GENERAL MANAGEMENT IIBMS EXAM ANSWER
CASE – 1 Your Job and Your Passion—You Can Pursue
Both!
The 21st century offers many challenges to
every one of us. As more firms go global, as more economies interconnect, and
as the Web blasts away boundaries to communication, we become more informed
citizens. This interconnectedness means that the organizations you work for
will require you to develop both general and specialized knowledge—such as
speaking multiple languages, using various software applications, or
understanding details of financial transactions. You will have to develop
general management skills to foster your ability to be self-reliant and thrive
in a changing market-place. And here’s the exciting part: As you build both
types of knowledge, you may be able to integrate your growing expertise with
the causes or activities you care most about. Or, your career adventure may
lead you to a new passion.
Former presidents George H. W.
Bush and Bill Clinton are well known for combining their management
skills—running a country—with their passion for helping people around the
world. Together they have raised funds to assist disaster victims, those with
HIV/AIDS, and others in need. Jake Burton turned his love of snow sports into
an entire industry when he founded Burton Snowboards. Annie Withey poured her
business and marketing knowledge into her two famous business ventures:
Smartfood and Annie’s Homegrown. Both products were the result of her passion
for healthful foods made from organic ingredients.
As you enter the workforce, you
may have no idea where your career path will lead. You may be asking yourself,
“How will I fit in?” “Where will I live?” “How much will I earn?” “Where will
my business and personal careers evolve as the world continuous to change at
such a fast pace?” If you are feeling nervous because you don’t know the
answers to these questions yet, relax. A career is a journey, not a single
destination. You may have one type of career or several. It is likely you will
work for several organisations, or you may run one or more businesses of your
own.
As you ask yourself what you want
to do and where you want to be, take a few minutes to review the chapter and
its main topics. Think about your personality, what you like and dislike, what
you know and what you want to learn, what you fear and what you dream. Then try
the following exercise.
Questions
1.
Create
a three-column chart in which the first column lists nonmanagement skills you
have. Are you good at travel? Do you know how to build furniture? Are you a whiz
at sports statistics? Are you an innovative cook? Do you play video games for
hours? In the second column, list the causes or activities about which you are
passionate. These may dovetail with the first list, but they might not.
Non Management Skills
|
Activity
|
|
Ability to Present
Good reader
Well absorber
|
Reading
Playing
Walking
|
|
Yes I am
good at travel
Yes I
know how to build furniture
No I am
not whiz at sports statistics
Yes, I am
an innovative cook
No I
cannot play video games for hours
2.
Once
you have you two columns complete, draw lines between entries that seem
compatible. If you are good at building furniture, you might have also listed a
concern about families who are homeless. Remember that not all entries will
find a match—the idea is to begin finding some connections.
Non Management Skills
|
Activity
|
|
Ability to Present
Good reader
Well absorber
|
Reading
Playing
Walking
|
|
3.
In
the third column, generate a list of firms or organizations you know about that
reflect your interests. If you are good at building furniture, you might be
interested working for the Habitat for Humanity organization, or you might find
yourself gravitating towards a furniture retailer like Ikea or Ethan Allen. You
can do further research on organizations via Internet or business
publications.
Non Management Skills
|
Activity
|
Organization
|
Ability to Present
Good reader
Well absorber
|
Reading
Playing
Walking
|
H& C Publication
Vision Creater
Yonex
|
I can do further research on organizations
via internet or business.
CASE – 2 Biyani – Pioneering a Retailing Revolution
in India
“I use people as
hands and legs. I prefer to do thinking around here.”
─ Kishore Biyani,
CEO & MD, Pantaloon Retail (India) Ltd.
Kishore Biyani (Biyani), CEO& MD of
Pantaloon Retail (India) Ltd., planned to have 30 Food Bazaar outlets, 22
outlets in Big Bazaar, 21 Pantaloons outlets, and four seamless malls under the
Central logo, by the end of 2005. He also planned to launch at least three
businesses every year and had already selected music, footwear and car
accessories as his next areas of investments. He was already the top retailer
in India followed by Raghu Pillai of RPG. As of 2004, Biyani headed a company
that had a turnover of Rs 6,500 million and operated 13 Pantaloon apparel stores,
9 Big Bazaars, 13 Food Bazaars, and 3 seamless malls (Central), one each
located in Bangalore, Hyderabad, and Pune.
Biyani’s journey from a person who looked
after his family business to India’s top retailer in 1987, when he launched
Manz Wear Pvt. Ltd. The company launched one of the first readymade trousers
brands – ‘Pantaloon’ – in the country. The company also launched its first
jeans brand called ‘Bare’ in 1989. On September 20, 1991, Manz Wear Pvt. Ltd.
went public and on September 25, 1992, it changed its name to Pantaloon
Fashions (India) Limited (PFIL). ‘John Miller’ was the first formal shirt brand
from PFIL.
The company opened its first
apparel stores, called ‘Pantaloons’ at Kolkata in August 1997. The stores
generated Rs 70 million. Biyani then realized the potential of the Indian
market and started to aggressively tap it. Accordingly, Biyani decided to
expand into other segments of retailing besides apparel. To reflect this change
in focus, the company changed its name to Pantaloon Retail (India) Limited
(PRIL) in July 1999 and set itself a target of achieving Rs 10 billion in sales
by June 2005. In course of time he launched three other retail formats -- Big
Bazaar, Food Bazaar, and Central.
Biyani didn’t believe in copying
ideas from western retailers. He was critical of his peers who felt just copied
ideas form the west without making any effort to mold them to Indian
conditions. He ensured that his store formats such as Big Bazaar, Food Bazaar,
and Pantaloons were all suited to the purchasing style of Indian consumers.
Biyani was a huge risk taker and
his planning was always different from the conventional way of doing business.
This was also one of the factors that had prompted Biyani to move away from his
father’s conventional way of doing business. During the initial stages of his
success, his risk-taking attitude sometimes had the effect of turning away
financiers. The biggest risk that Biyani took was in opening Big Bazaar in
Mumbai in 2001. The company needed money to expand Big Bazaar’s operations.
However, it had profits of only Rs 40 million with a low share price at
eighteen rupees. Therefore, Biyani could not raise money through equity. In
light of this situation, Biyani took a loan of Rs 1,200 million from ICICI for
launching the operations of Big Bazaar, which increased his debt exposure.
However, Big Bazaar proved to be a resounding success with 100,000 customer
visits in its first week of operations. According to analysts, if Big Bazaar
had failed, Biyani would have landed in a severe debt crisis. The success of
Big Bazaar not only increased the company profits, it also changed the
perception of investors.
Many people criticized Biyani for
not delegating authority and Biyani himself accepted the criticism. He said, “I
use people as hands and legs. I prefer to do the thinking around here.” He
preferred taking individual decision on activities like strategic planning,
ideas for other ventures, and other important issues. It was because of this
that managers like Kush Medhora of Westside were initially apprehensive about
joining Biyani’s business. However, Biyani changed his attitude gradually with
the launch of Big Bazaar, Food Bazaar, and Central and appointed different
people for managing different business units.
Biyani believed in leading a
simple life and in being simply dressed. His vision came from his diverse
reading connected to retailing and other areas. He made it a point to visit
each of his stores across the country. He aimed to spend at least seven hours a
week at the stores. In the stores, he would stand at a corner and observe
people. He also walked on streets, met common people, and talked to local
leaders to plan and put up new products in his stores. Each of his stores was
set with a weekly target, which was reviewed every Monday. Whenever a new store
was opened, the details of its operations during the first 45 days were to be
sent to him. Sometimes, he suggested remedies to some problems. Biyani believed
in extensive advertising to make more people know about the product. His
decision making was quick and devoid of unnecessary delays. Biyani was also a
good learner and learned quickly from his mistakes. He planned to improve
inventory management through responding effectively to the demands of the
customers rather than forecasting them, as he felt that forecasting would pile
up the inventory in this dynamic market.
Questions
1.
The
tremendous success of the ‘Pantaloons’, ‘Big Bazaar’ and ‘Food Bazaar’
retailing formats, easily made PRIL the number one retailer in India by early
2004, in terms of turnover and retail area occupied by its outlets. Explain how
Biyani is further planning to consolidate his businesses.
Biyani didn’t believe in copying
ideas from western retailers. He was critical of his peers who felt just copied
ideas form the west without making any effort to mold them to Indian
conditions. He ensured that his store formats such as Big Bazaar, Food Bazaar,
and Pantaloons were all suited to the purchasing style of Indian consumers.
Biyani was a huge risk taker and
his planning was always different from the conventional way of doing business.
This was also one of the factors that had prompted Biyani to move away from his
father’s conventional way of doing business. During the initial stages of his
success, his risk-taking attitude sometimes had the effect of turning away
financiers. The biggest risk that Biyani took was in opening Big Bazaar in
Mumbai in 2001. The company needed money to expand Big Bazaar’s operations.
However, it had profits of only Rs 40 million with a low share price at
eighteen rupees. Therefore, Biyani could not raise money through equity. In
light of this situation, Biyani took a loan of Rs 1,200 million from ICICI for
launching the operations of Big Bazaar, which increased his debt exposure.
However, Big Bazaar proved to be a resounding success with 100,000 customer
visits in its first week of operations. According to analysts, if Big Bazaar
had failed, Biyani would have landed in a severe debt crisis. The success of
Big Bazaar not only increased the company profits, it also changed the
perception of investors.
Many people criticized Biyani for
not delegating authority and Biyani himself accepted the criticism. He said, “I
use people as hands and legs. I prefer to do the thinking around here.” He
preferred taking individual decision on activities like strategic planning,
ideas for other ventures, and other important issues. It was because of this
that managers like Kush Medhora of Westside were initially apprehensive about
joining Biyani’s business. However, Biyani changed his attitude gradually with
the launch of Big Bazaar, Food Bazaar, and Central and appointed different
people for managing different business units.
Biyani is further planning to consolidate his
businesses in the following ways
1. Gather credit, loan and bill statements. To gain a
full understanding of how much debt the business has, pull together all of your
debt statements.
2. Categorize the debt. As you review each statement,
decide if it is debt that needs to be paid now or if it can be put off until
later. You may choose to consolidate some debts and not others, or you may wish
to consolidate the total debt the business has.
3. Compare the interest rates, fees, terms and
conditions of potential debt-consolidation options before deciding which one
will be the most beneficial to your business situation.
4. Obtain a debt-consolidation loan from a Small
Business Association lender. These types of loans are only beneficial when you
can obtain a lower interest rate than what you are currently paying on your
business debts combined. A debt consolidation loan is also beneficial when the
term of the loan doesn’t extend beyond existing debt terms. For example, if you
are scheduled to pay off existing debt now in 10 years, but the
debt-consolidation loan stretches the payoff date to 20 years, then you end up
paying more in the long-run than if you would have kept the business debt
status quo.
5. Obtain a small business loan from a private or
commercial lender. The same rules apply to a small business loan as those of a
debt-consolidation loan.
6. Seek commercial debt counselling from a company
that specializes in business-debt consolidation. Commercial debt counselling
will help you create a plan for paying off the business debt, and the debt
counsellor assigned to your business will help you carry out the plan.
Typically, as part of the payment you make to the debt consolidation loan or to
the business creditors, the debt consolidation company tacks on a fee for its
services.
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