Far Eastern University Manila, Philippines: Assignment in
Far Eastern University Manila, Philippines: Assignment in
Far Eastern University Manila, Philippines: Assignment in
Manila, Philippines
Assignment in:
ECON 1
Submitted By:
GALLOS, JUSTIN D.
Company Overview :
Initially being launched as an analog driven product line, it transitioned into a universally
acclaimed pioneer in technological innovation. The tech industry is currently the world’s
largest smartphone and mobile phone manufacturer. Currently, it sells over a hundred
products of different varieties and models. Its operational branches are present in
about 79 countries.
Constant change
Through its corporate culture, Samsung facilitates change that benefits the business.
This characteristic of the organizational culture puts innovation at the center, based on
the recognition that change is essential when it comes to technological innovation. For
example, Samsung’s employees embody values, beliefs, and a philosophy that change
is necessary to improve the company’s consumer electronics and related products and
ensure long-term competitive advantage against other firms, such as Apple, which also
embrace the need for change in goals for innovation.
The power of each important buyer group depends on a number of characteristics of its
market situation and on the relative importance of its sales or purchases to the industry
compared with its overall business.
The products it purchases from the industry form a component of its product and
represent a significant fraction of its cost. The buyers are likely to shop for a favorable
price and purchase selectively. Where the product sold by the industry in question is a
small fraction of buyers’ costs, buyers are usually much less price sensitive.
It earns low profits, which create great incentive to lower its purchasing costs. Highly
profitable buyers, however, are generally less price sensitive (that is, of course, if the
item does not represent a large fraction of their costs).
The industry’s product is unimportant to the quality of the buyers’ products or services.
Where the quality of the buyers’ products is very much affected by the industry’s
product, buyers are generally less price sensitive. Industries in which this situation
obtains include oil field equipment, where a malfunction can lead to large losses, and
enclosures for electronic medical and test instruments, where the quality of the
enclosure can influence the user’s impression about the quality of the equipment inside.
The buyers pose a credible threat of integrating backward to make the industry’s
product. The Big Three auto producers and major buyers of cars have often used the
threat of self-manufacture as a bargaining lever. But sometimes an industry engenders
a threat to buyers that its members may integrate forward.
The buying power of retailers is determined by the same rules, with one important
addition. Retailers can gain significant bargaining power over manufacturers when they
can influence consumers’ purchasing decisions, as they do in audio components,
jewelry, appliances, sporting goods, and other goods.
A company’s choice of suppliers to buy from or buyer groups to sell to should be viewed
as a crucial strategic decision. A company can improve its strategic posture by finding
suppliers or buyers who possess the least power to influence it adversely.
Most common is the situation of a company being able to choose whom it will sell to—in
other words, buyer selection. Rarely do all the buyer groups a company sells to enjoy
equal power. Even if a company sells to a single industry, segments usually exist within
that industry that exercise less power (and that are therefore less price sensitive) than
others. For example, the replacement market for most products is less price sensitive
than the overall market.
Recommendation
Samsung’s organizational culture brings strategic management challenges in
achieving culture-based objectives. For example, the corporate culture’s ethics
aspect requires effective monitoring and control to determine human resource
inadequacies in this regard. Also, Samsung faces the challenge of ensuring
prosperity for all and opportunity for all employees. In maintaining its
organizational culture, the technology conglomerate may encounter barriers to
developing a work environment where all employees’ career development goals
are considered in an equitable manner.
5.) References
http://panmore.com/samsung-organizational-culture-corporate-cultural-
characteristics-analysis
http://www.ijstm.com/images/short_pdf/1484811690_D535ijstm.pdf
http://www.iosrjournals.org/iosr-jbm/papers/ncibppte-volume-4/26.pdf
https://www.astrogrowth.com/blog/samsung-mission-statement/
https://bstrategyhub.com/swot-analysis-of-samsung-2019-samsung-swot-
analysis/ https://strategicmanagementinsight.com/swot-analyses/samsung-swot-
analysis.html