Management Decision: Volume 1 Issue 2

Subject:

Table of contents

THE HIGHER CIVIL SERVICE

EDWARD PLAYFAIR

What is the nature of the civil servant's job? How can one speed the good man's route to the top? How does one avoid a promotion policy based on “dead mens' shoes?”

Choosing the best product ranges and assortments

JAMES ROTHMAN

How can a low price brand be promoted in such a way that it gains sales from its competitors and not from another, more expensive brand made by the same manufacturer? A firm has…

MARKETING COSTS: and their importance in pricing

MAX KJAER‐HANSEN

Whilst the ultimate objective of every business firm is to sell its products, the volume and profitability of its sales depend on the balance between supply and demand. Clearly…

MARKETING CONSORTIA: A PLAN FOR THE SMALL AND MEDIUM SIZED FIRM

JOHN KEAN

The woollen and worsted industry consists almost wholly of small firms which for the main part are none‐the‐less of a sufficient size to be economic production units—that is they…

Raising the efficiency of the smaller firm

G.A. HUTCHESON

With so much emphasis placed today on the need for professional management and greater use of sophisticated techniques and equipment, the problems and requirements of medium‐sized…

PRICING: in theory and practice

ANDRÉ GABOR

If you ask a student of economics what price is, he will answer that it is the factor which equates supply with demand. He is likely to add that, in a competitive market, price…

The competitive value of corporate size

TONY MORGAN

Many companies fail to use their size to develop the growth of their business. The author, Consultant in the Arthur D. Little organization in the U.K., shows what opportunities…

Industrial training—opting in or opting out?

GORDON E. WHEELER

A QUESTION OF PRIORITIES WITH SMALLER COMPANIES The time has long since passed when it could be assumed that the fundamental problem of attaining profitability in business…

DECISION TAKEN

A.M. ALFRED

Discounted cash flow (DCF) is a technique for measuring whether future earnings from a project are worth the capital investment required to acquire them. Future earnings have…

Operational research and the buyer

ANDREW MUIR

To the outsider, the buyer's decision taking processes would seem to be highly empirical with little use being made of the scientific management techniques that are now available…

MANAGEMENT JARGON EXPLAINED

Tom Ward

NETWORK ANALYSIS The group techniques known collectively under the title of network analysis and comprising Programme Evaluation and Review Technique (PERT), Critical Path…

The problems of an investment analyst—: and their implications for the capital market

CHARLES PATTEN

Investment analysis is still a young and imperfect science, but the opinions of the analyst are often crucial in deciding what new issues the capital market is prepared to accept…

A seller's market for management education in Britain?

BERNARD TAYLOR

There is common agreement today in government and in industry about the need to educate and develop British management as a means of achieving faster economic growth and more…

Making the most out of publicity

WILLIAM PATERSON

• Publicity is a vital arm of marketing. In the wider sense it covers all marketing communications — advertising, public relations, direct‐mail, brochures, display, films…

2204

LEGAL DEVELOPMENTS

NEIL MERRITT

DEFINITION OF REDUNDANCY Section 1 (1) of the Redundancy Payments Act 1965 provides “Where on or after the appointed day an employee, who has been continuously employed for the…

TAXATION and FINANCE

DESMOND GOCH

THE COMPANIES BILL The tangled affairs of some of the insurance companies involved in the recent crop of failures, with the consequent problems for policyholders who suddenly find…

Cover of Management Decision

ISSN:

0025-1747

Online date, start – end:

1967

Copyright Holder:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Open Access:

hybrid

Editor:

  • Brandon Randolph-Seng (Editor-in-Chief)