"Case study 4 kodak gets the picture in executive education pg 335" Essays and Research Papers

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    To: Kelly Johnston‚ CEO Kodak From: Head of Marketing Operations‚ Kodak In Reference To: A Kodak moment; drawing your attention to major architectural flaws within our company‚ specifically the MAPP plan‚ as well as solutions for more sustainable options for future structures. It has come to my attention that there are some major flaws lying inside our organizational architecture. These flaws lay in the foundation of Kodak`s organization structure and so we cannot move forward until these

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    Kodak

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    based on cameras that used films to capture images. Kodak had 90% market share of film’s market and 85% of camera’s market by that time. But in 1981 Sony’s plans to launch Mavica‚ world’s first digital camera‚ marked the beginning of a technological industry shock. Kodak’s executives where frightened that photography industry would die. To react to this change Kodak went trough seven different restructuring between 1983 and 1993. During that period Kodak developed its strategy based on three main pillars:

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    Relevant Facts: Kodak has a long history that spans over 130 years. Founder George Eastman patents photographic film stored in a roll in 1884. In 1888 he implemented the first camera to complement his film roll. Kodak was then founded in Rochester‚ New York in the early 1890’s and by 1900 the Brownie camera was made a sparked photography to the masses. In 1975 Kodak was the first company to build a functioning digital camera that stored images on a cassette tape. In 2004 Kodak stopped selling film

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    Kodak eastman case

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    PROBLEM STATEMENT Kodak is the photo film market leader since 1994 but the company is loosing share‚ in the past five years in United States has decrease from 76% to 70%‚ the main reason is the growing share of brands with lower prices. In January of 1994 Kodak is analyzing if launching a lower price product is the best alternative to stop loosing share. DIAGNOSIS As said before Kodak is loosing market share and looks like if the company doesn’t do something the tendency is going to be the same

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    Kodak Harvard Case

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    Case preparation memo GROUP NAME _____________________________ YOUR NAME_________Jordan Lewis_______ CASE __Kodak_________________ 1. What is/are the problem(s) in this case? Keep it to a single statement. At most‚ you may point out a couple of the key questions. The problem in the Kodak case is that Kodak is losing market value because they are reworking their product line‚ causing doubt in customer mindset. They have created the Funtime film to attempt to regain market value. 2. What

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    Kodak Case Analysis

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    CASE: Kodak Business Imaging Systems Divisions By Problem How does a multinational corporation choose between various manufacturing sites for its products? Kodak’s business Imaging Systems Division designed‚ manufactured‚ marketed and sold microfilm readers and printers. More than 50% of reader/printer businesses were outside the U.S. Kodak’s readers and printers were manufactured in two plants; Rochester‚ NY and Manus‚ Brazil. The Rochester plant served the world market except Brazil. The

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    Eastman Kodak Case

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    Eastman KodakCase Analysis Problem The problem in this case is concerned with Eastman Kodak losing its market share in film products to lower-priced economy brands. Over the last five years‚ in addition to being brand-aware‚ customers have also become price-conscious. This has resulted in the fast paced growth of lower priced segments in which Kodak has no presence. Kodak plans to address this issue by introducing a new brand‚ “Funtime” in the economy brand segment. Kodak also proposes to replace

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    Kodak

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    How Kodak suffered due to a wrong decision. Kodak‚ because of its market dominance until the 1990s‚ was the one of the world’s top five most valuable brands. Kodak’s filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection brings to an end over 130 years of a brand that our grandparents’ generation would have seen as revolutionising their lives. Kodak‚ the company that George Eastman started over 130 years ago was to become part of the lives of everyone who wanted to take pictures of events both special

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    HOMEWORK2 (40 Points) SELECTED CASE STUDIES ANALYSIS This document has three short case studies that are considered classic. They are older but have timeless lessons. In addition‚ the case studies at the end of chapters 2 &3 of your textbook are good. Deliverable: Read these case studies carefully and develop a short report (2-3 pages) to discuss the key lessons learned from each and the similarities/differences between the case studies. It is best to use a table of the following format for

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    Motion Picture Case Study

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    Case Study: YouTube‚ the Internet‚ and the Future of Movies Question 1 The movie industry was face with competitive forces that made the industry unattractive. The threat of substitutes was extremely high. This was because the increased levels of high speed Internet made downloading easier and faster‚ which made pirating movies easier. This increased the threat of substitutes because consumers were no longer buying movies‚ the consumers started to download movies and television shows free of

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