Case Study-Nokia Group 4.02: Elsard Haanstra S2177315 Lan Huang S2536447 Daniël Koster S2198835 Weixiang Wang S2509652 Joyce van Zenderen S2195445 Contents: 1. Problem Statement The problems Nokia faces are increasing price pressure‚ intense competition and slower growth. Meanwhile‚ changing environment and customer needs are problems Nokia are encountering. How can Nokia maintain its market share on 37.8% in a maturing industry in the next three years? 2. Customer
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THE FIVE COMPETITIVE FORCES THAT SHAPE STRATEGY Porter on his 1979 HBR article states 5 competitive forces that can hurt your desired profits: 1. Established rivals (old competition) 2. Understanding the customer (their needs and desires) 3. Suppliers (how to make it less expensive) 4. New players (new or temporal competition) 5. Substitutes (other services or products that may replace ours) If the forces are intense‚ companies don’t obtain attractive returns for their investments. If forces
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Frozen Food Five Force Analysis 1. Bargaining power of suppliers < Low > In food business‚ there are plenty of suppliers who sell raw material such as vegetables‚ meats‚ and other ingredients that used in the process of producing frozen foods. Since lots of supplier who sell the same kinds of raw materials‚ all of these suppliers must compete against each other to get the customers because we have the same target market. They suppliers sell them at the low price because when the frozen
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CURRICULUM VITAE Abdullah Muhammad Akram P.O.Box 11705‚ Ras-Al-Khaimah UAE Date of Birth : 11th February‚ 1993 Email: abdulla_mohd17@hotmail.com Mobile No: 056-7201610 Visa Status: Father sponsorship PERSONAL OBJECTIVE: ➢ To seek a career in a progressive organization‚ providing an ethical and professional working environment and offering a challenging‚ demanding and diverse nature of job‚ where I can exercise my abilities‚ learn new skills and contribute towards the betterment
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Assignment Assessment Report Campus: | | Year/semester | | Level: | ACL-I | Assignment Type | Work Shop Task - I | Module Name: | SALES | Assessor’s Name | | Student’s Name: | | Reqd Submission Date | | e-mail id & Mob No | | Actual Submission Date | | Stream | CORE | Submitted to : | | Certificate by the Student: Plagiarism is a serious College offence. I certify that this is my own work. I have referenced all relevant materials. Student’s
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with the highest standards of business conduct Nokia aims to be among the world’s leading companies in responsible business practices We examine the entire value chain and product lifecycles to ensure that we meet the expectations of responsible business Appropriate business behavior Nokia communicates its corporate responsibility (CR) ambitions through all of its employees‚ with work practices reflective of Nokia’s Code of Conduct Governance Nokia believes that real progress is made only when
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Introduction: "Nokia - Connecting People": this slogan is known all over the world. In 2006 Nokia employs 68‚041 people in 120 countries. Currently every third mobile phone sold in the world is from Nokia. The Nokia Company is today one of the world’s leading high tech companies. Its rapidly growth in the 1990s coincided with a basal structural change of the Finnish economy and industry. In this restructuring process Nokia played an important role. Despite the fact that Nokia is a leading multinational
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NOKIA AND MICROSOFT News from Microsoft -1.28% in the last few days – 4Q14 earnings‚ an announcement of 18‚000 layoffs‚ and the release of a memo from Microsoft’s EVP of devices Stephen Elop about rightsizing – has brought about a clearer picture of Microsoft’s plans for Nokia Nokia’s phones‚ which it acquired in April for $7 billion. Nokia was one of many cellphone manufacturers that struggled as Apple -1.13%’s iOS and Google GOOGL -1.92%’s Android gained dominance of the smartphone market and displaced
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Porters Five Forces: sports good stores Bargaining Power of Suppliers Supplier bargaining power is likely to be high. *The market is dominated by a few large suppliers rather than a fragmented source of supply‚ *There is the possibility of the supplier integrating forwards in order to obtain higher prices and margins. *Forward integration provides economies of scale for the supplier Bargaining Power of Customers Customers bargaining power is likely to be high *Switching to an alternative
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First case: The Nokia case Strategic Management class Group H2 Team 7 Team members (5): (Family name ) (First name ) BALITEAU NATHAN LAHLOU ZAKARIA THOMAS HUESCA CHRISTELLE VANNIER LÉO ZHONG YANNI Q1 : The story of the Nokia company starts at the end of the 18th century near the town of Nokia‚ Finland when mining engineer Fredrik Idestam set his first wood pulp mill and since then the company has change participating in many sectors over the
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