Swatch Group Ltd. Have a minute? Course: International Marketing Lecturer: Dr. J.T. Bouma Case: Swatch Group Ltd. Date: March 16th‚ 2010 Group: 13.3 Students: Dennis Hesling‚ S1892444 Rikke Nielsen‚ S1939882 Jan Oestmann‚ S1956140 Arjen Hofman‚ S1873083 Table of contents 1. Introduction p. 1 1.1 Abstract p. 1 1.2 Introduction to the company p. 1 2. Analysis of the company and its market p
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Case Analysis: The Swatch Summary: In 1978‚ when Dr. Ernst Thomke became managing director of ETA‚ the position of this Swiss flagship industry had changed dramatically. Especially with the presence of a strong competency (Japan and U.S). Macro-environment: (PESTEL Analysis) * Economic: Threat: The market share had fallen from 56% to a mere 20%. Opportunity: The production had grown from 61 million to 320 million pieces and movements annually. Opportunity: the decline of the dollar was
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he Swatch Group Ltd.‚ which is based out of Beil‚ Switzerland‚ is the world largest watch company. It was estimated that in 1998‚ it has produced about 119 million watches with consecutive yearly sales of over 3.2 billion Swiss francs. The Swatch group has produce the product all over 50 locations throughout the world‚ including France‚ Germany‚ Italy‚ USA‚ the Virgin Islands‚ Thailand‚ Malaysia‚ and China‚ with its main facility in Switzerland. Since the beginning of the Swatch Group‚ it has
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the fully automated assembly line is implemented without the human intervention. In addition‚ to keep Swatch competing with low cost manufacturers‚ the capital-investment is applied as a result of decreasing in costs. The lean and flat hierarchies help enhancing the innovativeness and creativity throughout the company. The hybrids of centralization and decentralization management allow Swatch to yield the benefit from the local knowledge while maintaining the control over the distribution and management
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1. What changes in the production and marketing of watches led to Swatch? Before 1950s - “home-made” effect Starting from 1950s watches were considered as very precious goods that only few people could afford. The production of watches was a craft that required accurate skills and mastery of jewels making techniques. Watches were considered as a luxury good as well as a “financial investment”. People spent a lot on them‚ had great care of them and used to hand them down from generation to generation
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1) Why was the Swatch so successful? In what way was this watch different from others in the industry? The first main reason why Swatch managed to gained so much popularity in the watch industry is because they managed to cut costs. Heyek had started a low-end product initiative and was fully committed to vertical integration‚ that is‚ he intended to build and assemble the low-price quartz watches entirely in Switzerland. This‚ along with the decision to encase the watch with cheap plastic‚ helped
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Marques Johnson September 16‚ 2014 “Skepticism about Weakness of Will” Summary By: Gary Watson In this essay Watson argues that there is no fundamental distinction between weakness of will‚ akrasia‚ and compulsive behavior. Watson said that when a person knowingly acts against their better judgment that is a weakness of their will. In particular‚ he challenged the common view that the weak-willed individuals are unable to resist‚ while a person who acts compulsively cannot resist their
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1. Prior to the introduction of the Swatch‚ what kind of watches were popular among consumers? In what ways was a Rolex different from a Timex‚ or from a gold-plated Seiko? How did consumers make buying decisions? Initially watchmaking was almost an art. Watches were luxury goods‚ produced by skillful jewelry makers and micromechanical engineers and consisted of a lot of little mechanical movements. Made in Switzerland they automatically became symbols of status‚ prestige and a very high Swiss
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Introduction Today‚ Swatch is a world known brand‚ and is recognized for its watches quality. One man should be rewarded for this: Nicolas G.Hayek. He was the one who created the brand‚ inside the Swatch Group‚ in 1983. Now‚ Swatch is one of the leaders in the watch industry‚ and a huge worldwide MNC. Hayek knew which strategy he should adopt in order to launch the Swatch Brand. He was a strategic thinker… Strategic Thinking How did Hayek manage to make Swatch one of the Leaders of
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Swatch Group Case Analysis Eileen Weber June 14‚ 2012 Problem: The Swatch group is a family of Swiss made watches that include watches at four basic market segments; basic‚ middle‚ high‚ and luxury/prestige. While net sales have been steadily increasing since 2008‚ Swatch is having a problem with its Omega brand competing with Rolex. Rolex has continuously outsold Omega since 2006 and the problem is how to position the Omega brand to capture the market share that is currently dominated by Rolex
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