Front | Back |
Strategy
|
The actions that managers take to attain company goals.
|
Profitability
|
The rate of return concept
|
Profit Growth
|
The percentage increase in net profits over time.
|
Value Creation
|
Performing activities that increase the value of goods or services to consumers
|
Operations
|
The various value-creation activities a firm undertakes
|
Organization Architecture
|
The totality of a firm's organization, including formal organizational structure, control systems and incentives, organizational culture, processes, and people.
|
Organizational Structure
|
The three-part structure of an organization, including its formal division, its location of decision-making responsibilities with that structure, and the establishment of integrating mechanisms to coordinate the activities of all subunits.
|
Controls
|
The metrics used to measure the perfomance of subunits and make judgments about how well managers are runnng those subunits
|
Incentives
|
The devices used to reward appropriate managerial behavior
|
Processes
|
The manner in which decisions are made and work is performed within any organization.
|
Organizational Culture
|
The norms and value systems that are shared among the employees of an organization.
|
People
|
The employees of an organizatio; its recruiting, compensation, and retention strategies; and the type of people who work at the organization
|
Core Competence
|
The Skills within a firm that competitors cannot easily match or imitate
|
Location Economies
|
The economies that arise from performing a value creation activity in the optimal location for that activity. wherever in the world that may be found, at a cost advantage to the firm
|
Global Web
|
When different stages of a value chain are dispersed to those locations around the globe where value added is maximized or where costs of value creation are minimized.
|