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1 – 10 of 19Many operating managers view culture and culture change as something “soft” or “squishy” and remote from day‐to‐day concerns. They're worried about “making their numbers” and say…
Abstract
Many operating managers view culture and culture change as something “soft” or “squishy” and remote from day‐to‐day concerns. They're worried about “making their numbers” and say they haven't got time to think about organizational culture.
A poorly performing company, one in need of a complete turnaround, typically lacks resources for new strategic initiatives. The usual remedies are lay‐offs, cost‐cutting, and…
Abstract
A poorly performing company, one in need of a complete turnaround, typically lacks resources for new strategic initiatives. The usual remedies are lay‐offs, cost‐cutting, and asset sales. However, these remedies often undermine the company's long‐term health. Moreover, they don't address the issues that lie at the heart of the problem: an ineffective corporate culture.
Speed‐to‐market is not just a buzzword. It is a belief and a behavior. Here's how to get your people to act in ways that achieve high speed‐to‐market.
Anagha Shukre and Sreejith Ummathiriyan
This case study is a compilation of data gathered from secondary data sources.
Abstract
Research methodology
This case study is a compilation of data gathered from secondary data sources.
Case overview/synopsis
Roger Federer has won a record setting 20 grand slam titles in his career and has an impressive 103 ATP singles titles to his name. He has stood the test of time and is widely acknowledged as one of the most distinguished players of all times. His personal charisma, classic shot making abilities and consistent stylish on-court performance over a long period of time has created a brand – Roger Federer. Inevitably, as he will have to wind down his career, it would be challenging to brace the brand and identify ways for its endurance. Various models of brand management, namely, Brand Identity Prism and Customer-Based Brand Equity model, have been applied for the brand – Roger Federer. An analysis of brand-building practices can help to understand how sportspersons build brand equity and factors which characterize personal brands that develop in a professional arena. This case study also helps to dwell on how human brands will sustain themselves after the players retire.
Complexity academic level
This case is designed to teach the concepts of brand in courses such as brand management, marketing management and sports marketing to both undergraduate and postgraduate classes of business management. This case can also be used in various executive programs and in customized short-term courses.
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C.Athena Aktipis and Robert O. Kurzban
The awarding in October of 2002 of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics1Technically the Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel, established in 1968.1…
Abstract
The awarding in October of 2002 of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics 1 Technically the Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel, established in 1968.1 to Daniel Kahneman and Vernon Smith might have profound implications for the survival of Homo economicus, which has long occupied a privileged place in the minds of economists and decision-making theorists. The species has endured many challenges and proven quite adaptable, changing to accommodate a cascade of findings inconsistent with its original conception. Homo economicus now faces a potentially more serious challenge: the resurgence of Homo sapiens, a more coherent and biologically grounded model for human decision-making, informed by theory and data from across the scientific spectrum.
Raymond G. McInnis and Michael Turner
Many people fear the approach of 1984. Why? Because in their minds too many of George Orwell's dark prophecies in his 1948 novel, 1984, appear to be coming true.