supply chain 1

For this post, we will discuss the importance of managing marketing channels and supply chain. Who knew, this was part of the role of marketing! Select one topic below for your post: Explain what direct and indirect channels are and provide examples. What factors might a marketing manager need to consider when selecting or managing a marketing channel?

Why is knowing and understanding supply chain important to the marketing team? Include a general overview, advantages/disadvantages, and risk/rewards. You may also tie in the product you selected for your first assignment as a way to apply the concepts and share an example. The idea is to share and discuss information about marketing channels and supply chain and gain a better understanding, using your product selection as well as your insights and readings from our textbook.

quality management 2

pitch an idea for a quality management program. Then address the following questions:

a.    Who will you include on the deployment team and why?

b.    How will you structure and manage the team to optimize their success?

c.     What quality management tool are you proposing be implemented and why?

d.    Why is this particular tool a good fit for this organization or the problem you are trying to solve?

e.    How will the new tool you are proposing impact overall quality (service quality or product quality)?

1 Briefly describe

Q1.1 Briefly describe what six elements make up an organization’s strategic framework.

Q1.2Briefly describe the seven steps that can be used to identify an organisation’s core values.

Q1.3 In addition to values, organisations will establish expectations about certain aspects major functions and operations of the business. Briefly describe each of these.

Q1.4Briefly describe what strategies are.

Q1.5Briefly describe what are Critical Success Factors (CSFs) and Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) respectively

Q1.5 There are said to be three levels of strategy. Briefly describe each one.

Q1.6 Briefly discuss the ten laws of effective communication.

In 2-3 sentences explain what is the impact of the Internet on small business (you can list the advantages or disadvantages)?

In 2-3 sentences explain what is the impact of the Internet on small business (you can list the advantages or disadvantages)?

project’s performance 100%

project’s performance

You are the project manager working on a Market Mailing project.  The client informed your project team during the project planning phase that the project must be completed on time in order to sync with the launch of the new product. Also, the client informed you and the team that there is no cash reserve for the project so the project has to be completed within budget.  Below is the status update that two project team members (Jennifer and Ben) put together.  Based on the project’s performance to date, complete the Rating Project Risk exercise on the next page. 

 

 

 

Rating Project Risk

Based on the project’s performance complete the risk assessment chart below by rating each risk factor as follows: 

  • High, medium, or low in terms of its potential impact 
  • High, medium, or low in terms of its probability of occurrence 

Project Risk Items 

Potential Impact 

(H / M / L) 

Probability of Occurrence 

(H / M / L) 

Overall Risk 

(H / M / L) 

Risk Score Justification Statement 

Completing Task A over the $1,200 budget

 

 

 

 

Completing Task A after the scheduled end date of June 15

 

 

 

 

Completing Task B over the $1,200 budget

 

 

 

 

Completing Task B after the scheduled end date of May 30

 

 

 

 

Extract the combined effect of those two values, combined with your judgment, and score each risk factor as high, medium, or low overall. Justify your scores using the data provided above. 

knowledge management strategic thinking and learning organizations 1

knowledge management strategic thinking and learning organizations

questions

1- Demonstrate how knowledge management, strategic thinking, and learning organizations impact organizational effectiveness.

2- With the case study below,

-Examine how key managers act to enhance efficiency and effectiveness in an organization, identifying aspects of HOC’s management. Include key facts from the case study.

-Examine management of human capital and how it supports strategic thinking (ST) and the learning organization (LO). Apply these concepts to the case study.

-Analyze the impact structure and culture have on the creation and maintenance of ST/LO organizations and write up the case analysis and recommendations.

-Formulate an inclusion and relationship-building strategy for managers within the organization.

Taking into consideration Organizational Structure, Culture, Behavior, provide strategies that would help the organization move toward the future.

knowledge management strategic thinking and learning organizations

CASE STUDY

Ralph Lorean International (RLI) owner of several house décor and furniture manufacturers recently purchased a controlling interest in a medium-size firm, House of Cloth (HOC), which employs 6,644 people worldwide. HOC has been considered a premier manufacturer of cloth since 1964. Revenues over the last four years have been flat and costs are rising steadily. RLI purchases an interest in the company despite the flat sales because of its reputation and loyal customer base. RLI has a history of turning troubled companies around and they think they can do the same with HOC.

RLI has to date allowed HOC to operate independently while they examine closely the causes of the recent poor performance of the company. Areama Cantros, was recently promoted to senior management analyst because of her superb work with Izzy’s Bed Emporium. RLI has decided to send Areama to HOC on a fact-finding mission. She is to discover the challenges facing the management at HOC and make recommendations that will improve and grow significantly HOC’s financial performance.

Areama’s, first meeting with HOC’s management team after arriving at their headquarters seemed to go well. The first thing Areama noticed about the team was that while they seemed to be personally different in obvious ways, beneath the surface they were quite alike. Of the seven members who compose the team, three have been with the company since its inception. The remaining four are much younger and came to the company after its international expansion in 2010. Two of the team members have worked with HOC in India and came to headquarters as part of a promotion plan. The other two team members come from Guatemala and Romania where they were employed in local branches of HOC. The team membership is predominately male with only two women. Despite the differences in age, gender, company tenure, and their functional and industry background, the members seem like they are cut from the same cloth in that each is very businesslike, analytical, competitive, and results-driven.

In your discussion regarding the company’s expansion five years ago, Henry Smythe, one of the founders, remarked, “The expansion was tough for us because of all the pressure and uncertainty, and to be honest, we really didn’t jell together at first-I thought it was a big mistake to bring new people on board to manage the ship-but now we’re past all that, we’re very cohesive, and we share the same vision of how we do business. This is a good thing because when I retire in a few years, I’ll know the company is in good hands.” Everyone in the room seemed to be a nod in agreement. Another founder, Russell “Rusty” Gee, then looked squarely into Areama’s eyes and added, “I’m not exactly sure what you are doing here, but we have weathered storms together and while I admit the last years haven’t been stellar, I know we can handle things ourselves. This was part of the deal, wasn’t it? We know this place better than anyone, so I can’t imagine we’ll seriously consider any recommendations that will upset the apple cart.” Rusty made the statement in a friendly way with a smile on his face, yet Areama knew he was serious.

knowledge management strategic thinking and learning organizations

Although the meeting told Areama many things two things stood out to her as real problems. The first turnover among the creative team associates is high: thirty-five percent each year for the last two years, and thirty percent the year before that. The industry average is twenty percent. HOC’s creative team is integral to its competitive edge in the industry. New patterns, cloth fabrics, and uses are essential to the firm’s livelihood. Although the top management team is aware of the problem, they seem to rationalize it. As “Jamie Wagner, VP of human resources noted, “We hire the best and the brightest, so it’s only natural that they occasionally get poached by other firms. We try our best to keep them, but we haven’t been able to match salaries with our competitors in recent years. Once things turn around the numbers will go down.”

Besides the turnover issue, Areama also learned that the company had been sued three times recently. The cases all involved associates who were passed over for a promotion and who claimed the work environment was so filled with stress that it made them ill and unable to work. Areama was aware of the first case because it was highly publicized and HOC was forced to settle the case to get out of the public eye. Afraid of similar problems with the first case HOC settled both suits out of court quickly and managed to keep them out of the eye of the press. Senior management seemed to be proud of this fact. Before you had a chance to ask Jamie if she thought the suits and turnover may be related, Jamie volunteers the following. “We were really unlucky during this period. We hired three associates who didn’t possess the right capabilities for the job, and each had trouble coping in their own way. Most everyone that comes to our design team at HOC is drawn to our reputation for quality and success. We just have to find a better way of finding people who fit.”

Areama’s conversation with the design team members revealed nothing too far out of the industry norm. Workload and time pressure are high, but not atypical. The design teams are put together by fabric use and usually, their members are led by a senior client manager, who has the final design approval. Jamie told Areama that the teams were self-managed but that appeared not to be the case. The senior lead assigned tasks to each associate member during the projects. Because the support staff is reduced team members had to assume a lot of administrative duties.

Creative teams have the autonomy to work wherever and whenever they need to. This arrangement gives employees a lot of flexibility and working odd hours in strange locations is not unusual. Areama heard one story that a creative dinner was held in the private room of a local restaurant. The team paid the owner $1,000 to keep the room available to them for as long as they needed it. The team stayed overnight and left just before lunch the next day. While all the members were on board with the idea, one of the female designers had to leave early because of a family obligation. The team produced a successful product for a big client. Bursting with pride over the story the senior manager who revealed the story remarked,” fantastic team-building experience for those that chose to tough it out” and it perfectly reflects the company’s ‘work-hard, play-hard mentality.” Areama, had to wonder if a young woman who had to leave early was now considered “not the right fit”.

knowledge management strategic thinking and learning organizations

Areama’s inquiry as to how the design team’s job performance is managed, she learned that towards the end of the calendar year, senior client managers get together and spend an entire day on the evaluation process. The evaluations focus on the extent to which the member contributed to the designs of the team they worked on the previous year. All members are given scores and listed. Using the member’s job performance score, their names are placed in one of three categories. The top ten percent will receive a bonus of up to fifty percent of their base pay and are fast-tracked for senior client managers. The next thirty percent will receive a twenty-five percent bonus and are consider on track for promotion. The last group gets 2-3 percent of their salary as a bonus. The bonus checks are mailed to the members’ homes before the winter holidays to “avoid bad feelings and conflict, that can naturally come about among teams” Jamie remarks.

Lunch with the senior client managers told Areama that the subject of turnover and the lawsuits is touchy. One manager said “Around here, you’re rewarded for paying your dues, for doing whatever is thrown your way. Yes, it is demanding, and requires sacrifice, but how else can we find out if people have what it takes? Those of us sitting at this table have been through it and we know it works look how successful we have been. Hires who claim they can’t take it or that it’s abusive just can’t be tolerated.” Areama seemed to notice that all the senior managers seem to be male, American, and considerably older than the associates.

knowledge management strategic thinking and learning organizations

After lunch, Areama met with a group of associates who seem to shed yet another perspective about life in the design department. As an example, the young associate who left work dinner, Areama couldn’t help but search her out, said, “I learned a lot from dealing with the pressure at the beginning, but the work is non-stop. They say it’s ‘work-hard, play-hard, but even the play feels like work. The projects are great, but I never really feel like I’m fully involved. I’m always trying to get a chance to be heard.” Another member agreed and added “It’s okay I guess if you get plugged into the right manager from the outset, but I’ve never seemed to gain favor no matter how many hours I work. To top it off, the crazy hours are creating a lot of conflict at home and the strains are adding up.”

rules of leadership

Referring to the reading: “What is an Effective Leader

  1. ” by Dave Ulrich (2014) Think about the five rules of leadership. Who, according to you, comes closest to all the five rules and why?
Organisation culture

Objectives and Key Results PART 1

ASSIGNMENT: Objectives and Key Results PART 1: Understand OKRs Explore Google’s re:Work ‘Set Goals with OKRs’ website. View from ‘Introduction’ to ‘Update OKRs regularly’ and the included links.
Answer the following nine questions. 1. Why are OKRs effective?
2. What is a stretch goal? Why use stretch goals?
3. Meeting what percent of goals is considered a success?
4. How do OKRs help teams say ‘yes’ and ‘no’ to projects and ideas?
5. How many OKRs should be used?
6. Explain the five types of OKR writing mistakes.
7. When teams create their own OKRs, what should be taken into consideration?
8. How often are OKRs created? Discussed? Revised? Reported?
PART 2: Practice Creating OKRs Complete the following table. Remember, results must be measurable, defined with numbers, percentages and due dates. It should be very clear to determine if a result was achieved. If you are not comfortable creating results for the construction site supervisor or the restaurant manager roles, you may replace these with roles of your choosing. Make sure to have a total of 3 roles, 3 objectives, and 9 results in your submission.

Supervisor Objectives and Key Results

Construction site supervisor Objective: Build quality homes Result 1:
Result 2:
Result 3:
Restaurant manager Objective: Provide excellent customer service
Result 1:
Result 2:
Result 3:
You choose: Objective:
Result 1:
Result 2:
Result 3:

Ontological Humility

Ontological Humility 1

Base on this article write a discussion essay:

How you have experienced ontological humility and ontological arrogance in your life.

Ontological Humility

  • Munro, I. (2019, July 6). Ontology (my big word of the month) and humility. Leading Essentially. https://leadingessentially.com/2019/07/06/ontology-my-big-word-of-the-month-and-humility/
  • This blog introduces readers to the concept of ontological humility. The concept was penned by Fred Kofman in his 2006 text, Conscious Business. Ontological humility is the first step to recognizing, admitting, and embracing the idea that there is more we do not know than what we know. The more we know the more we realize how little we know.
  • Murray, T. (2008). Exploring epistemic wisdom: Ethical and practical implications of integral theory and methodological pluralism for collaboration and knowledge-building [PDF]. Ethics & Methodological Pluralism, ITC 2008.
  • This thought piece describes how ontological humility is the first step to gaining epistemic wisdom. Please read through this with an open mind and realization that there might be sections that are confusing to you today, and that is alright. You will want to re-read this article throughout the program and consider how your understanding of the concepts have become clearer over time.
  • Note that this site only allows a limited number of downloads each day. You might find it helpful to save the article to another location to ensure you can access it when you want.