered as high. Only 43
percent respondents exposed to and aware of the ad copy could accurately recall
important details, such as the name of the store promoting the retail sale.
Just 43 per cent correct interpretation was considered as low. Of those who
could accurately interpret the ad copy,
32 per cent said they intended to respond by purchasing the advertised•
products ' and 68per cent sad they had no intention to buy. This yields an
overall intention to buy of 7 per cent. The largest area of lost opportunity
was due to those who did not accurately interpret the ad copy.
The post-promotion survey indicated that only 4.2 per cent
of the target market customers made purchases of the promoted products during
the promotion period. In terms of how the buyers learned of the promotion, 46
per cent mentioned newspaper A (Hindi), 27 per cent newspaper B (Hindi), 8 per
cent newspaper (English), and 15 per cent learned about sale through word-of
mouth communication.
The retail promotion was judged as successful in many ways,
besides yielding sales worth
Rs 900,000. However, management was concerned about not
achieving a higher level of ad comprehension, missing a significant sales
opportunity: It was believed that a better ad would have at least 75 per cent
correct comprehension among those aware of the ad. This in turn would almost
double sales without any additional cost.
QUESTIONS
1. Why would
some consumers have high-involvement levels in learning about this sales
promotion?
2 Is a
level of 75 per cent comprehension realistic among those who become aware of an
ad? Why or why not?
3. Do you
think such promotions are likely to influence the quality image of the retail
store? Explain.
Master Program in Business Administration (MBA)
Note :- Solve any 4 case study
All case
carries equal marks
Case I
PANDIT TO AFAUZI
The case is based on an actual incident which took place in
an Army unit operationally deployed in a field area just a few months before
the 1971 showdown with Pakistan. The opposing forces of India and Pakistan were
taking their respective positions in a pre-war scenario. The clouds of showdown
were looming large over the horizons of both the countries. The rumbling of own
tanks and guns, the reconnaissance, leaders of different arms and services
establishing liaison with one another in the process of formulating plans for
both defence and attack, digging of main and contingency positions was in
progress, complete war machinery was being mobilized, camouflaged, and
concealed. Ammunition and other explosives were being unloaded and dug down.
Junior leaders were being briefed and rebriefed, communications were being
checked, and troops were being motivated and looked after as most of them were
green because of their sudden induction in the Army in post war days of 1965.
Such was the scene which convinced all and sundry that war was imminent. Most
of the troops looked forward to a showdown mainly because they wanted to get
rid of the heavy ammunition as also for the mere thrill of it. Those who had
not seen a battle, seemed excited over the prospects of a war and those who had
seen the war, took everything in their stride, displaying a perfect cool, calm
and confident countenance.
One Ram Bali Mishra (RBM) was a raw and green jawan of about
20 years of age and two years' service and naturally had not seen a war. He was
relatively tall, well built with fair complexion. He had pleasant manners,
turned himself out well and spoke well. He was a complete teetotaler,
non-smoker, and a vegetarian. He was well educated and well versed in religious
affairs, particularly, of the religion to which most of the unit belonged. In
the absence of the religious teacher of the unit, he held religious institute
(dharamsthal) and gave religious discourses at the dharamsthal to all officers,
junior commissioned officers JCOs), non-commissioned officers (NCOs) and
jawans. During the pre-war days, he was performing the duties of a Sahayak (assistant,
formerly known as orderly) to Gun Position Officer (GPO), a young officer, of
the rank of a Second Lieutenant with one year of service.
RBM's charter of duties included:
(a) attending all the training activities of his trade
(telephone operator) which were being organized in the sub-unit;
(b) making arrangements to get the food from the officers'
mess and water from the tube- well for the office; and
(c) attending the telephone and noting down all the messages
for the office.
By virtue of the nature and timings of these duties, RBM was
excused physical training in the morning and games in the evening which all
other jawans of the sub-unit attended. He was generally happy with these duties
and working with the officer: After a short span of a week or so, the officer
noticed some changes in the behavior of RBM. He also looked pale and worried.
He was less talkative, less lively and his interaction with other jawans
decreased. He started keeping aloof except where his duties warranted interaction
with others. The officer tried to find the reasons from RBM but nothing emerged
except a shy and coy smile and “aisi to koi baat Nai, Sahib". The officer
tried to probe further to find out if some guilt conscience was bothering him
because of some bad habit which young man of his age is likely to fall prey to,
in the absence, of even visual contact of civil life and members of the
opposite sex.
This was denied vehemently. After another week or so, it was
noticed that RBM had developed constipation, ate very little, felt tired after
walking even a few hundred yards and had become weak. He was interviewed by the
officer but nothing emerged once again. He was sent to the Regimental Medical
Officer (RMO). The RMO inspected him and gave some medicines. On being
contacted by the officer, the RMO mentioned that there was nothing wrong
medically with RBM except that he was scared of the prospects of war. He even
disclosed that after having been medically examined, RBM even started giving a
discourse to the RMO on the bad effects of a war on environment, economy,
costs, etc. He stated that people would be loaded with sufferings; killed,
injured, maimed, and would become homeless. The children would become orphans,
women widowed, and the humanity would suffer. He vehemently advised the RMO to
make all attempts to stop the war and if he could, at least oppose it. After a
brief conversation, the RMO was convinced that all the symptoms pointed to a
fear psychosis of war. He gave some medicines to RBM and sent him to the sub-unit.
The RMO told the GPO that because of the worry about the
war, RBM had developed problems of digestion and hence, ate less, became
inactive and felt tired quickly. He had earlier been feeling shy of expressing
his apprehensions about the war to others, lest they consider him a coward. The
GPO gave a thought to the whole problem and interviewed RBM, advising him to
attend• all physical activities, including physical training, weapon training,
games, etc. thence on. The officer also planned to keep RBM among the persons
of his trade, specially in the command post which controlled the firing of the
guns, where from the officer himself was expected to control the' fire in case
of breakout of war.
A small cadre (class) was organized for all ranks of the
sub-unit to apprise them of the organization of all arms and services in the
army, starting from the level of a sub-unit. They were explained the tactics in
the battlefields, the deployment patterns of different arms, the pattern and
modes of support by the Air Force, the capabilities of weapons held by them,
the comparative sizes of the countries, India versus Pakistan, and the level of
forces held by them. They were also explained the cause for which they were
there. They were there to make their contribution towards the liberation of
Bangladesh (then East Pakistan), wherefrom about a crore refugees had entered
India because of the repression by Pakistan forces. These refugees had become a
burden on the Indian economy and social structure which India could not afford.
Thus, India, the foremost leader of peace loving nations, had to prepare for
war to ensure return of these refugees to liberated Bangladesh. At times, to
maintain peace, it becomes necessary to resort to war.
The participants were also told about the strength of their
Army and deployment in that area, of course, within the constraints of security
requirements. They were also told that none of them would remain alone even
during the war and that their sub-unit and the unit would always fight
together. They would always have their weapons and ammunitions with them, which
they were very good at firing. The process of medical care, the claim of
evacuation in case of serious injuries and the enhanced benefits and
compensation to families in case of death of a soldier, then announced by the
government, were also communicated to them. The reliability of India's friends
on the international scene was also intimated. The tactics, capabilities of
aircrafts and weapons, and reliability of Pakistan's friends were also brought
out. The disadvantages and difficulties of supply to the then East Pakistan
were explained to the participants. The geographical location of East Pakistan
in relation to our country was also described. Everybody was convinced of the
great advantages and superiority we had vis-a-vis Pakistan.
Thence on, RBM was a totally changed man. He was noticed to
be more active, intermingling with others at the slightest pretext and
opportunity, giving discourses about loyalty to the country and martyrdom. He
took keen interest in all the training activities, including the digging of a
number of contingency gun positions. He volunteered to go with night patrols
too, which operated to shoot bursts of rounds with light machine guns in trees
and groves close-by, whenever the guns were deployed at a new place. He
volunteered to venture out with the line party which was earmarked to lay
telephone lines over long distances through sugarcane fields. He started
watching the slaughtering of goats in the unit. Above all, he started eating
eggs, though he did not touch meat.
This transformation in RBM was a welcome sight and
appreciated by all. Everyone heaved a sigh of relief on seeing RBM becoming a
brave "Fauzi" from a timid "Pandit". The RMO was informed
of this transformation. He too felt happy. His contribution had been no less in
diagnosing the cause of sickness correctly. The cadre was conducted for the
whole sub-unit with a view to eradicate any apprehensions from the minds of
others too, in case there were any, and to educate all. The cadre proved to be
a great success. It motivated the whole lot, made them more confident and ready
to face the challenge bravely. This was subsequently apparent when the
hostilities started.
QUESTIONS:
1. What was
the cause of fear in RBM?
2. What were
the symptoms of fear displayed by RBM?
3. How did
the RMO come to know of the war phobia of RBM?
4. What
actions should be taken to avoid building up of fear among the troops? Which of
these steps were taken by the officer?
Case II
HE WHO RIDES A TIGER
In the Year of the Youth, the author took up a research
project on young industrial workers. It involved comparing young and old
workers. Two industries producing the same machines at similar technological
level were selected. One belonged to the private sector and the other to the
public sector. While the latter was started a decade later than the former, it
had achieved greater expansion. Both were located in the same state.
After we obtained necessary permission to conduct our study,
we reached the mofussil town where the private sector industry was located.
Before we could launch our study, as a matter of principle, we wanted to meet
the General Secretary of the workers' union. The Personnel Department was not
willing for this. On our insistence they called the union official. We talked
to him for about half an hour but Personnel Department people were all the time
hovering around.
So we fixed a time in the evening to meet him in the union
office in the town. We visited the union office in the evening. The union was
having problem regarding wage deduction of some workers who did not show up for
overtime. The overtime notice was short and they had not consented either, even
then the management was threatening wage deduction for one week.
The union could hardly do a thing' as they in the past had
burnt their hands when they had to unilaterally call off the 106 day old strike
in which even their Treasurer had committed suicide. They were scared to the
extent that they had productivity linked bonus agreement for even 12% bonus.
Moreover, a new minuscue union was recently started in the company.
We visited the new union's office next evening and held a
long discussion. They asked for' our suggestions. The union believed in legal
battles more than agitations. After a visit to the industry the author visited
the state headquarters of the new union. There every office bearer was
surprisingly a lawyer. In the HQ we learnt that after we left, their union took
out a procession and held a meeting in the temple. Perhaps this was the result
of our discussion. While the older union was a prisoner of its past, the new
union was free to write its own history. Workers' interests were being served
perhaps by both.
QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION
1. Discuss
merits/demerits of the role of strike, agitation and legal approach in
union¬management relations.
2. What role
does mutual trust play in building union-management relations?
CASE III
COMPETITION AHEAD: VSNL AT CROSS ROADS
The telecom sector had been functioning as a typical
government department right from its inception. With the Department of
Telephones (DoT) being under the exclusive control of the Ministry of
Communications, Government of India (GO!), the system functioned more as a
monopoly., With the advent of the LPG process (liberalization, privatization
and globalization) in the early nineties, the telecom department went through a
phase of modernization. A number of new and sophisticated electronic exchanges
were installed which enhanced the capacity and lead to the disappearance of
waiting list for telephone connections. In a landmark decision in 1995-96, the
Government of India threw open its gates for private players in the area of
cellular services. LCG and ACG were the two major players to enter this area in
Karnataka region, while DoT decided to remain as an observer and continued as a
provider of basic services only. Subsequently the Internet, ISD and other
services were also opened to private participation.
The year 1998 saw the entry of Vikas Telenet (VTNL) as a
basic service provider in the state of Karnataka. It launched its basic
services in Bangalore district, the commercial capital of the state, in January
1998. The impact of this entry was felt by DoT as it resulted in a mass
customer churning, challenging the market leadership of DoT in basic services.
This growing challenge from VTNL made General Manager DoT Indore, R.L. Rawat
realized the need for a comprehensive review of the competitive scenario. The
situation faced by the Bangalore district was one of its kind. It was the only
city where four companies were providing telephone services. LCG and ACG were
providing cellular services while VTNL and DoT were providing basic services.
To attract the customers all the providers had attractive tariff plans. DoT's
market share was not affected by the entry of LCG and ACG as - they operated
only as cellular service providers and their services carried a premium price.
But the entry of VTNL as a basic service provider with attractive tariff plans
showed a marked shift in customer base from DoT to VTNL specially in case of
heavy users make it necessary for DoT to come up with similar competitive
tariff plans.
General Manager Operations DoT Bangalore, S.N. Dutt, felt
that improved services, customer care and proper pricing would help in winning
back the heavy users who accounted for almost 60 to 65% of the total revenue.
Keeping this in mind, a review of VTNL's tariff plans was done (Annexure I).
The review revealed that the customers were getting a distinct price advantage
in the rentals and free calls given by VTNL.
Along with this, a discount ranging from 2.5 to 16% was also
announced by VTNL. S.N. Dutt formulated a comprehensive plan to guard DoT's
market share. Officers were appointed as account holders and were responsible
for rendering personalized customer care to commercially important customers
hoping to retain them with better services. He also formulated a proposal of
discounts which was forwarded to the Circle Head Office (Annexure-II) and a
presentation was made by DGM - Marketing K.K. Sen, highlighting the rate at
which customer churning was taking place and the need for implementation of new
tariff plan. He pleaded with the senior officers that DoT needed to be at least
reactive if not proactive, to sustain itself in the market. The proposal was
well received and forwarded to the Ministry of Communications for approval.
Responding to the need of the hour, the Ministry decided to offer a comprehensive
discount of 2.5 to 16% for its heavy users. The scheme was introduced in
Bangalore, which was extended first to the state of Karnataka and later on to
the entire nation.
VTNL, which had so far been concentrating only on the heavy
users, decided to now expand its network to get a wider customer base. With
this view in mind, a number of promotional schemes were introduced e.g., web
phone, a facility for internet usage where access to the net was provided at a
cost of 60 paise per call only. It also announced free Internet facility for a
year on every new connection. Besides this, VTNL went in for heavy promotion of
its schemes. The careful wording of the schemes and enhancement of the number
of free calls made the customers feel that they were gainers as far as rentals
were concerned. These schemes when launched created very difficult times for
VTNL during May -August 2001. By then, DoT had been Corporatised (October 1,
2000) and came to be known as VSNL. The Bangalore office was extremely hopeful
that the corporatisation would facilitate. the implementation of new innovative
schemes. For drafting a proposal of innovative schemes, VSNL first conducted a
market research where in -the database of surrendered connections was used as
sample and effort were made to identify the cause of disconnections. The survey
revealed that of the total number of disconnections 30% were due to economic
recession while 40% were due to customer turning in favor of VTNL while the
remaining were due to a multitude of factors interplaying with one another.
To redeem the situation, VSNL, Bangalore prepared an
innovative plan known as Business Special Plan - Plan 600-800, which offered
800 free calls on a monthly rental of Rs.600 only. The plan was put forward to
Chief General Manager at Bangalore for approval. The persistent efforts of K.K.
Sen bore fruits and the proposal was approved at the Circle level.
However, at the time of launch K. K. Sen realized that they
needed TRAI's (Telecom Regulatory Authority of India) approval for going ahead.
To ensure the unhindered approval of TRAI, modified tariff plans called 500-700
and an economy plan were suggested and sent for approval. While formulating
these plans, an attempt was made to segment the market with an intention to
target each segment with a customized/specific set of services. Plan 500-700
was targeted at high end users. Here, 700 calls were offered free on a monthly
rental of Rs. 500 only. The economy plan carried a rental of just Rs.160 per
month with a rate of Rs.l.20 per call. This plan was specially targeted at
customers who had more of incoming calls and needed a facility for meeting
their specific requirements. The rolling out of these schemes had an immediate
impact with nearly 8,000 customers coming over to VSNL Bangalore. Along with
these new tariff proposals a number of innovative strategies were introduced by
VSNL, Bangalore.
• The
initial registration amount was reduced and new subscribers were offered the
facility of paying the amount in installments.
• Call centre
functioning since February 2001 to deal with customer grievances was made
proactive to ensure better customer care.
• Training
was given to the front-end-people for updating their skills and changing the
mindsets.
• Tele-shopping
service was started which provided a one stop shopping facility, giving the
customers the option to choose their telephone numbers, instrument and
service.. Installation was assured within 48 hours.
• Phone-on-Phone
facility was started wherein customers could obtain a connection installed by
simply ringing up for it.
• A bill
collecting facility was also introduced to further assist the customers.
• VCC Le.,
prepaid cards were introduced and even delivered at the doorsteps of the
customers.
• Bill
collection in the rural areas by mobile vans was introduced.
• Linemen
were given pagers to facilitate prompt servicing of faulty telephone lines.
• Regular
meetings between call centre members and maintenance staff were held to
exchange information and solve grievances.
• For
motivating and facilitating their employees, free telephone service was
provided to all the employees.
• An
advertising budget of Rs.30,00,000 (0.2% of the total sales revenue) was
outlined for launching a comprehensive promotion programme using both indoor
and outdoor media ensuring a good coverage of the market.
VSNL – Tariff Structure
Scheme Rental
(Rs.) Free Colis Facilities
Business Plan - 500-700* 500
(Monthly) 700 Without STD
Economy Plan ** 160
(Monthly) Nil With STD
Standard Plan* 500
(Bimonthly) 150 With STD
* 0.80 Per Call **
Rs.1 .20 Per Call
VTNL – Tariff Structure
Scheme Rental
(Rs.) Free Calls
Silver 300 349
(Monthly) 300
Golden – 500 499
(Monthly) 500
Questions:
1. What were
the strengths and weaknesses of VSNL?
2. Do you
think that VSNL should have changed its thrust from basic telephony to cellular
services?
3. If you
were the Deputy General Manager, what strategies would you have undertaken to
deal with the competition?
Case IV
DISNEY’S DESIGN
The Walt Disney Company is heralded as the world’s largest
entertainment company. It has earned
this astounding reputation through tight control over the entire operation :
control over the open – ended brainstorming that takes place 24 hours a day ;
control over the engineers who construct the fabulous theme – park rides;
control over the animators who create and design beloved characters and
adventurous scenarios ; and control over the talent that brings the many
concepts and characters to life.
Although control pervades the company, it is not too strong a grip. Employees in each department are well aware
of their objectives and the parameters established to meet those
objectives. But in conjunction with the
pre-determined responsibilities, managers at Disney encourage independent and
innovative thinking.
People
at the company have adopted the phrase “Dream as a Team” as a reminder that
whimsical thoughts, adventurous ideas, and all – out dreaming are at the core
of the company philosophy. The over all
control over each department is tempered by this concept. Disney managers strive to empower their
employees by leaving room for their creative juices to flow. In fact, managers at Disney do more than
encourage innovation. They demand
it. Projects assigned to the staff “
imaginers” seem impossible at first glance.
At Disney, doing the seemingly impossible is part of what innovation means. Teams of imaginers gather together in a
brainstorming session known as the “Blue Sky” phase. Under the “Blue Sky”, an uninhibited exchange
of wild, ludicrous, outrageous ideas, both “ good” and “ bad”, continues until
solutions are found and the impossible is done.
By demanding so much of their employees, Disney managers effectively
drive their employees to be creative.
Current
Disney leader Michael Eisner has established the “Dream as a Team”
concept. Eisner realized that managers
at Disney needed to let their employees brainstorm and create with
support. As Disney president Frank Weds
says, “If a good idea is there, you know it, you feel it, you do it, no matter
where it comes from.”
Questions :
1. What
environmental factors influenced management style at Disney?
2. What
kind(s) of organizational structure seem to be consistent with “Dream as a Team” ?
3. How and
where might the informal organization be a real asset at Disney ?
Case V
“THAT’S NOT MY JOB” –
LEARNING DELEGATION AT CIN-MADE
When Robert Frey purchased Cin – Made in 1984, the company
was near ruin. The Cincinnati, Ohi-based
manufacturer of paper packaging had not altered its product line in 20
years. Labor costs had hit the ceiling,
while profits were falling through the floor.
A solid quarter of the company’s shipments were late and absenteeism was
high. Management and workers were at
each other’s throats.
Ten
years later, Cin – Made is producing a new assortment of highly differentiated
composite cans, and pre-tax profits have increased more than five times. The Cin – Made workforce is both flexible and
deeply committed to the success of the company.
On-time delivery of products has reached 98 percent, and absenteeism has
virtually disappeared. There are even
plans to form two spin – off companies to be owned and operated by Cin-Made
employees. In fact, at the one day
“Future of the American Workforce” conference held in July 1993, Cin-Made was
recognized by President Clinton as one of the best – run companies in the
United States.
“ How
did we achieve this startling turnaround ?”
mused Frey. “Employee empowerment
is one part of the answer. Profit
sharing is another.”
In the
late spring of 1986, relations between management and labor had reached rock
bottom. Having recently suffered a pay
cut, employees at Cin- Made came to work each day, performed the duties
required of their particular positions, and returned home-nothing more. Frey could see that his company was suffering. “To survive we needed to stop being worthy
adversaries and start being worthy partners,” he realized. Toward this end, Frey decided to call a
meeting with the union. He offered to
restore worker pay to its previous level by the end of the year. On top of that, he offered something no one
expected: a 15 percent share of Cin-Made’s pre-tax profits. “I do not choose to
own a company that has an adversarial relationship with its employees.” Frey
proclaimed at the meeting. He therefore
proposed a new arrangement that would encourage a collaborative
employee-management relationship “Employee participation will play an essential
role in management.”
Managers
within the company were among the first people to oppose Frey’s new idea of
employee involvement. “My three managers
felt they were paid to be worthy adversaries of the unions.” Frey recalled. It’s what they’d been trained for. It’s what made them good managers. Moreover, they were not used to participation
in any form, certainly not in decision making.”
The workers also resisted the idea of extending themselves beyond the
written requirements of their jobs. “
(Employees) wanted generous wages and benefits, of course, but they did not
want to take responsibility for anything more than doing their own jobs the way
they had always done them,” Frey noted.
Employees were therefore skeptical of Frey’s overtures toward “employee
participation.” “We thought he was trying
to rip us off and shaft us,” explained Ocelia Williams, one of many Cin-Made
employees who distrusted Frey’s plans.
Frey,
however, did not give up, and he eventually convinced the union to agree to his
terms. “ I wouldn’t take no for an
answer,” he asserted. “Once I had made
my two grand pronouncements, I was determined to press ahead and make them come
true.” But still ahead lay the
considerable challenge of convincing employees to take charge :
I made
people meet with me, then instead
Of
telling them what to do, I asked them.
They
resisted.
“ How
can we cut the waste on his run ?” I’d
say, or
“How are we going to allocate the
overtime
on this order ?”
“That’s
not my job,” they’d say.
“But I
need your input,” I’d say. “How in the
World
can we have participative management
If you
won’t participate?
“I
don’t know,” they’d say. “Because that’s
not my
job either. That’s your job. ?”
Gradually,
Frey made progress. Managers began
sharing more information with employees.
Frey was able slowly to expand the responsibilities workers would carry. Managers who were unable to work with
employees left, and union relations began to improve. Empowerment began to happen. By 1993, Cin Made employees were taking
responsibility for numerous tasks.
Williams, for example, used to operate a tin-slitting machine on the
company’s factory floor. She still runs
that same machine, but now is also responsible for ordering almost $ 100,000 in
supplies.
Williams
is just one example of how job roles and duties have been redefined throughout
Cin-Made. Joyce Bell, president of the
local union, still runs the punch press she always has, but now also serves as
Cin- Made’s corporate safety director.
The company’s scheduling team, composed of one manager and five lead
workers from various plant areas, is charged with setting hours, designating
layoffs, and deciding when temporary help is needed. The hiring review team, staffed by three
hourly employees and two managers, is responsible for interviewing applicants
and deciding whom to hire. An employee
committee performs both short – and long – term planning of labor, materials,
equipment, production runs, packing, and delivery. Employees even meet daily in order to set
their own production schedules. “We
empower employees to make decisions, not just have input,” Frey remarked. “I
just coach.”
Under
Frey’s new management regime, company secrets have virtually disappeared. All Cin-Made employees, from entry-level
employees all the way to the top, take part in running the company. In fact, Frey has delegated so much of the
company’s operations to its workers that he now feels little in the dark. “I
now know very little about what’s going on, on a day-to-day basis,” he
confessed.
At
Cin-Made, empowerment and delegation are more than mere buzzwords; they are the
way of doing business – good business. “We, as workers, have a lot of
opportunities,” said Williams. “If we want to take leadership, it’s offered to
us.”
Questions:
1. How were
principles of delegation and decentralization incorporated into Cine – Made
operations?
2. What are
the sources and uses of power at Cin – Made?
3. What were
some of the barriers to delegation and empowerment at Cin –Made?
4. What
lessons about management in a rapidly changing marketplace can be learned from
the experience of Cin – Made?
Case VI
HIGH-TECH ANSWERS TO DISTRIBUTION PROBLEMS AT ROLLERBLADE
When a manger finds that demand exceeds inventory, the
answer lies in making more goods. When a manager finds that inventory exceeds
demand, the answer lies in making fewer goods.
But what if a company management finds that they just do not know which
situation applies?
This is
the situation that recently confronted management at Rollerblade, the popular
skate manufacturer based in Minnetonka, Minnesota. Rollerblade has been one of
the leading firms in the fast growing high performance roller skate
marketplace, it matters a great deal for Rollerblade managers whether demand
and inventory are in balance, or not.
Rollerblade
was in a bind. The product literally
could not be shipped out the door. The
managers found that workers were not able to ship products because, as a result
of poor storage structures, they could not find the products. Once they were found, overcrowded aisles, in
addition to other space constraints, still prevented efficient shipping because
the workers could barely manage to get the products out the door. “We were out of control because we didn’t
know how to use space and didn’t have enough of it,” said Ian Ellis, director
for facilities and safety. “Basically,
there was no more useable space left in the warehouse, a severe backlog of
customer orders, and picking errors were clearly in the unacceptable range,”
added Ram Krishnan, Principal of NRM Systems, based in St. Paul, Minnesota.
The
answer for Rollerblade was found in technology.
High-tech companies have introduced a collection of computer
simulations, ranging in cost roughly from $10,000 to $30,000, that assist
managers in generating effective facility designs. With the help of layout Master IV simulation
software, developed by NRM, Rollerblade Management was able to implement a new
distribution design. As a result of the
distribution improvement, Rollerblade was able to increase the number of
customer orders processed daily from140 to 410 and eliminate order
backlog. “Now we have a different
business,” says Ellis. “The new layout has taken us from being in a crunch, to
being able to plan.
Questions:
1. With
retailers as their primary customers, what customer competitive imperatives
could be affected by Rollerblade’s inventory problems?
2. How
appropriate might a just – in – time inventory system be for a product such as
roller skates?”
3. What
opportunities are therefore Rollerblade managers to see FOR themselves as
selling services, instead of simply roller skates?
Masters Program in Business Administration (MBA)
Note :- Solve any 4 Case Study
All Case
Carry equal Marks.
CASE I
A GLOBAL PLAYER?
This is one game that India has permanently lost to its
arch-rival Pakistan - manufacturing and exporting sports goods. Historically,
when India and Pakistan were one before 1947, Sialkot, now in Pakistan, used to
be the world's largest production centre for badminton, hockey, football,
volleyball, basketball, and cricket equipment. After the creation of Pakistan,
Jalandhar became the second centre after Hindus in the trade migrated to India.
Soon Jalandhar overtook Sialkot and till the early 1980s it remained so.
However when the face of the trade began to change in the 1980s and import of
quality leather and manufacturing equipment became a necessity for quality
production, Pakistan wrested the initiative as India clung it its policies of
discouraging imports through high duties and restrictions. As it was, the
availability of labor and skills was a common factor in both Sialkot and
Jalandhar, but with Sialkot having the advantage of easier entry, most of the
world's top sports manufactures and procedures developed an association with
local industry in Sialkot that continues even today. Ten years later, in the
early 1990s, when Manmohan Singh liberalised the norms for importing equipment
and raw material required for producing sports goods, it was too late as
majority of the global majors had already shifted base to Sialkot.
In 1961 the late Narinder Mayor started the first large
scale sports goods manufacturing unit, Mayor & Company, thereby laying the
foundation of an organized industry. Even today, more than 70 percent of the
industry functions in an unorganized manner. Starting with soccer balls, Mayor
expanded to produce inflatable balls like volleyballs, basketballs, and rugby
balls. Today his two sons Rajan & Rajesh have built it up into five companies
engaged in a wide array of businesses, though sports goods remain the group's
core business. While the parent trading company, Mayor & Company, remains
the leading revenue-earner to the tune of Rs. 55 crore annually out of a total
group turnover of Rs. 85 crore-plus, Mayor's second venture, the
Indo-Australian Mayor International Limited, is spinning another Rs. 15 crore.
Mayor International is a 100 per cent export-oriented unit (EOU) exclusively
manufacturing and exporting golf and tennis balls.
The
product portfolio of the company comprises the following:
Inflatable Balls
• Soccer
balls and footballs (Professional, Indoor, Match and Training, leisure toy)
• Volley
balls, rugby balls (Volley balls and Beach Volley Balls)
• Australian
rugby, hand balls (English League, Union and touch) (Australian rules,
Australian Rugby League balls with laces)
Boxing Equipment
• Boxing
and punching balls (Boxing and Punching Balls, Head Gear, Gloves, Punching
Mitts and Kits Punching Bags & Bag Sets)
• Gloves
• Goal keeper's
gloves (Football / Soccer)
• Boxing
gloves
Cricket Equipment
• Worldwide
distributor for Spading Cricket Bats, Balls and Protective equipment.
HOCKEY EQUIPMENT
• Worldwide
distributor for Spading Hokey Sticks, Balls & Protective equipment
Based in Delhi, Rajan Mayor, 41 is the CMD of the group,
which also comprises an IT division working on B2B and B2C solutions; Voyaguer
World Travels in the tourism sector; a houseware exports division specializing
in stainless steel kitchenware, ceramics, and textiles; and a high school.
Younger brother Rajesh, 34, is the executive director and looks after all the
divisions operating in Jalandhar. Technical director Katz Nowaskowski divides
his time equally between India and Australia, where he looks after the group’s
interests. “While inflatable balls are our prime competence in our core
business, we are presently focusing on golf balls, for which we are the sole
producers in South Asia. Out of a total Rs. 300 crore of sports goods business
generated in domestic market, most of which is supplied by the unorganized
players, golf balls constitute a miniscule amount and therefore we came up with
a 100 per cent EOU for producing golf balls. Later the same facility was
utilized with little moderation for tennis balls too,” says Nowaskowaski.
Clarifying
that the sports good industry in India only includes playing equipment and not
apparels or shoes, D K Mittal, chairman of the Sports Goods Export Promotion
Council and joint secretary in the Ministry of Commerce, has certified Mayor
group as the number one exporter since 1993 till date, barring 1996. However,
SGEPC secretary Tarun Dewan points out that being the number one exporter does
not mean that Mayor is the number one brand being exported. “Actually we have tie
ups Dunlop, Arnold Palmer, and Fila for manufacturing golf balls. For footballs
and volleyballs we have association with Adidas, Mitre, Puma, Umbro, and
Dunlop. We manufacture soccer World Cup and European Cup replicas for Adidas,
which is a huge market. Only 400 balls used for actual play in the World Cup
are manufactured in Europe & that too only for sentimental reason,
otherwise we are capable of delivering products of the same, if not better
quality. Now since we manufacture balls for them, we cannot antimonies them by
producing balls of similar quality with our own brand name. Secondly, I agree
that competing with such big quaint in the world market in terms of branding is
a task that is well beyond our reach at the moment. However, we are trying to
brand ourselves in the domestic market and that is one of the prime focus in
the coming year,” says Rajan.
Coca-Cola,
Unilever, McDonald’s, American Airlines, Disney club, and other such big brands
come up with huge orders at tines for golf balls with their logos for
promotional schemes. However, there is no mention of the producing country
since these companies do not want to show that balls they deliver in the US are
being produced in Asia, “Not only is our quality good enough; labour in India
is cheap enough to churn out a much less expensive product in the end. Yet, the
main threat to our industry comes from countries like Taiwan and China, who
have already cornered a chunk of world markets in tennis, badminton, and squash
rackets. This is primarily because of two reasons – slow response to our needs
in tune with the market requirements from the government and lack of
infrastructure. And most importantly, tags ‘Made in China’ or ‘Made in Taiwan’
are more acceptable in the West than ‘Made in India’ or ‘Made in Pakistan’. One
of the mottos of the Mayor group has been to make ‘Made in India’ an acceptable
label in the West. For that we stress quality, timely delivery, and competent
rates. Yet, a lot depends on perception value, which in our case is sadly on
the negative side, much owing to our government’s stance over the years. Things
might be improving, but the pace is very slow and as our economy drifts towards
a free market scenario supinely, it might just prove to be too little too late
in the end,” says Rajesh.
Today,
Mayor group is sitting pretty as its competitors, Soccer International Sakay
Trades, Savi, Wasan, Cosco, Nivia and Spartan are only trying to catch up in
the inflatables category. With 1.2 million dozen golf balls, Mayor is way ahead
of its competitors. The company is planning to enhance its manufacturing
capacity to 1.5 million dozen golf next fiscal. With approval from the world’s
two top golf associations – the US PGA and RNA of Scotland, demand for its
product is not a problem, the company’s senior marketing officials point out.
With the markets in Mayor’s current export destinations – Europe, North
America, Australia, and Nw Zealand – all set to expand in the coming years
after the present slump, Mayor wants to expand its sports goods business that
caters to 60 per cent of its overall exports. Though 40 per cent of exports
come from house ware manufactured in Delhi and Mumbai, with export centres in
the same countries for its sports goods, just about maintaining this business
at its present state, and concerning entirely on sports goods is what the
mayors are intent on.
With
nearly 2000 skilled workforce; quality certification from ISO 9001:2000 and ISO
14001: 2004; and having spread to more than 40 countries, Mayor and Company is
obviously sitting pretty.
Questions
1. What
routes of globalization has the Mayor group chosen to go global? What other
routes could it have taken?
2. What
impediments are coming in the Mayor group’s way becoming a major and active
player in international business?
3. Why is
‘Made in India’ not liked in foreign markets? What can be done to erase the
perception?
CASE II
ARROW AND THE APPAREL INDUSTRY
Ten years ago, Arvind Clothing Ltd., a subsidery of Arvind
Brands Ltd., a member of the Ahmedabad based Lalbhai Group, signed up with the
150-year old Arrow Company, a division of Cutlet Peabody & Co. Inc., US,
for licensed manufacture of Arrow shirts
in India. What this brought to India was not just another premium dress shirt
brand but new manufacturing philosophy to its garment industry which combined
high productivity, stringent in-line quality control, and a conducive factory
ambience.
Arrow’s
first plant, with a 55,000 sq. ft. area and capacity to make 3,000 to 4,000
shirts a day, was established at Bangalore in 1993 with an investment of Rs. 18
crore. The conditions inside – with good lighting on the workbenches, high
ceilings, ample elbow room for each worker, and plenty of ventilation, were a
decided contrast to the poky, crowded, and confined sweatshops characterizing
the usual Indian apparel factory in those days. It employed a computer system
for translating the designed shirt’s dimensions to automatically mark the
master pattern for initial cutting of the fabric layers. This was installed,
not to save labour but to ensure cutting accuracy and low wastage of cloth.
The
over two-dozen quality checkpoints during the conversion of fabric to finished
shirt was unique to the industry. It is among the very few plants in the world
that makes shirts with 2 ply 140s and 3 ply 100s cotton fabrics using 16 to 18
stitches per inch. In March 2003, the Bangalore plant could produce
stain-repellant shirts based on nanotechnology.
The
reputation of this plant has spread far and wide and now it is loaded mostly
with export orders from renowed global brands such as GAR, Next, Espiri, and
the like. Recently the plant was identified by Tommy Hilfiger to make its brand
of shirts for the Indian market. As a result, Arvind Brands has had to take
over four other factories in Bangalore on wet lease to make the Arrow brand of
garments for the domestic market.
In
fact, the demand pressure from global brands which want to out outscore from
Arvind Brands, is so great that the company has had to set up another large for
export jobs on the outskirts of Bangalore. The new unit of 75,000 sq. ft. has
cost Rs. 16 crore and can turn out 8,000 to 9,000 shirts per day. The technical
collaborates are the renowned C&F Italia of Italy.
Among
the cutting edge technologies deployed here are a Gerber make CNC fabric
cutting machine, automatic collar and cuff stitching machines, pneumatic
holding for tasks like shoulder joining, threat trimming and bottom hemming, a
special machine to attach and edge stitch the back yoke, foam finishers which
use air and steam to remove creases in the finished garment, and many others.
The stitching machines in this plant can deliver up to 25 stitches per inch. A
continuous monitoring of the production process in the entire factory is done
through a computerized apparel production management system, which is hooked to
every machine. Because of the use of such technology, this plant will need only
800 persons for a capacity which is three that of the first plant which employs
580 persons.
Exports
of garments made for global brands fetched Arvind Brands over Rs. 60 crore in
2002, and this can double in the next few years, when the new factory goes on
full stream. In fact, with the lifting of the country-wise quota regime in
2005, there will be a surge in demand for high quality garments from India and
Arvind is already considering setting up two more such high tech
export-oriented factories.
It
is not just in the area of manufacture but also retailing that the arrow brand
brought a wind of change on the Indian scene. Prior to its coming, the usual
Indian shirt shop used to be a clutter of racks with little by way of display.
What Arvind Brands did was to set up exclusive showrooms for Arrow shirts in
which the functional was combined with the aesthetic. Stuffed racks and clutter
were eschewed. The products were displayed in such a manner that the customer
could spot their qualities from a distance. Of course, today this has become
standard practice with many other brands in the country, but Arrow showed the
way. Arrow today has the largest network of 64 exclusive outlets across India.
It is also present in 30 retail chains. It branched into multi-brand outlets in
2001, and is present in over 200 select outlets.
From
just formal dress shirts in the beginning, the product range of Arvind Brands
has expanded in the last ten years to include casual shirts, T-shirts, and
trousers. In the pipeline are light jackets and jeans engineered for the middle
age paunch. Arrow also tied up with the renowed Italian designer, Renato
Grande, who has worked with names like Versace and Marlboro, to design its Spring
/ Summer Collection 2003. The company has also announced its intention to
license the Arrow brand for other lifestyle accessories like footwear, watches,
undergarments, fragrances, and leather goods. According to Darshan Mehta,
President, Arvind Brands Ltd., the current turnover at retail price of the
Arrow brand in India is about Rs. 85 crore. He expects the turnover to cross
Rs. 100 crore in the next few years, of which about 15 per cent will be from
the licensed non-clothing products.
In
2005, Arvind Brands launched a major retail initiative fir all its brands.
Arvind Brands licensed brands (Arrow, Lee and Wrangler) had grown at a healthy
35 per cent rate in 2004 and the company planned to sustain the growth by
increasing their retail presence. Arvind Brands also widened the geographical
presence of its home-grown brands, such as Newport and Ruf-n-Tuf, targeting
small towns across India. The company planned to increase the number of outlets
where its domestic brands would be available, and draw in new customers for
readymades. To improve its presence in the high – end market, the firm started
negotiating with an international brand and is likely to launch the brand.
The
company has plans to expand its retail presence of Newport Jeans, from 1200 outlets
across 480 towns to 3000 outlets covering 800 towns.
For
a company ranked as one of the world’s largest manufacturers of denim cloth and
owners of world famous brands, the future looks bright certain for Arvind
Brands Ltd.
Company Profile
Name of the Company : Arvind Mills
Year of Establishments : 1931
Promoters : Three brothers – Katurbhai,
Narottam Bhai and Chimnabhai
Divisions : Arvind Mills was spilt in 1993
into three units – textiles, telecom and garments. Arvind Brands Ltd. (textile
unit) is 100 per cent subsidiary of Arvind Mills.
Growth Strategy : Arvind Mills has grown through
buying – up of sick units, going global and acquisition of Germanand US brand
names.
Questions
1. Why did
Arvind Mills choose globalization as major route to achieve growth when
domestic market was huge?
2. Hoe does
lifting of Country-wise quota regime’ help Arvind Mills?
3. What
lessons can other Indain business learn from the experience of Arvind Mills?
CASE III
AT THE RECEIVING END !
Spread over 121 countries with 30,000 restaurants, and
serving 46 million customers each day with the help of more than 400,000
employees, the reach of McDonald’s is amazing. It all started in 1948 when two
brothers, Richard and Maurice ‘Mac’ McDonald, built several hamburger stands,
with golden arches in southern California. One day a traveling salesman, Ray
Kroc, came to sell milkshake mixers. The popularity of their $O. 15 hamburgers
impressed him, so he bought the world franchise rights from them and spread the
golden arches around the globe.
McDonald’s depends on its overseas restaurants for revenue.
In fact, 60 percent of its revenues are generated outside of the United States.
The key to the company’s success is its ability to standardize the formula of
quality, service, cleanliness and value, and apply it everywhere.
The company, well known for its golden arches, is not the
world’s largest company. Its system wide sales are only about one-fifth of
Exxon Mobil or Wal-Mart stores. However, it owns one of the world’s best known
brands, and the golden arches are familiar to more people than the Christian
cross. This prominence, and its conquest of global markets, makes the company a
focal point for inquiry and criticism.
McDonald is a frequent target of criticism by
anti-globalization protesters. In France, a pipe-smoking sheep farmer named
Jose Bove shot to fame by leading a campaign against the fast food chain.
McDonald’s is a symbol of American trade hegemony and economic globalization.
Jose Bove organized fellow sheep farmers in France, and the group led by him
drove tractors to the construction site of a new McDonald’s restaurants and
ransacked it. Bove was jailed for 20 days, and almost overnight an
international anti-globalisation star was borne. Bove, who resembles the
irrelevant French comic book hero Asterix, traveled to Seattle in 1999, as part
of the French delegation to lead the protest against commercialization of food
crops promoted by the WTO. Food, according to him, is too vital a part of life
to be trusted to the vagaries of the world trade. In Seattle, he led a
demonstration in which some ski-masked protestors transhed at McDonald’s/ As
Bove explained, his movement was for small farmers against industrial farming,
brought about by globalization. For them, McDonald’s was a symbol of
globalization, implying the standardization of food through industrial farming.
If this was allowed to go on, he said, there would no longer be need for
farmers. “For us”, he declared, “McDonald’s is a symbol of what WTO and the big
companies want to do with the world”. Ironically, for all of Bove’s
fulminations against McDonald’s, the fast food chain counts its French
operations among its most profitable in 121 countries. As employer of about
35,000 workers, in 2006, McDonald’s was also one of France’s biggest foreign
employers.
Bove’s and his followers are not the only critics of
McDonald’s. Leftists, anarchists, nationalists, farmers, labor unions,
environmentalists, consumer advocates, protectors of animal rights, religious
orders and intellectuals are equally critical of the fast food chain. For these
and others, McDonald’s represents an evil America. Within hours after US
bombers began to pound Afghanistan in 2001, angry Pakistanis damaged McDonald’s
restaurants in Islamabad and an Indonesian mob burned an American flag.
McDonald entered India in the late 1990s. On its entry, the
company encountered a unique situation.
Majority of the Indians did not eat beef but the company’s preparations
contained cow’s meat nor could the company use pork as Muslims were against
eating it. This left chicken and
mutton. McDonald’s came out with
‘Maharaja Mac’, which is made from mutton and ‘McAloo Tikki Burger’ with
chicken potato as the main input. Food
items were segregated into vegetarian and non-vegetarian categories.
Though
it worked for sometimes, this arrangement did not last long. In 2001, three Indian businessmen settled in
Seattle sued McDonald’s for fraudulently concealing the existence of beef in
its French fries. The company admitted
its guilt of mixing miniscule quantity of beef extract in the oil. The company
settled the suit for $10 million and tendered an apology too. Further, the company pledged to label the
ingredients of its food items, and to find a substitute for the beef extract
used in its oil.
McDonald’s
succeeded in spreading American culture in the East Asian countries. In Hong Kong and Taiwan, the company’s clean
restrooms and kitchens set a new standard that elevated expectations throughout
those countries. In Hong Kong,
children’s birthdays had traditionally gone unrecognized, but McDonald’s
introduced the practice of birthday parties in its restaurants, and now such
parties have become popular among the public.
A journalist set forth a ‘Golden Arches Theory of Conflict Prevention’
based on the notion that countries with McDonald’s restaurants do not go to war
with each other. A British magazine, The
Economist, paints an yearly ‘Big Mac Index’ that uses the price of a Big Mac in
different foreign currencies to access exchange rate distortions.
Questions :
1. What
lessons can other MNCs learn from the experience of McDonald’s?
2. Aware of
the food habits of Indians, why did McDonald’s err in mixing beef extract in
the oil used for fries?
3. How far
has McDonald’s succeeded in strategizing and meeting local cultures and needs?
CASE IV
BPO-BANE OR BOON ?
Several MNCs are increasingly unbundling or vertical
disintegrating their activities. Put in simple language, they have begun
outsourcing (also called business process outsourcing) activities formerly
performed in-house and concentrating their energies on a few functions.
Outsourcing involves withdrawing from certain stages/activities and relaying on
outside vendors to supply the needed products, support services, or functional
activities.
Take Infosys, its 250 engineers develop IT applications for
BO/FA (Bank of America). Elsewhere, Infosys staffers process home loans for
green point mortgage of Novato, California. At Wipro, five radiologists
interpret 30 CT scans a day for Massachusetts General Hospital.
2500 college educated men and women are buzzing at midnight
at Wipro Spectramind at Delhi. They are busy processing claims for a major US
insurance company and providing help-desk support for a big US Internet service
provider – all at a cost upto 60 percent lower than in the US. Seven Wipro
Spectramind staff with Ph.Ds in molecular biology sift through scientific
research for western pharmaceutical companies.
Another activist in BPO is Evalueserve, headquartered in
Bermuda and having main operations near Delhi. It also has a US subsidiary
based in New York and a marketing office in Australia to cover the European
market. As Alok Aggarwal (co-founder and chairman) says, his company supplies a
range of value – added services to clients that include a dozen Fortune 500
companies and seven global consulting firms, besides market research and
venture capital firms. Much of its work involves dealing with CEOs, CFOs, CTOs,
CLOs and other so-called C-level executives.
Evalueserve provides services like patent writing,
evaluation and assessment of their commercialization potential for law firms
and entrepreneurs. Its market research services are aimed at top-rung financial
service firms, to which it provides
analysis of investment opportunities and business plans. Another major offering
is multilingual services. Evalueserve trains and qualifies employees to
communicate in Chinese, Spanish, German, Japanese and Italian, among other
languages. That skill set has opened market opportunities in Europe and
elsewhere, especially with global corporations.
ICICI Infotech Services in Edison, New Jersey, is another
BPO services provider that is offering marketing software products and
diversifying into markets outside the US. The firm has been promoted by
$2-billion ICICI Bank, a large financial institution in Mumbai that is listed
on the New York Stock Exchange.
In its first year after setting up shop in March 1999, ICICI
Infotech spent $33 million acquiring two information technology services firms in
New Jersy – Object Experts and lvory Consulting – and Command Systems in
Connecticut. These acquisitions were to help ICICI Infotech hit the ground in
the US with a ready book of contracts. But it soon found US companies
increasingly outsourcing their requirements to offshore locations, instead of
hiring foreign employees to work onsite at their offices. The company found
other native modes for growth. It has started marketing its products in
banking, insurance and enterprise source planning among others. It has
ear------- $10 million for its next US market offensive, which would go towards
R & D and back-end infrastructure support, and creating new versions of its
products to comply with US market requirements. It also has a joint venture –
Semantik Solutions GmbH in Berlin, Germany with the Fraunhofer Institute for
Software and Systems Engineering, which is based in Berlin, Germany with the
Fraunhofer Institute for Software and Systems Engineering, which is based in
Berlin and Dortmund, Germany, Fraunhofer is a leading institute in applied
research and development with 200 experts in software engineering and
evolutionary information.
A relatively late entrant to the US market, ICICI Infotech
started out with plain vanilla IT services, including operating call centers.
As the market for traditional IT services started weakening around mid-2000,
ICICI Infotech repositioned itself as a “Solutions” firm offering both products
and services. Today, it offers bundled packages of products and services in
corporate and retail banking and insurance, among other areas. The new
offerings include data center and disaster recovery management and value chain
management services.
ICICI Infotech’s expansion into new overseas markets has
paid off. Its $50 million revenue for its latest financial year ending March
2003 has the US operations generating some $15 million, while the Middle East
and Far East markets brought in another $9 million. It now boasts more than 700
customers in 30 countries, including Dow Jones,
Glaxo – Smithkline, Panasonic and American Insurance Group.
The outsourcing industry is indeed growing from strength.
Though technical support and financial services have dominated India’s
outsourcing industry, newer fields are emerging which are expected to boost the
industry many times over.
Outsourcing of human resource services or HR BPO is emerging
as big opportunity for Indian BPOs with global market in this segment estimated
at $40-60 billion per annum. HR BPO comes to about 33 percent of the outsourcing
revenue and India has immense potential as more than 80 percent of Fortune 1000
companies discuss offshore BPO as a way to out costs and increase productivity.
Another potential area is ITES/BPO industry. According to a
NASSCOM Survey, the global ITES/BPO industry was valued at around $773 billion
during 2002 and it is expected to grow at a compounded annual growth rate of
nine percent during the period 2002-06. NASSCOM lists the major indicators of
the high growth potential of ITES/BPO industry in India as the following :
During 2003-04, The ITES/BPO segment is estimated to have
achieved a 54 percent growth in revenues as compared to the previous year. ITES
exports accounted for $3.6 billion in revenues, up from $2.5 billion in
2002-03. The ITES-BPO segment also proved to be a major opportunity for job
seekers, creating employment for around 74,400 additional personnel in India
during 2003-04. The number of Indians working for this sector jumped to 245,500
by March 2004. By the year 2008, the segment is expected to employ over 1.1
million Indians, according to studies conducted by NASSCOM and McKinsey &
Co. Market research shows that in terms of job creation, the ITES-BPO industry
is growing at over 50 percent.
Legal outsourcing sector is another area India can look for
Legal transcription involves conversion of interviews with clients or witnesses
by lawyers into documents which can be presented in courts. It is no different
from any other transcription work carried out in India. The bottom-line here is
again cheap service. There is a strong reason why India can prove to be a big
legal outsourcing industry.
India, like the US, is a common-law jurisdiction rooted in
the British legal tradition. Indian legal training is conducted solely in
English. Appellate and Supreme Court proceedings in India take place
exclusively in English. Indian legal opinions are written exclusively in
English. Due to the time-zone differences, night time in the US is daytime in
India which means that clients get 24 hour attention, and some projects can be
completed overnight. Small and mid-sized business offices can solve staff
problems as the outsourced lawyers from India take on the time consuming labour
intensive legal research and writing projects. Large law firms also can solve
problems of overstaffing by using the on-call lawyers.
Research firms such as Forrester Research, predict that by
2015, more than 489,000 US lawyer jobs, nearly eight percent of the field, will
shift abroad.
Many more new avenues are opening up for BPO services
providers. Patent writing and evaluation services are markets set to boom. Some
200,000 patent applications are written in the western world annually, making
for a market size of between $5 billion and $7 billion. Outsourcing patent
writing service could significantly lower the cost of each patent application,
now anywhere between $12,000 and $15,000 apiece – which help expand the
market.
Offshoring
of equity research is another major growth area. Translation services are also
becoming a big Indian plus. India produces some 3,000 graduates in German each
year, which is more than in Switzerland.
Though
going is good, the Indian BPO services providers cannot afford to be complacent,
Phillippines, Mexico and Hungary are emerging as potential offshore locations.
Likely competitor is Russia, although the absence of English speaking people
there holds the country back. But the dark horse could be South Africa and even
China.
BPO is
based on sound economic reasons. Outsourcing helps gain cost advantage. If an
activity can be performed better or more cheaply by an outside supplier, why
not outsource it ? Many PC makers, for example, have shifted from in-house
assembly to utilizing contract assemblers to make their PCs. CISCO outsources
all productions and assembly of its routers and switching equipment to contract
manufacturers that operate 37 factories, all linked via the Internet.
Secondly,
the activity (outsourced) is not crucial to the firm’s ability to gain
sustainable competitive advantage and won’t hollow out its core competence,
capabilities, or technical knowhow. Outsourcing of maintenance services, data
processing, accounting, and other administrative support activities to companies
specializing in these services has become common place. Thirdly, outsourcing
reduces the company’s risk exposure to changing technology and / or changing
buyer preferences.
Fourthly,
BPO streamlines company operations in ways that improve organizational
flexibility, cut cycle time, speedup decision making and reduce coordination
costs. Finally, outsourcing allows a company to concentrate on its crore
business and do what it does best. Are Indian companies listening? If they
listen, BPO is a boon them and not a bane.
Questions
1. Which of
the theories of International trade can help Indian services providers gain
competitive edge over their competitors?
2. Pick up
some Indian services providers. With the help of Michael Porter’s diamond,
analyze their strengths and weaknesses as active players in BPO.
3. Compare
this case with the case given at the beginning of this chapter. What
similarities and dissimilarities do you notice? Your analysis should be based
on the theories explained in this chapter.
CASE V
THE SAGA CONTINUES
It was the talk of the town in Bangalore during the late
1970s and early 1980s. The plant was coming up on the Bangalore – Yelahanka
Road, about 20 km from the city. Everything the people over three did became a
folklore. The buildings were huge with wonderful architecture, beautifully
built with wide roads and huge spaces. Should a situation demand, the entire
plant could be dismantled, bundled up, loaded into trucks and ferried to other
places. Lighting inside the building had to be seen to be believed. Interiors
had to be seen to be believed. Washrooms, stores, reception, canteen,
healthcare, had to be seen to be believed. It had never happened elsewhere. It
was amazing, the boss was not addressed as Sir, he was called Mr. ---- and so !
The yellow painted buses on the city roads made a delightful sight. Legends
were fold about the two gentlemen who founded the company.
An interesting story is told about how one of the surviving
founders (Larsen who lived till 2003) visited the Bangalore plant once a year,
he stayed in a hotel on his own, hired his own cab, went to the plant and
greeted every employee, from the top brass down to the last person in the
hierarchy. Story is also told about how, on one such visit Larsen went to the
reception and asked for permission to enter the plant. Not knowing who he was,
the young lass in reception room made him wait for half-an-hour. By luck,
someone recognized him.
A budding author captured all these and many more in his
first book, which became a big hit with all the teachers and students in
different colleges buying and reading it.
If cannot be anything other than L & T, the huge
engineering and construction multi-plant organization, founded in 1938 by two
Danish engineers, Henning Holck – Larsen and Soren Kristin Toubro.
Henning Holck – Larsen and Soren Kristin Toubro, school – mates
in Denmark, would not have dreamt, as they were learning about India in history
classes that they would, one day, create history in that land. In 1938, the two
friends decided to forgo the comforts of working in Europe and started their
own operation in India. All they had was a dream. And the courage to dare.
Their first office in Mumbai (Bombay) was so small that only one of the
partners could use the office at a time! Today, L & T is one of India’s
biggest and best known industrial organizations with reputation for
technological excellence, high quality of products and services and strong
customer orientation.
As on today, L & T is a 62 business conglomerate with
turnover of Rs. 18,363 crore (2006-07), with the script commanding Rs. 2400 in
the bourses.
No, L & T is not sitting pretty. It want to hit Rs.
30,000 crore turnover mark by 2010 and is busy restructuring, sniffing new
pastures, grooming new talent and projecting the new company credo – “It’s all
about Imagineering.” With the sole idea of creating several MNCs within, with
footprints across nations, L & T is shedding the old economy and embracing
the emergent opportunities and challenges.
Stagnant Revenues and Low Margins
Not everything went the L & T way.
In the late nineties, the macro environment was -----
inspiring with stagnant revenues and low margins, and L & T’s core
strength, its engineers, were being constantly weaned away by the fast-growing
software sector. So, the general comment around the bourses was about the
credibility of the company, ‘L & T is a, good company but its stock price,
for some reason or the other, is fixed at the Rs. 140-210 band. So the company
had to change by keeping its core intact. As s senior executive remarks. “L
& T was perceived to be un –sexy and we had to create a new buzz around the
campuses.” The metamorphosis must echo through a whimper, not a bang. Even
before the company divested its cement business in 2003, which accounted for
25% of its total sales, there were years of incremental and low visibility
organizational moves towards a new L & T.
At a 52-week high of Rs. 2400, the L & T scrip today
looks dapper, a far cry from the nineties when the stock price was in a state
of flux. Much of the change started as a ripple way back in 1999 when Naik took
over as the CEO. He visited employees at all levels across the organization and
asked them what it took to transform the company. The insights were mapped and
implemented. “None of our employees thought that we build shareholder value.
They thought we build monuments,” the chairman reminisces. The focus on people
became stronger and formed the basis of restructuring. It became the first old
economy company to provide stock options to its employees.
When Naik came to the helm, he set upon himself a 90 – day
transformational agenda. Portfolios were reviewed and a vision clearly chalked
out. He drew up a simple, brief, “ L & T has to be a multinational company
and it has to deliver shareholder value at any cost. At the end of 90 days,
between July 22 and July 24, 1999, the company launched Project Blue Chip,
which essentially fast – tracked projects. The moot point was to complete all
projects by February of the new millennium. Strategy formation teams were
formed, portfolios reviewed and structures were optimized. Young leadership was
brought to the fore and the business streamlining process kicked in.
Hiving off from 1999-2001, L & T went about debottle-
necking its cement plants. They were modernized and capitalized were raised
from 12 million tones to 16 million tones annually, with minimum costs. The
mantra really was to grow the business and then divest it as cement fell in the
non-core category.
So, in September 2003, L & T sold its cement business to
the Aditya Birla Group, which resulted in the company’s Economic Value Add
(EVA), an important indicator of the financial health of the company, swinging
from a negative Rs.350-crore to a positive Rs.50-crore immediately. The move
also enabled L&T to reduce its debt-equity ratio from 1:1 to 0.2:1.
Analysts took a positive view of the demerger, and re-rated L&T as AAA from
AA+ in 2004. From then on, began L&T’s transformation into a lean and mean
machine. In 2004, the company envisaged a growth curve for the next five years.
This marked the beginning of Project Lakshya, which was centered around people,
operations, capabilities and new ventures. The company set out with over 300
initiatives in hand, and also placed a rigorous risk management system. For
instance, any project above Rs. 1,000-crore needed the signature of the
chairman. Project Lakshya is known for targeting and selecting the right
projects.
By now, the Indian economy had started witnessing
unprecedented boom and despite divesting the cement business, the L&T
turnover scaled the Rs. 10,000 crore mark. Alongside, the lucrative Middle East
market was booming and L&T forayed into six countries in the Gulf with
joint ventures. “The idea was to develop a mini L&T in the region,”
observes a senior company executive. The company also set up manufacturing
facilities in China to leverage the cost structure. Exports in 2007 constituted
18% of net sales. With soaring revenues and operating margins, L&T started
benchmarking itself with the best in the world. Suddenly, the notion of an
Indian MNC became a reality.
L&T has big plans to foray into new businesses. The new
businesses are:
Ship-building: L&T is getting into ship-building by
building a world-class facility, and already has a small shipyard in Hazira.
Will build complex ocean going ships for the first time in India.
Power equipment: It is getting into power equipment in a big
way. A JV with Mitsubishi for super critical boilers, formed another with
Toshiba for turbines on the way.
Financial services: L&T is rapidly increasing its
presence in infrastructure finance. It is also planning to come up with a $1
billion infrastructure fund.
Railways: A new area, L&T aims to be an end-to-end
solutions provider for the railways, from track-laying to signaling to
transmission, and others.
The global economic meltdown has hit L&T also, but
lightly. Its order book at Rs. 71,650cr has not grown as expected. Delay in
finalization of several government projects as well as the slowdown in the
overseas markets are the key reasons for the lax in order inflow. The company,
however, has maintained its forecast of a 25 percent growth in its order book
for the fiscal 2010.
L&T’s, IT and financial subsidiaries too witnessed
lackluster performance with profits remaining stagnant.
L&T’s focus areas in future would be the Middle East and
China in view of the booming infrastructure market there.
Thus, for an institution that has grown to legendary
proportions, there cannot and must not be an ‘end’. Unlike other stories, the
L&T saga continues.
QUESTIONS
1. Having a
strong presence in India, what drives L&T to think of emerging a strong MNC
?
2. What
challenges lies ahead of L&T ? How does it prepare to cope with them ?
3. Will the
L&T Saga continue ?
CASE VI
THE ABB PBS JOINT VENTURE IN OPERATION
ABB Prvni Brnenska Strojirna Brno, Ltd. (ABB-PBS),
Czechoslovakia was a joint venture in which ABB has a 67 per cent stake and PBS
a.s. has a 33 per cent stake. This PBS share was determined nominally by the
value of the land, plant and equipment, employees, and goodwill, ABB
contributed cash and specified technologies and assumed some of the debt of
PBS. The new company started operations on April 15, 1993.
Business
for the joint venture in its first two full years was good in most aspects.
Orders received in 1994, the first full year of the joint venture's operation,
were higher than ever in the history of PBS. Orders received in 1995 were 21/2
times those in 1994. The company was profitable in 1995 and ahead of 1994s
results with a rate of return on assets of 2.3 per cent and a rate of return on
sales of 4.5 per cent.
The
1995 results showed substantial progress towards meeting the joint venture's
strategic goals adopted in 1994 as part of a five-year plan. One of the goals
was that exports should account for half of the total orders by 1999. (Exports
had accounted for more than a quarter of the PBS business before 1989, but most
of this business disappeared when the Soviet Union collapsed), In 1995 exports
increased as a share of total orders to 28 per cent up from 16 per cent the
year before.
The
external service business, organized and functioning as a separate business for
the first time in 1995, did not meet expectations. It accounted for five per
cent of all orders and revenues in 1995, below the 10 per cent goal set for it.
The retrofitting business, which was expected to be a major part of the service
business, was disappointing for ABB-PBS, partly because many other small
companies began to provide this service in 1994, including some started by
former PBS employees who took their knowledge of PBS-built power plants with
them. However, ABB-PBS managers hoped that as the company introduced new
technologies, these former employees would gradually lose their ability to
perform these services, and the retrofit and repair service business would
return to ABB-PBS.
ABB-PBS
dominated the Czech boiler business with 70 per cent of the Czech market in
1995, but managers expected this share to go down in the future as new domestic
and foreign competitors emerged. Furthermore, the west European boiler market
was actually declining because environmental laws caused a surge of
retrofitting to occur in the mid-1980s, leaving less business in the 1990s.
Accordingly ABB-PBS boiler orders were flat in 1995.
Top
managers at ABB-PBS regarded business results to date as respectable, but they
were not satisfied with the company's performance. Cash flow was not as good as
expected. Cost reduction had to go further. "The more we succeed, the more
we see our shortcomings", said one official.
Restructuring
The
first round of restructuring was largely completed in 1995, the last year of
the three-year restructuring plan. Plant logistics, information systems, and
other physical capital improvements were in place. The restructing included :
• Renovating
and reconstructing workshops and engineering facilities
• Achieving
ISO 9001 for all four ABB-PBS divisions (awarded in 1995)
• Transfer
of technology from ABB (this was an ongoing project)
• Installation
of an information system
• Management
training, especially in total quality assurance and English language
• Implementing
a project management approach.
A
notable achievement of importance of top management in 1995 was a 50 per cent
increase in labour productivity, measured as value added per payroll crown.
However, in the future ABB-PBS expected its wage rates to go up faster than
west European wage rates (Czech wages were increasing about 15 per cent per
year) so it would be difficult to maintain the ABB-PBS unit cost advantage over
west European unit cost.
The Technology Role
for ABB-PBS
The joint venture was expected from the beginning to play an
important role in technology development for part of ABB's power generation
business worldwide. PBS a.s. had engineering capability in coal-fired steam
boilers, and that capability was expected to be especially useful to ABB as
more countries became concerned about air quality. (When asked if PBS really
did have leading technology here, a boiler engineering manager remarked,
"Of course we do. We burn so much dirty coal in this country, we have to
have better technology").
However, the envisioned technology leadership role for
ABB-PBS had not been realised by mid-1996. Richard Kuba, the ABB-PBS managing
director, realised the slowness with which the technology role was being
fulfilled, and he offered his interpretation of events :
"ABB did not promise to make the joint venture its
steam technology leader. The main point we wanted to achieve in the joint
venture agreement was for ABB-PBS to be recognised as a full-fledged company,
not just a factory. We were slowed down on our technology plans because we had
a problem keeping our good, young engineers. The annual employee turnover rate
for companies in the Czech Republic is 15 or 20 per cent, and the unemployment
rate is zero. Our engineers have many other good entrepreneurial opportunities.
Now we've begun to stabilise our engineering workforce. The restructuring
helped. We have better equipment and a clean and safer work environment. We
also had another problem which is a good problem to have. The domestic power
plant business turned out to be better than we expected, so just meeting the
needs of our regular customers forced some postponement of new technology
initiatives."
ABB-PBS had benefited technologically from its relationship
with ABB. One example was the development of a new steam turbine line. This
project was a cooperative effort among ABB-PBS and two other ABB companies, one
in Sweden and one in Germany. Nevertheless, technology transfer was not the
most important early benefit of ABB relationship. Rather, one of the most
important gains was the opportunity to benchmark the joint venture's
performance against other established western ABB companies on variables such
as productivity, inventory, and receivables.
Questions
1. Where
does the joint venture meet the needs of both the partners? Where does it fall
short?
2. Why had
ABB-PBS failed to realized its technology leadership?
3. What
lessons one can draw from this incident for better management of technology
transfers?
CASE VII
PERU
Peru is located on the west coast South America. It is the
third largest nation of the continent (after Brazil and Argentina), and covers
almost 500,000 square miles (about 14 per cent of the size of the United
States). The land has enormous contrasts, with a desert (drier than the
Sahara), the towering snow-capped Andes mountains, sparking grass-covered
plateaus, and thick rain forests. Peru has approximately 27 million people, of
which about 20 per cent live in Lima, the capital. More Indians (one half of
the population) live in Peru than in any other country in the western
hemisphere. The ancestors of Peru’s Indians were the famous Incas, who built a
great empire. The rest of the population is mixed and a small percentage is
white. The economy depends heavily on agriculture, fishing, mining, and
services. GDP is approximately $115 billion and per capita income in recent
years has been around $4, 300. In recent years the economy has gained some
relative and multinationals are now beginning to consider investing in the
country.
One of
these potential investors is a large New York based that is considering a $25
million loan to the owner of a Peruvian fishing fleet. The owner wants to
refurbish the fleet and add one more ship.
During
the 1970s, the Peruvian government nationalized a number of industries and
factories and began running them for the profit of the state. In most cases,
these state-run ventures became disasters. In the late 1970s, the fishing fleet
owner was given back his ships and allowed to operate his business as before.
Since then, he has managed to remain profitable, but the biggest problem is
that his ships are getting old and he needs and influx of capital to make
repairs and add new technology. As he explained it to the New York banker:
“Fishing is no longer just an art. There is a great deal of technology
involved. And to keep costs low and be competitive on the world market, you
have to have the latest equipment for both locating as well as catching and
then loading and unloading the fish.”
Having
reviewed the fleet owner’s operation, the large multinational bank believers
that the loan is justified. The financial institution is concerned, however,
that the Peruvian government might step in during the next couple of years and
again take over the business. If this were to happen it might take and
additional decade for the loan to be repaid. If the government were to allow
the fleet owner to operate the fleet the way he has over the last decade, the
loan could be repaid within seven years.
Right
now, the bank is deciding on the specific terms of the agreement. Once these
have been worked out, either a loan officer will fly down to Lima and close the
deal or the owner will be asked to come to New York for the signing. Whichever
approach is used, the bank realizes that final adjustments in the agreement
will have to be made on the spot. Therefore, if the bank sends a representative
to Lima, the individual will have to have the authority to commit the bank to
specific terms. These final matters should be worked out within the next ten
days.
Questions
1. What are
some current issues facing Peru? What is the climate for doing business in Peru
today?
2. What type
of political risks does this fishing company need to evaluate? Identify and describe
them.
3. What
types of integrative and protective and defensive techniques can the bank use?
4. Would the
bank be better off negotiating the loan in New York or in Lima? Why?
Master Program in Business Administration (MBA)
Note :- Solve any 4 case study
All case
carries equal marks
CASE I
A DIAMOND PERSONALITY
Ask Suraj bhai about the dot-com burst and he may grin at
you as if to say, ``What burst?’’ Suraj bhai, a 38-year-old entrepreneur, owns
an Internet business that sells loose diamonds to various buyers. Business is
becoming for Suraj bhai. In 2004, he had sales of INR 3,500 million. Needless
to say, Suraj bhai is optimistic about his business venture.
The
future wasn’t always to bright for Suraj bhai, however. In 1985, Suraj bhai
moved from his native town Suraj, to New Delhi, with little ability to speak
English. There, he attended language courses and worked at the local mall to
support himself. After graduation, his roommate’s girlfriend suggested that he
work at a local jeweler. ``I thought she was crazy. I didn’t know anything
about jewelry,’’ says Suraj bhai, who took her advice. Though he worked hard
and received his Diamonds and Diamonds Grading certification from the
Gemological Institute, he wasn’t satisfied with his progress. `I quickly
realized that working there, I was just going to get a salary with a raise here
and there. I would never become anything. That drove me to explore other
business ventures. I also came to really known diamonds – their pricing and
their quality.’’
In
1997, tired of working for someone else, Suraj bhai decided to open his own
jewelry store. However, business didn’t boom. `Some of my customers were
telling me they could find diamonds for less on the Interest. It blew my mind’’
Surajy bhai recognized an opportunity and began contacting well-known diamond
dealers to see if they would be interested in selling their gems online. Suraj
bhai recalls one conversation with a prominent dealer who told him, `You cannot
sell diamonds on the Internet. You will not survive.’’ Discouraged, Suraj bhai
then says that he made a mistake. ``I stopped working on it. If you have a
dream, you have to keep working harder at it.’’
A year
later, Suraj bhai did work harder at his dream and found a dealer who agreed to
provide him with some diamonds. Says Suray bhai, ``Once I had one. I could approach
others. Business started to build. The first 3 months I sold INR 20 million
worth of diamonds right off the bat. And that was just me. I started to add
employees and eventually closed the jewelry store and got out of retail.’’
Although Suraj bhai does have some diamonds in inventory, he primarily acts as
a connection point between buyers and suppliers, giving his customers an
extraordinary selection from which to choose.
Suraj
bhai is now a savvy entrepreneur, and his company, Abhisaz.com, went public in
October 2003.
Why is
Suraj bhai successful? Just ask two people who have known Suraj bhai over the
years. Yogesh bhai, a realtor who helped build Suraj bhai building, says,
``Suraj bhai is a very ambitious young man. I am not surprised at all how successful
he is. He is an entrepreneur in the truest sense of the world.’’ One of Suraj
bhai former real-estate instructors, Arun Jain, concurs. `I am not surprised at
all at his success,’’ says Arun. ``Suraj bhai has always been an extremely
motivated individual with a lot of resources. He has a wonderful personality
and pays close attention to detail. He also has an ability to stick to things.
You could tell from the beginning that he was going to persevere, and I am
proud of him.’’
Suraj
bhai is keeping his success in perspective, but he also realizes his business’
potential: ``I take a very small salary, and our overhead in INR 25 million a
year. I am not in debt, and the business is breaking ever. I care about the
company. I want to keep everything even until we take off, and then it may be
another ball game.’’
Questions:
1. What factors do you think attributed to Suraj bhai’s
success? Was he merely ``in the right place at the right time’’, or are there
characteristics about him that contribute to his success?
2. How do you believe Suraj bhai would score on the Big Five
dimensions of personality (extroversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness,
emotional stability, openness to experience)? Which ones would he score high
on? Which ones might he score low on?
3. Do you believe that Suraj bhai is high or low on core
self-evaluations? On what information did you base your decision?
4. What information about Suraj bhai suggests that he has a
proactive personality?
CASE II
BULLYING BOSSES
It got to where I was twitching, literally, on the way into
work,’’ states Carrie Clark, a 52-year-old retired teacher and administrator.
After enduring 10 months of repeated insults and mistreatment from her
supervisor, she finally quit her job. ``I had to take care of my health.’’
Though
many individuals recall bullies from their elementary school days, some are
realizing that bullies can exist in the workplace as well. And these bullies do
not just pick on the weakest in the group, rather, any subordinate in their
path may fall prey to their torment, according to Dr. Gary Namie, director of
the Workplace Bullying and Trauma Institute. Dr. Namie further says workplace
bullies are not limited to men-women are at least as likely to be bullies.
However, gender discrepancies are found in victims of bullying, as women are
more likely to be targets.
What
motivates a boss to be a bully? Dr. Harvey Hornstein, a retired professor from
Teachers College at Columbia University, suggests that supervisors may use
bullying as a means to subdue a subordinate that poses a threat to the
supervisor’s status. Additionally, supervisors may bully individuals to vent
frustrations. Many times however, the sheer desire to wield power may be the
primary reason for bullying.
What is
the impact of bullying on employee motivation and behavior? Surprisingly, even
though victims of workplace bullies may feel less motivated to go to work every
day, it does not appear that they discontinue performing their required job
duties. However, it does appear that victims of bullies are less motivated to
perform extra-role or citizenship behaviors. Helping others, speaking
positively about the organization, and going beyond the call of duty are
behaviors that are reduced as a result of bullying. According to Dr. Bennett
Tepper of the University of North Carolina, fear may be the reason that many
workers continue to perform their job duties. And not all individuals reduce
their citizenship behaviors. Some continue to engage in extra-role behaviors to
make themselves look better than their colleagues.
What
should you do if your boss is bullying you? Don’t necessarily expect help from
coworkers. As Emelise Aleandri, an actress and producer from New York who left
her job after being bullied, stated, ``Some people were afraid to do anything.
But others didn’t mind what was happening at all, because they wanted my job.’’
Moreover, according to Dr. Michelle Duffy of the University of Kentucky,
coworkers often blame victims of bullying in order to resolve their guilt.
``they do this by wondering whether maybe the person deserved the treatment, that
he or she has been annoying, or lazy, they did something to earn it,’’ states
Dr. Duffy. One example of an employee who observed this phenomenon firsthand is
Sherry Hamby, who was frequently verbally abused by her boss and then
eventually fired. She stated, ``This was a man who insulted me, who insulted by
family, who would lay into me while everyone else in the office just sat there
and let it happen. The people in my office eventually started blaming me.’’
What
can a bullied employee do? Dr. Hornstein suggests that employees try to ignore
the insults and respond only to the substance of the bully’s grip. `stick with
the substance, not the process, and often it won’t escalate,’’ he states. Of
course, that is easier said than done.
Questions:
1) Of the
three types of organizational justice, which one does workplace bullying most
closely resemble?
2) What
aspects of motivation might workplace bullying reduce? For example, are there
likely to be effects on an employee’s self-efficacy? If so, what might those
effects be?
3) If you
were a victim of workplace bullying, what steps would you take to try to reduce
its occurrence? What strategies would be most effective? What strategies might
be ineffective? What would you do if one of your colleagues was a victim of an
abusive supervisor?
4) What
factors do you believe contribute to workplace bullying? Are bullies a product
of the situation, or are they flawed personalities? What situations and what
personality factors might contribute to the presence of bullies?
CASE III
THANKS FOR NOTHING
Thought it may seem fairly obvious that receiving praise and
recognition from one’s company is a motivating experience, sadly many companies
are failing miserably when it comes to saying ``thanks’’ to their employees.
According to curt Coffman global practice leader at Gallup, 71 percent of U.S.
workers are ``disengaged’’, essentially meaning that they could care less about
their organization. Coffman states. ``We’re operating at one-quarter of the
capacity in terms of managing human capital. It’s alarming.’’ Employee
recognition programs, which became more popular as the U.S. economy shifted
from industrial to knowledge-based, can be an effective way to motivate
employees and make them feel valued. In many cases, however, recognition
programs are doing ``more harm than good’’ according to Coffman.
Take
Ko, a 50-year-old former employee of a dot-com in California. Her company
proudly instituted a rewards program designed to motivate employees. What were
the rewards for a job well-done? Employees would receive a badge which read ``U
Done Good’’ and, each year, would receive a T-shirt as a means of annual
recognition. Once an employee received 10 ``U Done Good’’ badges, he or she
could trade them in for something bigger and better—a paperweight. Ko states
that she would have preferred a raise. ``It was patronizing. There wasn’t any
deep thought involved in any of this.’’ To make matters worse, she says the
badges were handed out arbitrarily and were not tied to performance. And what
about those T-shirts? Ko states that the company instilled a strict dress code,
so employees couldn’t even wear the shirts if they wanted to. Needless to say,
the employee recognition program seemed like an empty gesture rather than a
motivation.
Even
programs that provide employees with more expensive rewards can backfire,
especially if the rewards are given insincerely. Eric Lange, an employee of a
trucking company, recalls the time when one of the company’s vice presidents
achieved a major financial goal for the company. The vice president, who worked
in an office best of Lange, received a Cadillac Seville as his company car and
a new Rolex wristwatch that cost the company $10,000. Both were lavish gifts,
but the way they were distributed left a sour taste in the vice president’s
mouth. He entered his office to find the Rolex in a cheap cardboard box sitting
on his desk, along with a brief letter explaining that he would be receiving a
1099 tax form in order to pay taxes on the watch. Lange state of the vice
president, ``He came into my office, which was right next door, and said, `can
you believe this?’’ A mere 2 months later, the vice president pawned the watch.
Lange explains. ``It had absolutely no meaning for him.
Such
experiences resonate with employees who may find more value in a sincere pat on
the back than gifts from management that either are meaningless or aren’t
conveyed with respect or sincerity. However, sincere pats on the back may be
hard to come by. Gallup’s poll found that 61 percent of employees stated that
they haven’t received a sincere, ``thank you’’ from management in the past
year. Finding such as these are troubling, as verbal rewards are not only
inexpensive for companies to hand out but also are quick and easy to
distribute. Of course, verbal rewards do need to be paired sometimes with
tangible benefits that employees value – after all, money talks. In addition,
when praising employees for a job well-done, managers need to ensure that the
praise is given in conjunction with the specific accomplishment. In this way,
employees may not only feel valued by their organization but will also know
what actions to take to be rewarded in the future.
Questions
1) If
praising employees for doing a good job seems to be a fairly easy and obvious
motivational tools, why do you think companies and managers don’t often do it?
2) As a
manager, what steps would you take to motivate your employees after observing
them perform well?
3) Are there
any downsides to giving employees too much verbal praise? What might these
downsides be and how could you alleviate them as a manager?
4) As a
manager, how would you ensure that recognition given to employees is
distributed fairly and justly?
CASE IV
WILL GEORGE W. BUSH BE A GREAT PRESIDENT?
What does it take to be a great U.S. president? A survey of
78 history, political science, and law scholars rated the U.S. presidents from
George Washington to Bill Clinton. Here are the presidents who were rated ``Great’’
and ``Near Great.’’
Great
George
Washington
Abraham
Lincoln
Franklin
D. Roosevelt (FDR)
Near
Great
Thomas
Jefferson
Andrew
Jackson
James
Polk
Theodore
Roosevelt
Harry
Truman
Dwight
Eisenhower
Ronald
Reagan
Among recent presidents, Presidents Nixon, Ford, and Carter
were ranked ``Below Average’’ and Presidents G. H. W. Bush (the first President
Bush) and Clinton were ranked ``Average’’.
So what
explains these ratings? The following are some qualities of presidents who have
stood the test of time.
1. Great
presidents are transformational leaders who engender strong emotions – that is,
you either love them or you hate them (it’s hard to hate someone who made
little difference). And great presidents enact a vision that may not respond to
popular opinion. Lincoln and FDR were beloved, and hated, by millions.
2. Great
presidents are bold and take risks, and almost all great presidents emerge
successfully from a crisis. A great president is perceived as ``being there’’
when a crisis emerges and taking bold action to lead the nation out of the
crisis – for example, Lincoln in the Civil War and Roosevelt in WWII.
3. Great
presidents are associated with a vision. Most people, for example, are able to
associate the great presidents with defining moment where a clear set of
principles was articulated – for example, FDR’s speech to Congress after the
attacks on Pearl Harbor, and Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address.
4. Great
presidents are charismatic. They are engaging, articulate, and expressive,
which helps capture the public’s attention and rallies people around a
president’s cause. One leadership expert argues that the best presidents create
colorful personas with their language by using words with basic emotions – for
example, good versus evil or love versus hate.
So what about President George W. Bush (the second President
Bush)? Shortly after his second inauguration, President Bush embarked on an
ambitious agenda of legal reform, transforming the Social Security system, tax
reform, and revising immigration laws. One writer commented, ``Bush has always
thought big, and always believed you earn political capital by expending it.’’
However, the closeness of the 2004 election (Bush received 51 percent of the
vote and Kerry received 48 percent) suggests that Bush may not have
overwhelming support.
Questions
1. How would
you rate President George W. Bush on the four characteristics outlined at the
beginning of the case? How would you contrast his reaction to Hurricane Katrina
with his reaction to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001? What do you
think his handling of these two events says about his leadership?
2. Do you
think leaders in other contexts (business’, sports, religious) exhibit the same
qualities of great or near-great U.S. presidents?
3. Do you
think being in the right place at the right time could influence presidential
greatness?
Case V
A UNIQUE TRAINING PROGRAM AT UPS
Mark Colvard, a United Parcel manager in San Ramon,
California, recently faced a difficult decision. One of his drivers asked for 2
weeks off to help an ailing family
member. But company rules said this driver wasn’t eligible. If Colvard went by
the book, the driver would probably take the days off anyway and be fired. On
the other hand, Colvard was likely to be criticized by other drivers if he bent
the rules. Colvard chose to give the driver the time off. Although he took some
heat for the decision, he also kept a valuable employee.
Had
Colvard been faced with this decision 6 months earlier, he says he would have
gone the other way. What changed his thinking was a month he spent living in
McAllen, Texas. It was part of a UPS management training experience called the
Community Internship Program (CIP). During his month in McAllen, Colvard built
housing for the poor, collected clothing for the Salvation Army, and worked in
a drug rehab center. Colvard gives the program credit for helping him empathize
with employees facing cries back home. And he says that CIP has made him a
better manager. ``My goal was to make the numbers, and in some cases that meant
not looking at the individual but looking the bottom line. After that 1-month
stay, I immediately started reaching out to people in a different way.’’
CIP was
established by UPS in the late 1960s to help open the eyes of the company’s
predominantly white managers to the poverty and inequality in many cities.
Today, the program takes 50 of the company’s most promising executives each
summer and brings them to cities around the country. There they deal with a
variety of problems- from transportation to housing, education, and health
care. The company’s goal is to awaken these managers to the challenges that
many of their employees face, bridging the cultural divide that separates a
white manager from an African American driver or an upper-income suburbanite
from a worker raised in the rural South.
Questions
1. Do you
think individuals can learn empathy from something like a 1-month CIP
experience? Explain why or why not.
2. How could
UPS’s CIP help the organization better manage work-life conflicts?
3. How could
UPS’s CIP help the organization improve its response to diversity?
4. What
negatives, if any, can you envision resulting from CIP?
5. UPS has
2,400 managers. CIP includes only 50 each year. How can the program make a
difference if it includes only 2 percent of all managers? Does this suggest
that the program is more public relations than management training?
6. How can
UPS justify the cost of a program like CIP if competitors like FedEx, DHL, and
the U.S. Postal Service don’t offer such programs? Does the program increase
costs or reduce UPS profits?
Masters Program in Business Administration (MBA)
Note :- Solve any 4 case study
All case
carries equal marks
CASE I
NAVEEN FISHERIES LTD.
The managing director of Naveen Fisheries Ltd. (NFL)
received a message from one of the members of the crew that their mechanized
boats had sunk at sea off Paradeep Port Trust due to unfavorable weather. The
other directors of NFL ascertained the detailed information regarding the
incident. All the promoters were fresh graduates.
Naveem, Praveen, Nagain, Ravi and Chandra were the promoters
of the organization (NFL at Vishakhapattanam) with a capital contribution of
Rs. 25 lakh each. Three of them had an engineering background. The other two
were commerce graduates. They had thought of designing the vessels themselves
so that the cost each mechanized boat would be reduced from Rs. 30 lakhs (if
they bought them) to Rs. 22 Lakh. They designed three boats and these were sent
out with a newly – appointed crew. Two vessels were sent to Paradeep and the
third to Kakinada. Unfortunately, the weather was unfavourable. All the vessels
sank. The crew also did not have experience. Two workers were injured and the
rest arrived sagely. There was significant damage to the vessels and the
residue was considered scrap. The cost of scrap of the vessels was nominal. As
their working capital was scarce, and they were unable to invest more capital,
they were in a dilemma whether to continue the business or not.
Case I Questions:
1. What were
the reasons for the sinking of the vessels?
2. How could
they reorganize the businesses?
CASE II
MNC CORPORATION
At MNC Corporation, a foreman of inspection noticed a
mistake in the assembly of transmitter cases. The foreman, a shy man when
speaking to his immediate superiors, mentioned this matter to the senior
supervisor in a weak, ineffectual manner. The senior supervisor nodded his head
and continued to work on a report that he was writing. Later, a production
slowdown occurred, and it was discovered that this flaw in the transmitter was
the cause. The chief of production engineering, upset because this error had
passed inspection unnoticed, reproved the senior supervisor in a brusque manner.
The senior supervisor called in the foreman of inspection
and asked why this error had not been brought to his attention. The foreman
said, “I told you the other day they were missing same of the punch-outs in
those transmitter cases.” The senior supervisor said, “Yes, but you did not
pound the desk when you told me!”
Case II Questions:
1. Why did
the communication problem arise?
2. What do
you suggest to prevent the communication problem?
CASE III
MEHTA BANK LTD
Venkataraman was an officer in a leading nationalized bank
with years of service to his credit. During his long period of service, he
worked in different capacities and sections. His attitude and behavior made him
a trusted in the organization. Having been posted in a big branch based in a
large city, he was not keen on getting further promotions.
On one occasion, when he was working as an incharge of the
draft issue section, he issued bundles of drawing books from the main stock of
the security forms of the branch and kept the same in his custody in an almirah
provided to him. One fine morning, he removed three drawing books out of the
stock of books valued below Rs. 10,000 which he had in his own custody and kept
them in his house. He then started issuing drafts in various names form his
house out of the aforesaid stolen drawing books by allotting correct branch
serial numbers obtained from the branch register under his control. The drafts
were deposited in different banks/branches of the same bank in different
accouns opened in the names of the payees of the drafts. These accounts were
introduced by the bank employees, and some of them were in different
representations only, like Mr. Venkataraman Aiyar, Mr Venkataraman Iyengar,
etc. The drafts thus deposited were presented in clearing and were passed in
the normal course without any doubt or suspicion. In the evening, he would
visit the concerned drawee offices and collect such paid drafts.
Having found this technique successful, he tried his hand at
yet another. This time he started issuing drafts in fictitious names or in the
names of his close relatives drawn on outstations without any vouchers or
deposits. After a few days, he would cancel the same drafts by allowing the
credits to the respective accounts in his own branch by debiting the head
office accounts. He continued to do this for about three months, causing a loss
of over Rs. 700,000 to the bank.
The fraud came to light thanks to the presence of mind
exercised by on e of the officers at another local office. He found that on the
previous day also, he had paid a similar draft with the leaf number previous to
the draft presented now. In his view, it was not possible for such a big office
to avoid consumption of draft leaved in this fashion. Consequently, the matter
was taken up with the issuing branch. Unfortunately for Venkataraman, someone
else was working as the incharge of the draft issue section on that day. On
checking up the records, it transpired that no such draft was issued. This led
to promt investigations and detection of the whole fraud committed by
Venkataraman.
Case III Questions:
1. How do
you view the present fraud case: a human failure or a system failure?
2. What are
the main issues in the case, and how can our present system of control prevent
such fraud?
3. How would
you manage the situation on detection?
CASE IV
SHAHID FABRICS
Mr. Lateef, Chairman of Shahid Fabrics, a Hyderabad-based
garments and piece goods firm which exported all its products to the USA, faced
a decision in August 1985. The US government had imposed quota restrictions
which reduced the exports of his firm by 40 percent. He had to find a new
market for his products.
Shahid Fabrics was one of Pakistan’s major exporters of
garments and piece goods. Its share was 25 percent of the exports of these
goods of the whole country. It was established in 1954 as a producer of cotton
cloth and later, in 1966, it extended production to include garments and piece
goods. It had eight local production units and the total number of employees
was 8,000. All its garments and piece goods were exported, and branded
according to customer specification. All the goods were exported to the USA and
the sales of the firm amounted to US$ 100 million. In 1984, the US government
imposed quota restrictions. By August 1985, Shahid Fabrics exports had been
reduced by 40 percent.
Mr. Lateef believed that finding new markets was the only
way to survive. The possible alternatives according to him were the EEC
countries, the USSR, the Middle Eastern Arab countries and the other Asian
countries. The EEC was a very good potential market, but Europeans were very
tough buyers. It would be necessary to segregate the EEC from other buyers
because of their existing specifications with regard to style, colour and
packing. The USSR too was a potential market as far as demand was concerned,
but the country did not have enough money in foreign exchange.
The Middle Eastern Arab countries had money, but their
requirements were small due to their smaller population. Second, these
countries preferred not to buy Pakistani goods directly from Pakistan$. They
would rather like to buy the same Pakistani goods, branded differently from
other Western countries, say France.
Asia was a big market, but the Asian countries, including
turkey, were Shahid Fabrics’ competition in the international market. Mr.
Lateef was deeply concerned with the loss of 40 percent of his export goods. He
was eager to determine which new market offered the highest potential. He
wondered what specific information he could use to help his decision.
Case IV Questions:
1. What
information should Mr. Lateef develop to evaluate foreign markets?
2. Where
should he look for this information?
3. Develop a
framework to help Mr. Lateef identify his best potential foreign markets.
CASE V
WESTWARD EXPORTS LTD.
Mr. Abdul Ahmed, Production Manger, Westward Exports Ltd,
Karachi, faced a decision in 1984. the rejection rate of their exports of readymade
garments was 20 percent of total production. He also felt that their
productivity was not as high as it might have been.
Westward Exports Ltd. was a large Pakistani company
exporting ladies fashion garments made of pure cotton. Their main product items
were blouses, skirts, dresses, shirts, pants, etc. their main overseas markets
were the USA, Europe and Japan, and production was Rs. 100 million. They had
about 2,000 workers engaged in production through their various subcontractors.
Production was carried out by 138 subcontractors. They did
not utilize assembly line production: each individual worker carried out all
the jobs required on each garment. The machinery and equipment used by the
machines had a low output, and were not suited to high technology application.
Mr. Abdul knew that male workers performed 60 percent of the total production
and the rest was done by females. He also knew that while male workers were
always willing to work overtime, their absentee rate was greater than that of
women. Abdul felt that productivity could be higher, and he wondered how he
should approach this issue.
The company purchased raw material (grey cloth) from several
sources and had it dyed by different concerns, which sometimes caused variation
in the colors. Both dyeing and inferior stitching caused the rejection rate, to
rise to 20 percent of their total production. Mr. Abdul was worried about this
high rate of rejection, and wondered what sequence of steps he should take to
help reduce this high rejection rate.
Case V Questions:
1. What
alternatives are available to Mr Abdul?
2. Other
than purchasing higher technology machinery, in what ways might Mr Abdul
increase the effectiveness and efficiency of the dyeing and stitching
operations?
CASE VI
BABA BEARINGS COMPANY
The quality circle Sigma was started in the heat treatment
section of Baba Bearings Company with seven members.
The members prepared the following list of various factors
affecting the productivity of the heat treatment section.
1. Distortion
of bearing races in sealed quench furnaces.
2. Loss of
productivity and energy in sealed quench furnaces.
3. Excess
consumption of LPG.
4. Rejection
of cages due to scaling during annealing.
5. Shrinkage
in tapered roller bearing outer rings.
6. Broadly,
bearing are manufactured in the following three stages: (a) Turning, (b) Heat
Treatment, and (c) Grinding.
The circle members, in their brainstorming session, gave
priorities to the study aspects with the help of Pareto analysis. Distortion of
bearing races in sealed quench furnaces was a major factor affecting the
productivity. Hence, the circle decided to take this up for study. Turned rings
in the soft condition are hardened and tempered. After heat treatment, it was
noted that about 30 percent of the rings were beyond the specified limits of
distortion (ovality). These rings were subject to straining for rectification.
Straining is a laborious process involving extra manpower
and time. It affected schedules and deliveries to customers. The cause and
effect diagram was employed for analysis, and the following causes identified:
• Design of
heating elements
• Mesh
baskets distortion
The members collected data regarding the heating element.
Rings are loaded into the furnace keeping in a mesh basket in layers. The rings
are heated by corrtherm heating elements; the heat is made to circulate
uniformly throughout the furnace by a circulating fan. After the hardening
process, it was observed that in general, the rings arranged at the sides of the
basket adjacent to the heating elements showed greater ovality (50 per cent)
than those at the centre (17 percent).
The members felt that rings at the sides were directly
exposed to the radiant heat of the elements, and this resulted in a temperature
gradient within the cross-section of the rings, causing more distortion. The
temperature adjacent to the heating elements was higher by 26 degree Celsius
than at the centre of the furnace.
Case VI Questions:
1. What are
the measures to be taken to avoid direct effect of heat?
2. Design a
quality improvement process for the bearings company.
Masters Program in Business Administration (MBA)
Specializations :-
Total Quality Management
Note:
1. Solve any
10 Questions.
2. Use
analytical description where required.
3. Cite
references used if any while proposing solution to any question.
Q 1 ) Consider a company involved in testing the strengths
of components. Currently 50 engineers are working in the company. Explain
briefly the steps that the company should take to implement ISO 9001:2000 based
quality system and obtain the certificate from a certifying agency ?
Q 2) Enumerate any 8 key organization benefits achievable on
implementing ISO 14001 based system.
Q 3) What are the global benefits of environmental
management system? Discuss-in detail ?
Q 4) What are the different ways of receiving customer
feedback? How are the feedback used?
Q 5) A writer on quality has proposed statement on quality
is the only issue for organizational Survival.? Discuss the statement in the
light of the challenges facing contemporary organizational ?
Q 6 ) Comment on the following statement
a) “Employee
satisfaction must be the top priority which leads to customer satisfaction”
b) “Price
alone is not the only aim of the product. Product and service count for its
success”
c) “Recognition
and award systems lead to motivation”
Q 7) What are the different ways of receiving customer
feedback? How are the feedback used?
Q 8 ) What is the concern of most consumer? Is it price of
the product or service? Explain in detail.?
Q 9 How does the conceptual approach to ISO 14001 differ
from ISO 9001
Q 10 ) Enumerate any 8 key organization benefits achievable
on implementing ISO 14001 based system.
Q 11 ) Explain the need for the quality systems in an
organizations ?
Q 12 ) List out the barrier of TPM implementations ?
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