Knowledge in Business Administration

Harrah's Entertainment Case Solution

IIM Indore- Harrah's Entertainment Case study available in the attatchment below. Useful for students of business, studying the subject business administration. The case study includes Situation Analysis, Problem Statement, SWOT Analysis, Alternatives, Solution, etc.

Volkswagon of America- Case Solution

Case Study Analysis of “Volkswagon of America" given below. The attatched pdf is for business students, studying business administration as a subject. Content includes- IT Organization Structure at Volkswagen, Choosing the Right Projects to Fund, Current Systems (Pros and Cons), Current Problems, Recommendations,etc.

Infosys transition

Harvard Business Review(HBR) case solution for MBA students. #IIM

Telewar

How Relaince Jio has created disruptions in telecoomunication sector 

Case study

Electric cars, just a toy or future for Indian industry.

marketing environment

A marketing environment is divided into micro environment, macro environment and meso or intermediate environment, which are affected by internal and external factors. An organization must be able to understand and assess their marketing environment. Since the last decade of the twentieth century, marketing environments have been greatly affected by a boom in information technologies and internationalization, as customers worldwide rely increasingly on the Internet for information and their consuming behavior. This has brought to the fore opportunities and complications, such as growing concerns about personal privacy online and Internet theft.

case study

Health worries are causing many consumers to cut back on their savory snack consumption, leading the UK potato chip market to suffer falling popularity. This case study looks at how both Kettle Chips and Tyrrells are attempting to buck the trend by producing premium quality chips that are marketed on the basis of their authenticity. 

The Future of Work

The Future of Work: How the New Order of Business Will Shape Your Organization, Your Management Style and Your Life .   by Thomas W. Malone  (Author) For more than a decade, business thinkers have theorized about how technology will change the shape of organizations. In this landmark book, renowned organizational theorist Thomas Malone, codirector of MIT's "Inventing the Organizations of the 21st Century" initiative, provides the first credible model for actually designing the company of the future. Based on 20 years of groundbreaking research, The Future of Work foresees a workplace revolution that will dramatically change organizational structures and the roles employees play in them. Technological and economic forces make "command and control" management increasingly less useful. In its place will be a more flexible "coordinate and cultivate" approach that will spawn new types of decentralized organizations—from internal markets to democracies to loose hierarchies. These future structures will reap the scale and knowledge efficiencies of large organizations while enabling the freedom, flexibility, and human values that drive smaller firms. This book explores the skills managers will need in a workplace in which the power to decide belongs to everyone.

How Entrepreneurs Earned Consumer's Trust from Wed

Until Josiah Wedgwood, Britons ate from wood and pewter plates. Until Henry Heinz, ladies drudged over cured sustenances. Until Michael Dell, few individuals claimed a PC, not to mention longed for getting one "worked to arrange." According to business history specialist Nancy F. Koehn, these pathbreaking business visionaries shared an effective blessing: the capacity to perceive how monetary and social change would influence customer needs and needs. In "Fresh out of the plastic new", Koehn acquaints us with six unprecedented pioneers of brand creation who lived and worked amid times of broad change: Josiah Wedgwood in the Industrial Revolution; Henry Heinz and Marshall Field in the Transportation and Communication Revolution; and Estee Lauder, Howard Schultz of Starbucks, and Michael Dell in the Information Revolution.Through convincing and drawing in profiles of these entrepreneurial visionaries, she uncovers a provocative connection between financial turbulence, family unit needs, and friends procedure that holds imperative lessons for the present brand manufacturers. As indicated by Koehn, these ground breaking people comprehended the significant impacts that financial change has on what clients need, have, and can bear the cost of as much as on what organizations make-and were aces at misusing the colossal business openings these request side movements made. To be sure, the brands and organizations made by these people have turned out to be such a piece of regular daily existence that we've influenced them to some portion of basic discourse: we pass the Heinz; eat off Wedgwood; arrange a Starbucks. Koehn draws from their journals, correspondence, and authority business records to exhibit that these business visionaries were more than shrewd advertisers; they were organization developers.

SME growth in India - SMAC drivers

SMAC - The Next Growth Drivers of Indian SMEs

SMAC - The Paradigm Shift by KPMG

Social, Mobile, Analytics, and Cloud

FMCG - World Market Share

FMCG - World Market Share by Gramener