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Supply Chain Relationships: A Multi-lens Approach through a Case Study from POME by Gautam Koppala

Monday, November 1st, 2010

Supply Chain Relationships: A Multi-lens Approach through a Case Study from POME by Gautam Koppala

 

Supply Chain Relationships: A Multi-lens Approach through a Case Study:

The last few decades have witnessed the rise of research into supply chain management and relationships within it. However, in many cases previous research has taken a single-lens approach to understanding and explaining what is happening as well as in subsequently developing solutions. The research reported here seeks to take a multi-lens approach to relationships in the supply chain using a complete farm to retail food supply chain as an instrumental case.

Several authors have recently argued that, although supply chain management (SCM) has received a good deal of attention in the literature since the early 1980s, the concept is still not particularly well understood.

A case in point is integration through buyer–supplier or supply chain relationships. Specifically, the majority of current approaches tend to address the subject from a single perspective or lens.

A number of different perspectives have been taken in the literature, including power , trust and risk. Each of these variables has merit, but they are, on an individual basis, rarely the only variable that is at play. A few authors have attempted to link two of these three variables together, for example power and trust or risk and trust.

Building on this perspective, POME propose a more pluralist multi-lens research view where a single instrumental case is viewed from a range of explanatory perspectives. In addition, it is our belief that, in some cases, there may be other variables at play that have not yet been sufficiently explored in the supply chain literature.

Our first research aim is, therefore, to understand how these different variables impinge and to explain the actions of actors within a supply chain. Linked to this, our second aim is to explore which of these might be more important in shaping the actions of each actor. Our third question seeks to understand whether there are any other important variables in addition to power, trust and risk. If indeed there is a more complex set of explanatory variables at play, our fourth research aim will investigate how such a level of understanding might be used to help the actors to improve their supply chain through better relationships.

The vehicle for exploring these aims is a longitudinal case centred on an Australian food processing firm.

 

A review of the existing literature

The idea of forming cooperative rather than adversarial relationships with suppliers made an appearance in the literature several decades ago . Since then the idea has re-emerged under a variety of names including: co-makership reverse marketing ; supplier alliances and partnership sourcing. Variations have also appeared within the marketing domain under the title of relational or relationship marketing as well as within the strategic management field as strategic alliances. At the same time, the idea of cooperative relationships has been extended from immediate suppliers to encompass the wider supply chain and coupled with ideas borrowed from Japanese automotive and lean production literature.

One author called Ramsay (1996) argues that the majority of the academic literature emerged from an outright attack on the traditional, adversarial approach to supplier relationships with the assumption that collaboration and partnerships are the sine qua non of successful supplier relationship management. This latter view of relationship management has been supported by influential bodies in the UK such as the Confederation of British Industry (CBI) and the Department of Trade and Industry, which provided the initial support funding for Partnership Sourcing Ltd (PSL). However, evidence from many practitioners is that the term ‘partnership’ has been somewhat overused, often inappropriately where little real change has occurred .

The traditional purchasing-based view of SCM was to leverage the supply chain to achieve the lowest initial purchase prices whilst assuring supply, and was characterized by: multiple suppliers; supplier selection based primarily on purchase price; arm’s length negotiations; formal short-term contracts; and centralized purchasing. A more contemporary view of SCM, heralded by some as the ‘new paradigm’, redefines SCM as a process for designing, developing, optimizing and managing the internal and external components of the supply system, including material supply, transforming materials and distributing finished products or services to customers, that is consistent with overall objectives and strategies.

The essence of SCM is as a strategic weapon to develop a sustainable competitive advantage by reducing investment without sacrificing customer satisfaction. While managers have long acknowledged the importance of getting closer to their key customers, the logic has now been extended to the upstream supply chain so that close ties with key suppliers are also seen as important conceptualize the transition from traditional open-market negotiations to collaboration as a continuum

Collaboration, then, is seen by many as an integral facet of an SCM strategy. This popular view is not without its critics, and a balanced approach to collaboration gives a picture of the determinants of successful SCM. Speckman, Kamauff and Myhr (1998) note that the road from open-market negotiations to collaboration is a long one and should not by travelled by every buyer–seller relationship.

Many authors have advocated a portfolio approach to supplier relationships management. Whilst the arm’s length approach is now subject to criticism because of its focus on short-term cost reduction, it is often proposed under certain conditions: in commodity markets, with multiple suppliers, low asset specificity and little market uncertainty where the market serves as a control mechanism to ensure competitive prices

However, much industrial purchasing does not meet these market characteristics, and here collaboration is usually presented as the obvious alternative. SCM demands a business transformation in which managers attempt to mitigate uncertainty and exploit opportunity through the creative use of both suppliers and customers by evaluating who best supplies value and then leveraging that expertise or capability through the entire supply chain. Few analysts note that this requires sharing what once might have been considered proprietary information, relinquishing control to others in the supply chain and trusting that your supply chain partners will act in your best interest. Trust clearly emerges throughout the literature as a key issue determining the success or otherwise of supply chain collaboration efforts.

However, trust is an ambiguous and complex phenomenon. Depending on their discipline and the problems they have been studying, many researchers have concentrated on the diverse aspects of trust and the process of trust development. Rousseau et al (1998) define it in this way: ‘Trust is a psychological state comprising the intention to accept vulnerability based upon positive expectations of the intentions or behaviour of another.’ Therefore trust is a psychological state, not a behaviour.

Economists have also recognized the nebulous nature of trust:

Trust and similar values, loyalty or truth telling are examples of what an economist would call ‘externalities’. They are goods; they are commodities; they have real practical value; they increase the efficiency of the system, enable you to produce more goods or more of whatever values you hold in high esteem. But they are not commodities for which trade on the open market is technically possible or even meaningful.

In recent years a number of authors have suggested classifications of trust but few commented that it is doubtful whether these classification schemes lead very far in coming to grips with the phenomenon.

for example, distinguishes between arm’s length contractual relations (dominant in the West) and obligational contractual relations (dominant in the East) and conceptualizes three forms of trust: contractual trust (the mutual expectation that promises of a written or verbal nature will be kept), competence trust (the confidence that a trading partner is competent to carry out a specific task) and goodwill trust (commitments from both parties that they will do more than is formally required). He observes that goodwill trust is far more prevalent in Japanese buyer–supplier relationships and that it cannot be achieved without the presence of the other two types first. Few  identify the absence of trust as a key inhibitor to supply chain collaboration in the food industry. Few  suggest that relationships benefit from increasing trust. few argues that trust is an outcome (rather than a cause) of successful supply chain collaboration in Japan and that it is a set of other variables that lead to high-trust supplier relations. Similarly, few others state that both risk and interdependence are necessary conditions for trust.

Many authors have identified that the primary role of trust in inter-Project relationships is to mitigate risk. Trust and control are two principal antecedents of risk. few argue that varying levels of risk and reliance on trust will explain the governance structures of transactions.

In accordance with other studies investigating risk definitions, finds that supply risk is a multifaceted concept that differs according to industry (aerospace firms, for example, are more likely to understand risk in terms of threats to customer life and safety) but that the most widely held definition of supply risk focuses on understanding how risk affects a purchasing firm’s ability to meet its customer requirements.

Critical of previous efforts to address risk management in the absence of a grounded definition of risk, offers the definition, ‘Supply risk is defined as the probability of an incident associated with inbound supply from individual supplier failures of the supply market occurring, in which its outcomes result in the inability of the purchasing firm to meet customer demand or cause threats to customer life and safety.’

Other authors argue that trust within buyer–supplier relations can be explained by another underlying factor, specifically power. Few  says that partnership formation involves a process of give and take. The supplier may expect increased order security, improved forward order cover and reduced uncertainty, whilst the buyer hopes to achieve improved supply continuity and a better match between the supplier’s sale specification and the buyer’s own specification, as well as reduced long-term costs. Ramsay (1996), an author says that ‘In a genuine partnership, each party makes a commitment to the other and modifies its behaviour to more closely match the other’s requirements. Each also becomes more dependent on the other – and thus both loses and gains power.’ He also adds that for the majority of smaller projects the effort to form partnerships will frequently be met by supplier indifference or resistance – and the strategy itself is high-risk, high-cost and necessarily involves purchasers in an undesirable net loss of power. Cox (2001c) also argues that there will be only some power conditions that will be conducive to collaboration and that they will be in situations of buyer dominance or where power is equally distributed between buyer and seller to create interdependence.

Cox (2001a, 2001b) suggests that practitioners map the dominant power regimes in which they are located in order to formulate an understanding of which strategy – either proactive supplier selection (or traditional arm’s length approaches) or proactive supplier development (more contemporary collaborative approaches) – is most suitable. However, any attempt to do so will reveal that power is itself a multifaceted concept and therefore subject to various interpretations. Power, most commonly viewed as market leverage, forms another determinant factor to effective supply chain collaboration.

 

Methodology

The choice of research methodology is dependent upon the set of research questions under consideration and the state of knowledge in deciding the most appropriate approach, consideration was made of:

The focus, which was the process of improving a given supply chain and the relationships within it, particularly between a food processor and seven single or group entities. The study of processes is best served using longitudinal research
The fact that the study concerned change and adoption of new relationship sets. It was best to study this as it happened in their natural field settings as it is hard to establish cause and effect from retrospective research .
The fact that longitudinal cases of change are rare and as such the research was of an exploratory character.

It was necessary to spend a significant amount of time in field research to provide the depth of understanding necessary for subsequent theory building.As such it was only possible to study a single supply chain – and this choice does limit the ability to generalize from this research.

The study began with the focal company’s commitment to a lean supply chain initiative. The case study was undertaken from August 2003 (before the start of the initiative) until May 2005 (when the initiative developed past its original scope).

Instrumental case: the Perfect Pineapple Supply Chain Programme

Background

The Perfect Pineapple Supply Chain Programme was initiated in late 2003 and involved an Australian canned pineapple supply chain stretching from growers, through transport links and a processing plant, to a major retailer . The supply chain also involved three key suppliers of cans, cartons and pallets.

 

The programme centred on a company processing 110,000 tonnes of fresh pineapple every year through a single facility. The majority of processed fruit is canned either in slices (or rings), pieces, cut (small pieces), crush, or pulp for juice.

The company was set up as a cooperative in 1946, and is owned by about 700 fruit and vegetable growers – with the majority of shares held by 171 pineapple growers. The company is Australia’s largest grower-owned fruit and vegetable processor, with pineapple products representing 20 per cent of turnover. The market for these products is largely domestic and is dominated by Australia’s two major supermarkets, who control 80 per cent of the market – one of whom took part in this study. The recent history of Australian supermarkets has been one of consolidation and emulation of overseas best practice and, in common with other markets, power in the Australian food industry seems to reside at the retailer, with relationships in the supply chain generally exhibiting low levels of trust.

The retailer involved in the work was in the process of establishing a new supply chain strategy including:

the development of a primary freight system, which is an Australian version of factory gate pricing involving retailer-controlled collection, cross-docking and revised distribution centre configuration;
store-friendly one-touch replenishment involving a streamlined material and information flow in the supply chain with the ideal of touching product only once between point of manufacture and checkout .
vendor to store shelf end-to-end process efficiency and integration;
the development of supplier relationships;
delivery of cultural change and breakdown of functional silos.

At the start of the programme, there was limited evidence that the retailer had succeeded in implementing this new strategy.

The programme

In late 2002 the processor started a programme of manufacturing change under the a newly appointed general manager. The first year  involved a series of improvement initiatives at the main manufacturing site. This included value stream mapping and a series of smaller improvements to internal and external information flows.

 

During this period it became apparent that many of the issues and problems faced by the company were the result either of actions taken by other Projects or of a lack of complete supply chain coordination. In addition, the company was suffering rapidly declining profits, reporting its first ever loss in 2003. At the same time, its major customers were increasing shelf space to imported product, including canned pineapple from the Philippines. As a result it was decided to widen the scope of the programme to encompass the wider supply chain. Focusing on canned pineapples, the programme was christened the Perfect Pineapple Supply Chain Programme.

Step 2 of the programme brought together senior executives from the different firms involved to establish what the supply chain looked like and what the programme could achieve, and to gain a commitment from the projects to take part in the programme. During this meeting the major issues facing the supply chain became clear. The managing director of the processor commented on the pressure exerted by retailers, particularly in terms of costs. This was particularly relevant as the company was losing market share to overseas competitors whose product retailed at 30 per cent lower prices. It would be difficult for the company to absorb these reduced margins – so they put pressure on growers, who had not received an increase in price for their pineapples for nearly 10 years. The managing director concluded with the view that the only way forward was to work together as a team for everyone’s mutual benefit. This view was generally accepted, but there was concern that some – primarily the retailer – would gain more than others, or even at the expense of the other participants.

The meeting included an exercise to map the whole supply chain. This showed that no one had a good picture of the complete supply chain, and few could describe the operations within their own business in great detail. The meeting also developed an ideal future state – as well as the barriers to getting there. These barriers included capital shortages, problems in changing culture, skilled people to make the change, the older age of growers, the lack of integrated IT, and the processor’s lack of an explicit strategy.

Step 3 was to bring together the supply chain’s process owners, or operational staff. This was done shortly after step 2, with meetings following a similar path to those of the executive group, except that less time was spent discussing what was required and more on how it might be done. A far more detailed map of the supply chain was developed, and with it the real problems began to emerge. Agreement was reached to undertake a more detailed analysis of the supply chain in five loops involving cross-company groups. The loops were a downstream loop (post-manufacture), a canning loop, an upstream fruit loop (up to delivery of pineapples) and two loops for the cans and cartons respectively. The result of this step was an agreed outline plan for each loop. These plans were presented back to the executive group.

Step 5 had discussions among the executive group of the findings and recommended projects – and how these could be developed into a workable plan. The view of the retailer was that they were keen to develop a new, closer relationship with suppliers – but would do so only in a step-by-step approach and only with like-minded firms.

The discussions quickly identified short-term gains of A–4 million, although further analysis showed that the true benefits could be of the order of A million. However, two areas of concern emerged. The first was that it was difficult to plan a supply chain transition, as a new strategic plan for the processor was being finalized over the next three months. The second was the fact that all the firms were actively taking part, but not all seemed to be fully committed. In particular, concerns were raised about the can and carton makers who were only able to identify savings of less than A0,000 each. However, they soon changed their stance and agreed a strategic review involving an analysis of the type of packaging used and how this might be changed – for example, from cardboard boxes to plastic bins.

As a result of these discussions, various uncomfortable issues were brought to the surface, and hidden and unspoken concerns were shared. The result was that the atmosphere changed from being unsure to very positive. This positive feeling was reinforced by a strong plan involving all the respective firms in its delivery.  Since this point the group has continued implementing the plan and has already gained benefit of several million dollars. As a result, the processor has decided to extend the scope of the work to include a further loop – namely a beetroot loop, which represents a further 15 per cent of turnover. This step is a prelude to the development of further loops (for example, for baby food raw material ingredients, and fruit or fruit concentrate for fruit juice). It was also decided that once these further loops were in place (in late 2005) the extended group of projects (ie members of the Perfect Pineapple group and members of the new loops) would come together periodically and take on the shape and dynamics of a true supplier association (Hines, 1994).

Specifically, they were creating an open forum for exchange of views and information. This process involved identifying common (or not common) issues, concerns and visions for the supply chain, as well as the mapping of the complete chain by cross-company groups. This mapping also increased the individual and collective competence of the group, both in their own area and in the remainder of the supply chain. As a result, various individuals could see the bigger picture and the roles of others in improvement projects. In addition, this increase in individual and collective competence was likely to increase costs for new supply chain entrants, increasing barriers to entry and reducing risk for the present firms.

In this phase, senior staff from the processor went out of their way to develop a sense of common destiny, both by working to develop common measures across the supply chain and by creating an environment where mutually beneficial plans could be developed by teams from across the supply chain. Further commitment was sought with the full involvement of the retailer, but it was not yet possible to achieve the full commitment of all – particularly the packaging firms.

 

Phase 2 explanation

During the second phase of activity (steps 6 and 7), the processor was attempting to increase trust, having gone a significant way to reducing risk for all those involved. This second phase involved the development of learning effects, withholding power, and the removal of opportunistic behaviour – and ultimately was leading towards increased asset specificity. In terms of the explanatory model, the processor was seeking to move beyond competence trust to achieve goodwill trust, with firms doing more than their explicitly stated commitments

Staff at the processor worked hard to ensure that a place in the improvement work could be found for all of the firms. In addition, they developed an approach that was sustainable, as it was not focused on quick wins, but a longer approach of at least three years’ duration. Even at the early stages of the work they held informal discussions about developing the programme into a supplier association programme.

The second phase also involved the development of withheld power with a common set of metrics and attention paid to the fact that all the firms involved needed to see some benefit from the work. An example of the withheld power was the ‘quiet word’ to packaging firms when they appeared not to be giving their full commitment. They got reassurance that their involvement would benefit their firms and lead to a longer-term relationship with greater profit potential to all involved.

The second phase of activity moved the relationship set from a competence-based trust to the start of a goodwill trust where individual actors are starting to do things for the common good of the group rather than their individual benefit. This type of two-phase development has proved to be beneficial to the firms involved, but it may not be suitable in all other environments. It was appropriate here because the environment involved:

regular repeated transactions (with daily or weekly orders);
the willingness to hold back from explicit power relationships and the use of ‘withheld power’;
an agreed common benefit in working together;
a specific non-commodity product;

appropriate outside facilitation to make concerns explicit.

 

to illustrate the point, we will take the example of a single power lens as advocated by Cox (2001a, 2001b, 2001c).

Using a development of Cox’s power regime approach we can develop a power map for the physical movement of product , with the width of the arrows proportional to the cash flows, and the figures in circles representing the total business turnover of each firm. Following Cox (2001a), the symbols represent:

<

buyer having power over supplier

>

supplier having power over buyer

=

interdependence

0

independence

 

The retailer holds power over the processor, primarily owing to size and ability to switch to cheaper imported product. The processor holds power over the can and carton maker as well as its inbound transporter. The processor has a relatively interdependent relationship with the outbound transporter and, owing to their low reliance on each other, a relatively independent relationship with the pallet supplier. The processor appears to hold power over the growers, but the governance structures between the two mean that the processor is owned largely by the pineapple growers.

It should be possible to interpret where successful supply chain relationships and development are possible, and where existing power regimes would preclude their effectiveness. According to Cox, a supply chain approach will only work where there is buyer dominance or buyer–supplier interdependence. So we can predict that the processor will be able to encourage the transport firms and packaging suppliers actively to take part, but find it very hard to engage the other firms. However, a different picture emerged. In gaining agreement and commitment to the programme, various difficulties appeared, which could not completely, or even largely, be explained by existing power regimes.

As the programme of activities aligned closely with the retailer’s strategic objective, the retailer was enthusiastic about the programme. In addition, the growers were enthusiastic because it was ultimately to their benefit for the processor to produce a better financial result. The other company that showed the greatest enthusiasm was the outbound transporter. However, this owed little to the interdependence it enjoyed with the processor, and more to the perceived threat and risk that it felt in potentially losing business.

In addition, the inbound freight firm was not brought fully into the initiative in the early stages – but this was more to do with the commitment levels of the individuals involved, and once the discussions became more operational there was a much higher level of personal engagement. The pallet firm similarly did not take a very active part – but the reason appeared to be that improvements to the supply chain would probably reduce the number of pallets required. It also seemed that the packaging suppliers were only paying lip service to the work and were offering only marginal benefits. Their lack of involvement can be explained in two ways: firstly, the individuals involved saw little in the work in terms of career development; secondly, and more importantly, they did not trust the processor because of a history of adversarial price reduction demands.

The reactions and involvement of the different projects were sensible and indeed logical from their perspective. However, their responses cannot adequately be explained simply through a power lens. By viewing each company through each of the five lenses – power and dependency, risk, trust, ownership and governance structures, commitment – their behaviour can be both understood and explained  but in each case one variable was pre-eminent in shaping the behaviour. The pre-eminent variable for each firm is shown by a black box against the relevant variable. During the study it was possible to:

1) see how each less engaged firm could be brought on-side more readily and quickly; and

2) understand what was motivating the highly engaged firms and try to ensure that this factor was built upon to sustain the firm’s positive role. In addition, it should be possible to repeat the multi-lens assessment periodically, as inevitably some of the variables will change in importance and weighting.

 

Conclusion

Returning to the research questions

We have attempted to address four questions. The first sought to understand how three well-established variables (power and dependency, trust and risk) impinge and explain the actions of actors within a supply chain. It has been shown that each of these lenses has proved helpful in understanding the motivation of behaviour. However, we have demonstrated that none of them, on their own, can adequately explain the behaviour of any one of the actors.

Linked to this first question, the second question was to explore which of the three variables might be more important in shaping the actions of each actor. The analysis presented  above shows that each of these variables was the single most important factor in explaining some behaviour. Power and dependency was most important for the pallet supplier, risk was most important for the outbound transporter and the canner, and trust (or lack of it) was most important for both can and carton suppliers.

Our third question sought to understand whether there are any other important variables in addition to power, trust and risk. It was clearly established that it was not possible – in this particular case – to explain the behaviour of the firms using the three variables. We found two additional factors that were pre-eminent in explaining behaviour in at least one of the firms involved. These were the ownership and governance structures (most important for the growers) and personal commitment (most important for the retailer).

The last research question was contingent on there being a complex set of explanatory variables at play – which there did indeed prove to be. Gaining a more detailed understanding of the different variables at play might improve supply chain management through better relationships and more effective improvement activities. This was achieved in two ways. First, an explanatory model was developed to supplement our description of what was happening within the case; second, a framework was constructed that summarizes the impact of the different variables on each of the actors, and shows which was most important in influencing behaviour. We found that only a deep understanding of the actors would yield a full picture of all the different causes and effects.

Managerial lessons

This research has perhaps three important managerial lessons. The first is that taking a simple ‘everything can be explained by one variable’ approach was not appropriate in this study. This was highlighted by showing how using a single lens – power – led to a poor understanding of what might be occurring. Although this may be appropriate in rare examples, we believe that such a single-lens approach is very limited – and quite dangerous, as inappropriate solutions may be generated.

The second managerial lesson is that a multi-lens approach helps ensure that a better understanding is developed, which can lead to further stages of analysis and solution development. In this case the most appropriate five lenses were power and dependency, risk, trust, ownership and governance structures, and commitment.

As a result an explanatory model was presented, which may prove a useful framework for establishing closer long-term relations within a supply chain setting, particularly where:

there are regularly repeated transactions;
there are (or could be) common goals;
stronger actors are willing to withhold power for the good of the whole supply chain;
products or services are in some way bespoke or unique; •there is appropriate outside facilitation to make concerns explicit.

However, a caveat is that the five variables used here may not be the most important variables in all other cases – although they may provide a useful starting place for a discussion.

Gautam Koppala,

POME Author

The final managerial lesson is that, either on a one-off occasion or better still on a periodic basis, using a framework to help understand and explain the behaviour of actors is likely to be the first step in developing a better and more sustainable set of relationships, which will result in a more effective supply chain.

 

GAUTAM KOPPALA, With over   a decade, track record of successful leadership, excellent results through strategic skills in driving revenue and profit growth. Demonstrated ability to identify and trouble shoot critical issues impacting productivity, cost, distribution, marketing, Strategic positioning, sales and financial operations, with innate ability to build and maintain strong client relationships in operations. Expert in distilling and managing processes, enhancing internal structures, and promoting multi-skilled team competencies via nurturing mentorship and inspirational leadership. Engagements have spanned operational, strategic, technological and change management roles. Academically, I am a cum laude graduate with a Bachelor of Technology degree in Electrical and Electronics Engineering (B-Tech E.E.E.) and a post graduate in Masters in Human Resources Management (M.H.R.M.) and Masters of Foreign Trade (M.F.T.). As you will see my Post Graduation’s were been studied part-time, as well as working full-time as an Engineer. I feel that this demonstrates my ability to maintain dedication, motivation and enthusiasm for a project management over a long period of time. In addition, balancing full-time work with study has perfected my time-management and organizational skills. I believe that my college degrees and gamut certifications in combination with my extensive broad-based work experience along with my drive, resourcefulness and determination, would make me an excellent candidate for a senior management position with any company. Highlights of my background include Operations related Commercial, Supply chain, Sales with a magnificent experience in Project management, technically oriented towards Automation and Security Systems in Industrial and Building sectors. Presently, writing a book on Projects and Operations Management (comprise of 12 volumes, 6K pages), and awaited for the reputed publications. These books can be checked in Google books and other search engines too.

Case Study On Government Grants

Monday, November 1st, 2010

Case Study On Government Grants

Case studies always shed light on the actual success of the grants offered by the government. Today, you don’t have to pour over tedious manuals to get an idea about the ins and outs of grants. You can instead go online for all your queries related to grants case studies. You can get details on the site on lots of companies and institutions that do provide you with grants case studies.

You can get to know about small and startup business case studies, on high technology, service sector, green projects, food and drink and on medical and life sciences. At first, the case studies that are featured in the section can offer you the projects which have been completed. Also, such projects have significant progress to it. There are also other case studies which can present you with exceptional choices and which have received an offer of the grant.

 All together, you can get illustration of the main and the key features of specific schemes along with broad range of projects and sectors. Through the site, you get to know whether you are eligible for a grant or not. You can also know on small business support programs through the case studies.

 Grant case studies

 One such case study which you can refer is the business environmental program. There is technical assistance which can provide a business to reduce the costs and to improve the environmental performance. Such environmental program can offer free and confidential dictatorial and also prevention of pollution assistance to one’s businesses. The clients who take advantage of the grants case studies on environmental program are many.  Such clients include auto repair shops, hotels, mines, government operations, agriculture sector, dry cleaners, motels and metal finishers.

 Benefits of such environmental programs

 Further, through such programs one can get to save money and also get to enjoy professional advice. There are also recommendations which are tailored as per specific conditions. Thus, one can get to focus mainly on his business for which he can get effective solutions and can improve the environmental performance. On the site, there are also feedbacks which are from the client side.

 Case studies and their similar success stories

 You can also browse through the small business plans, articles and case studies which are focused on providing financial support in form of loans and grants.  This collection contains a lot of valuable articles which have tips and recommendations. These tips are on how to apply for and receive funds for a new or an existing small business. You are provided with the case studies and also with success stories which can present you with many details.

You can search through the province, through purpose of the program and also industry wise. By purpose, you can know whether the grants case studies purpose is acquisition, financial, marketing or other such purpose.

 Through the industry section, you get to view the case study as per the industries that are growing tremendously. This includes accommodation, education, health care, technical services, utilities, food services, construction, arts, entertainment, retail trade, manufacturing and many such industries. There are also links on recent case studies with their similar articles.

 

John Goldman is one of the foremost advisors in matters relating to Government Grants and Financial Aid. To learn more about government grants and how to apply for them visit the Government Grant USA website

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Case Study Research: Design and Methods (Applied Social Research Methods)

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The Case Study Handbook: How to Read, Discuss, and Write Persuasively About Cases

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Amazing Article Marketing Case Study

Monday, September 6th, 2010

Want to advertise widely the true value of the Article Marketing? Have you d? J? Demand? If the work of marketing article? The R? Answer is yes. There are super affiliate? S, that the use made available exclusively f? R g Article Marketing? N? RER trafic.Vous? On the position of? Cover, why they are using article marketing. These begin? Ogy you can commercialisation.Si the best return on investment of your money to you? J? Pen? You? tiez wasting your time? ? Write articles and submit them? Sites, article submission, you should read this? Study cas.Guna submitinme Nadar. com has R? ALIS? a? detailed case study of an author. They analyzed? Article submitted? EzineArticles.Voici a short R? Sum? The? Article Marketing Case Study. The link below m? Nera? Exemplary in year? Case study approfondie.Les 199 Article? Ezinearticles have 387 845 views and it is not over, she again? Oivent average of 15,000 hits per month, with 2500 clicks per month at the site (s). With an average of 35-50 cents / word-Keys ROI? Ezinearticles standard. com? an average of $ 1300-1500 f? r clicks? s have one profile per Ezinearticles seul.EzineArticles profile of the 4055 f? r the author, o? The links are displayed? s. H? lt a number? Saddle clicks have? T? to do? profiles that are not Compt? s in the statistics. Add? Items that are unionized? S? more than 3,500 Sitzpl tze? with links that presents repr? The Beh? Rde f? Hlt? Backlinks and SEO advantage is not f? R the clicks to the sites erw? Hnt go ? ren a union? Cette page? Case study is an R? V? Tion. Tr? S few authors take the time to pr fen? Which r? Results r? Els are f? R their articles. As you can see k?, There are many views more clicks on the sides of the authors, not Compt? S. Another thing? ? Keep Mind as you read this? Case study of the SEO benefits. solid backlinks to increase your PR and d? Put up the list of search engines. How many clicks to the websites of authors from biological research? It ‘? Silent m? Suivi.Gardez me? the spirit of an article made? Communications can be distribution? ? many more sites, blogs and other article directories. This means that your links to your sites to be r? Web.Voici parties w? F during the eight recommendations with you for marketing campaigns article.8 recommendations and implementation? Implement-R? Digest texts f? R readers and not valid for your site advertise in the article directly or indirectly – a gr? TALLY research before you? ? Contribution. – Use proper grammar and English. – Keep Ezinearticles. Guidelines and make sure you understand? write a long article? about 450-550 back words, if Ezinearticles. com accept Article 350 back words. – Do not back words-cl? S? Berh? Hte – Submit? Ezinearticles. com first and get approval – Once approved the item?, directories of other products before. – Hire the best companion? T? Communication? Authors, knowledgeable in the tea? me your website and k? can submit articles manually according to the guidelines by soumission.En yourself a favor and follow this link and get the? Case study together. It is an equation? Hbirne Moment f? R vous.http: / / Knol will be. Google. com/k/guna-nadar/article-marketing-a-case-study/18pn58gwhohkh/18

Psycological case study on rape vicitims in Delhi and Bihar

Sunday, August 29th, 2010

Extended Essay (EE) Swati not Sugandha Rape is a simple crime. Worse than murder, it is the scar of the victim must bear his whole life long. Defining rape is not easy. The Oxford Dictionary defines rape as a crime committed by a man to force the other person with him to have sex without their consent and against their will, especially through the threat or use of force against them. Rape is not only damaging physically, emotionally and psychologically he is involved in a profound traumatic effect which will later be evident in the cases below. So, if all the rape of the Son makes even more complex. Legally, the definition varies in the world, from countries with a perspective very lenient on crime in countries with comprehensive laws of all aspects of rape, severe laws. In extreme cases, rape is provided as punishment. For example, the world in Pakistan, Mukhtar Mai’s case made headlines in 2002. Teenage brother Mukhtar Mai has been accused of sexual assault in a young woman from another clan was. A Tribal Council will be arranged in May publicly raped as punishment for the disgrace of his family. In addition, used in the history of rape as a weapon of war. Rape appears to have been used differently by different social or cultural groups over time. Where rape is viewed from different perspectives. Citing statistics, and the focus on the endless investigations, it is a very dangerous image that is burned. A special study has shown that were at least three percent of women over the age of eighteen years at least one rape victim, not at all as rape trials. This is a huge social stigma, cultural and criminal who had been developed there since the human race. There are several models of rape that we in the cases examined below. First, the rape of anger, which is characterized by physical and verbal violence, while the action unfolds and degrade the victim out of frustration, to the relief of the anger and the use of sex as a weapon. Secondly, to, to rape her, is sex as a way of compensating for underlying feelings of inadequacy rapist power and its concerns about the ability of diet, strength, authority and control. The power rapist relies on verbal threats, intimidation with a weapon and uses only the amount of force necessary to subdue his victim. Third, the sadistic rape, torture, and generally the coolness. Injuries of the victim to focus on areas of his sexual body, and it can be damage to these areas. In some cases, not the sexual satisfaction of the goal, mail, or even one aspect of what the rapist wants. Sometimes it can be to show dominion and control. Sometimes, for a just cause fear and distress, or any other analogy. The rapist uses a certain type of instrument or foreign material from entering the victim. This effectively means that almost all women eighth or seventh least one rape victims in her life was. India in all its diversity and dynamics, can help the different languages, different cultures, different social and cultural backgrounds, we find the answers we seek to investigate what exactly leads to rape. Delhi capital of India and the Bihar state of India’s Republic of North India are places where these incidents occur to find a way to praise in the face compared to other parts of India. Delhi leads to so-called “rape capital of India, while Bihar has the famous name Rapistan for the same reasons. Case studies of these two regions should make for a fascinating insight into our understanding of rape. Delhi, the capital of India, a Punjabi-dominated culture has a large influx of people from all over India, especially in the northern states that people migrate to better opportunities and living conditions. Delhi, the rapid urbanization and growth, a high level of education and access to the media leads to a strong Western influence intense in the schools, still has to grow high rates of rape. Urban areas of Delhi are not friendly to women in general. According to the latest report of the National Crime Records annual Delhi’s highest crime rate of 357 percent between mega cities in 2006. The figures show that last year, Delhi is unsafe for women. It has the highest rate of crime against women, 33 percent of cases of rape, indecent assault cases is 23 percent, the highest for any metro city. But there is no evidence in Delhi. Delhi has a high illiteracy rate. The people here are very aware. He urged governments and less corruption. Up to ninety percent of cases, twenty-four hours to be resolved and rapists prosecuted. It is, therefore, in theory, should be less rape. But there is, in contrast to this case. What could be a possible reason for all this could be that in cases of rape has been explained above, the high amount of sexual frustration among young people show that Delhi has a strong Western influence. It is worthwhile in Sion, one of which is rape. Bihar, now on the other hand, is one of the most developed states in India. He is known for corruption, poor governance and illiteracy that the growth of the state derailed have in relation to civil and economic growth, educational growth and cultural and social growth leads to high stigma in society, the high delay and deep penetration of superstition . One factor that speaks loudly about the state of affairs in Bihar is the huge gap between the illiteracy rate in the state, between men and women, both low as well. Another factor is the relationship between the sexes is unequal in the country. The sex ratio of the 911 compound for the state, Bihar and 907 after the division (Bihar and Jharkhand State) in 1991, is well below the national average of 927 sex ratio. In the census of India 2001, the sex ratio of 921 Bihar even lower than the national sex ratio is 933rd Through the questioning of rape victims, we have a stronger sense of how women from different backgrounds seem to reflect also the psychological consequences of rape. And also understand the pain she experienced, which is sometimes forgotten in these incidents will be overwhelmed by the media. The possibility of a person who got through the race interview is a difficult task in itself, and the examination of the victim is a much more serious. The incident itself was a very distressing incident and ask the victim to relive the experience is something that should not turn off the victim justified. So many questions need to be sensitive to the incident and to account for the origin of the victims, not to the victim probably hurt all the time. The NGO that I was found in Bihar, I was selected, an excellent work at a very micro level, what I had thought the greatest impact. It deals with the support of rape victims cope with trust, by a female character, return to normal life and advise them drowned, and in some cases, the skills of the trauma. Thanks to these NGOs, I have taken three cases of rape victims. These case studies are similar in that they not be reported to the police and remained at the level of support from NGOs. These cases are different in that we are dealing with women from different socio-economic, but there is a strong similarity in their psychological response to rape. It was in Delhi, and two in Bihar. One of two in the rural areas of Bihar and other urban or international standards for semi-urban parts of Bihar, whose capital Patna, is located in the middle of the state. What is strange about these three incidents is that they are completely different, because the crimes, the psychology behind them, and many other factors. Under the leadership of the NGO that I have the right to ask a few questions on the review of case studies of the victim. I went through a lot of case studies in this regard. This process gave me a great achievement, but as a rape, some of which reported that there are many more cases of harassment, attempted rape and other violence against women and children in various locations in India. The problem is much deeper and more we can spread our knowledge flows coming from the media to anticipate. One of the many cases I read in Bihar is one of the typical cases of rape in the region. It was a case where three were “Adivasis” or tribal girls who worked as bound works raped. It was in a rural area of Bihar, where the three girls working in a brick factory in Nalanda district, under an imaginary bad. These women all day under the hot sun or the blistering cold, they work long hours for low pay. These women and children who work here live in makeshift huts in the area and services are offered very little. So all this leads to a lack of security, the nature and conditions of life under the poverty line. The cabins are 3′x6′x3 ‘which for all purposes such as cooking, sleeping, etc. There are no doors. They made from straw and wood doors to ward off dogs. There is no provision to provide protection on the stove. Anyone can come and go without hindrance. There is even no provision for toilet or bathing for this maneuver. No basic needs are met. All this will go to the girls to the fields to the toilet and end up being bullied by local boys. There is absolutely no privacy for bathing and guarded by the guys around homelessness. These women are constantly under the threat of sexual harassment, which have sometimes by the employers. Under these circumstances, the women known to be collected regularly and has in some cases I found also sexually harassed. Here in the stone oven 11 months, attacked a group of men who were armed, the brick, the night, then came the huts of the workers “, where they found these women. Three of these women were arrested, beaten and raped by the group of men. Could I have a interview with one of the victims was taken into the custody of one of the NGOs. When I met the girl, my first reaction and the second surprise of compassion and a sudden shock, a synergy between the shock, grief and anger was it. This girl who was raped was much younger than me. His face had lost much of his youth, and a tired facade, which shows his face. I myself was a little scared and very attentive to transcend the issue of the rape itself are on my words carefully, because they did not hurt him. But when I finally I have again surprised by his strong resonance. He gave me a clear perspective on her and she took the incident by his openness to talk about it. I interviewed Kumari, a migrant from Bangladesh (perhaps illegally, even though I asked him about it) and was here so that they (she and her family, who also worked in the oven does not starve). So they prefer hungry in the most inhuman conditions of being. The day of the incident forced her to work longer was, as it does not work the previous day and night, even though he paid for his absence from work, she had to spend another catastrophic situation that is now permanently stamped in his life. She tried to inform the public about the work the next morning on himself, but continued to work the next day, swallowing pride and shame in all. The only result in the continuity of these incidents and security has considerably decreased. She went on to say that about all that has dignity and life is important that there is no link in the oven. “I was helpless, I could not do anything, no one pays me,” said Kumari of speaks volumes about the increasing rate of rape. Under these circumstances, victims of rape are more or less anxiety, guilt, shame and anger. These emotions do not sit on the surface of the mind, but they do influence the woman over a long period after the attack. The fear a woman feels cross in all aspects of his life. More than likely she was attacked is his business, feeling secure in his world. Once security checks is attacked, the woman is worried about his regular daily habits. It may apply to foreigners and even friends and family with a new caution. A woman feels guilty, the victim of such an incident, vindictive, and why it was targeted. The question would get in his head, “she said to ask” or someone had a bad impression of his own. The period of embarrassment, through this rough phase of trauma-go is with people who are negative will deal think about it. This can lead us his men in their lives, have for a long time and nerves sex again. And finally, the gloss could be injured in his anger, their freedom and disturbed, and thus made the man who is his life a misery even more freely. Anger can lead to various forms, but most psychologists believe that the emotions of their lives can lead to the successful recovery of the excruciating experience. It is a moment that the woman to defend himself and his life in order will. However, there is a danger that anger may be projected onto others who are not involved. Another case in Patna is unique in another sense. It was shocking that again when he allegedly raped another limit, which is trust. In this case, a girl of 16 was raped by her headmaster at the school itself. “Sahib, led me into a classroom and patted her hand on my back, I thought he let my performance on the day of the sport,” said the voice from the rape victim faded over the phone. Smile and joyful attitude went from the girl’s face as they rape the victims of this terrible attack was unexpected. The school was a public school where the principal was the girl in a classroom and injured in isolation. The strange thing is that this case was not reported or submitted for a week until a week after the rape itself is the reason the culmination of factors that authorities fear a failure and the pressure and threats by the client itself in a place where you can not trust the authorities, infrastructure, basic social rights is law. I had with the girl, the victim was to communicate to you via telephone. The young girl spoke English spoken well and was polite. She knew the discussion and said little about the events that happened. The most striking thing to me said she has lost faith in this world. In a school in Indian culture as a temple of learning, a sacred place where teachers are regarded as the greatest views that parents, if such an incident occurs, there is no reason to trust you, but even on foot the street. This was the breach of trust with a rape victim. When I arrived, more questions about the current state of affairs has, the client to another public school, where he was moved to his position further. And the child went to a private school. The case that the operation has three years against the accused, and the parents are willing to drop it because they find no solution. In any case, there is a path of revenge and punishment must be done as a trial and makes a bad example. ‘S slow and corrupt justice system only encourages more rapists to rape and pillage. Moving to the capital of Bihar, New Delhi, we see a big change in demographics, governance and society, but the number of rapes is high. One of the cases that I looked at was one of the richest colony in Delhi. An old married woman of 26 was raped by a group of young people. The woman was abducted by a car in one of the boys and their houses in the colony, where she was the subject of more than two hours of terror. Learn to speak with her, I know about rapists, and I was shocked to know that this time the rapists were younger than me. The woman said angrily: “If my child is a part of it I was suicidal would be better known, have to be his mother. Then he asked the impression that the incident of rape on her left, she said that on the physical aspects that the shock and anxiety that children felt these acts and cruel as they are committing. The punishment was swift in New Delhi, like all these young people to study in good schools rehabilitation center for minors have sent. Thus, in this case, sexual desire, less an incentive for the boys as violent aggression. Rape is a crime of violence, perhaps best by studies investigating the perpetrators, who he is and why it is not understood. However, it is somewhat confusing. investigation of Amir in shows the 60 and 70, that is not the psychopathic rapist men it seems, they are rebels. The perpetrators of the members of the organization at a state hospital maximum security mental interviewed believed that made the prevention or avoidance of rape for the women responsible. After Amir’s theory, there are two categories, the rapist under the term “criminal” and “psychiatry.” He believes that the criminal rapist as a poor man, without formation of a lower socioeconomic status with a criminal record for crimes such as exhibitionism, fetishism, etc. In general, antisocial and easily influenced by the environment. The psychiatric rapists are men of a higher economic group formed, they have finally breached because of some personal problems or insufficient, and the feeling of guilt to increase after the attack. However, these theories are generally not conventional, but considered as a springboard into a deeper search. A widely accepted theory is that many rapists come from different cultures and most of them at the end of the crime to do to their masculinity and dominance in competition with to show the dominant culture. Consequently, these adolescents and young men a reference to their toughness and masculinity in a violent and dangerous. There are thousands of cases of rape occur, all around us every day we read about them in newspapers. More and takes longer to think of these horrible crimes. This crime has continued over the centuries leads. we ask whether the crime is an innate property of the people. Is this the way is wired, so to repeat such crimes and to forward to Genetics. In Bihar, we get a better view of the high number of rapes, as high as every 6 hours, point to a problem with the population as a whole. It starts with a weak government, the impact on corruption, less work, development, less education, less of consciousness and a further delay of a sale of women and rape more. If you are at the three institutions, with which a woman in touch, look, are the following: police, hospital and courts. In the most places the patrol officer responding to a complaint of rape victims and in most situations provided, the officer probably had little or no training in the treatment of rape. Unfortunately, many of the police hostility towards women victims of rape. you could concentrated than embarrassing, one woman about her sexual assault issue. Frequently asked questions by the police to the woman because of being on the attack by his clothes or specifically invited a man into his house, take a lift from a man go You can to a bar without accompaniment, or by his previous sexual experiences. The Conference of the Parties to stay in the sexual aspect of the rape case, and asked him to illustrate his feelings during the attack, the rapist’s genitals or the place where they raped. Fortunately, in many areas, the special police units have initiation of rape and thus the training of police officers in dealing with victims of rape. Regardless of the rape victim informed the police about the attack of rape, but it is essential to medical care . If a woman who was raped, comes to the hospital, medical staff more responsibility. You need to treat the patient and prepare yourself for the detection of the handover to the police that the rape took place. The victim of a rape outside of the medical care should also test for pregnancy and STDs go. A doctor should be able to explain why the requirements of such tests and the presence of semen in the vagina to check and to other parts of the body and clothing. In the emergency room of the hospital, where rape victims are immediately taken to do, not the doctors always respond positively. And so, women often report that they are questions of hostile questions, and irrelevant, some women do not report to the police, but they do not put a tariff on rapists . Although police and medical staff often throw questions unfair to the victims of rape in the courtroom. You can choose to have his own lawyer, but no one works as a consultant and therefore, the Court appoints attorney to which it has no control. It is a cycle that continues. In addition, it provides the necessary resources to make the kind, a lethal combination, the trends in rape [links 3773words] Fuel

HIGHLY USEFUL TIPS FOR CASE STUDY DISSERTATION

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

like a case study includes a detailed description of a person, group or incident that you select. Essays are case studies of qualitative research is based on the facts and the description of this particular topic to explore. The most important factor in this work is that you are not interested in general facts, but the factors involved, the variables that should have played a role in what circumstances it happened and what’s really happened. These case study is extremely useful in the learning process. It helps you to analyze a particular event in detail and to understand its nature, but at the same time, can be generalized not the results of your search, because the statistics that you have received, to be on a specific event, so that when a similar event will happen later, one can not label the cause for the same reasons. How to write case studies essay? First, you must be aware of different types of case studies and want to track. You must consider each type and determine what type is best for you in line with the theme you have chosen. The second step is to search for secondary data available. Is there a case study in conjunction with the memory available for your assistance? If so, read and well. Note continue the important points that will help your search will be. The third step is the primary research. This includes the collection of data by methods such as interviews, questionnaires and observation, etc. to analyze After compiling all necessary data and compare the results with both primary and secondary education to achieve and find a solution. Thesis case study can be written in different forms. You can ie a narrative form as the story is written, or you can write in a questioning, where you can ask a question and then to develop or simply as a narrative form, where you start with E. I. Introduction Background of history or followed by results and conclusion. General view of the case study is very useful for students, because they analyze the problems of real life in detail and apply their logic to be able to resolve it with the help of theories learned in class.

Managing Case Study Works On Busy College Schedules

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

The education system in the United Kingdom and the United States is one of the most modern and most productive, compared to other education systems around the globe. Therefore, this system of education among the more popular in the United Kingdom as well as students from other countries. Most universities in the United Kingdom already completed when the new school year begins. This terminal to the growing popularity and scope of the United Kingdom and the United States and its education system universitaire.Maintenant, the most difficult aspect for each student, which is registered at these universities in the United Kingdom get good grades and satisfied that a safe future for him . guarantee And with so many brilliant minds around, it gets a little harder to reach the mark, and it is certainly more than just hard work, perseverance and dedication. It’s actually a good article and an excellent case study. With continuous hard work and dedicated approach to the formation of mixed and inter-related essays and is an excellent case study of the work, the results are amazing. Well, here’s the problem. The paper and write an excellent case study is not an easy task. This is a completely different profile, which requires a sound knowledge of the English language, and comfort in the organization and structuring of the thought process in his paper. I can understand that for a student who has to do and perform several important tasks in a day, writing essays and case studies will be a fee supplémentaire.Le result of this additional work and additional load that the student is not able sufficient focus on the case study and essay section, and thus the fall marks. The notes are not achieved, and thus the overall performance of the student have developed tombe.Nous, the solution for you, which will be written to be very successful and fruitful for vous.Le choose the best doctoral thesis to solve the business problems you, as the Case Study on the measurement and the implementation of tests for you according to your needs and requirements. . Everything you need to do is to connect to these legitimate sites and choose from a wide range of options that await you. Even better, choose your own Free Project, which offers only very few companies. This unique offering allows you a free project of the case study on any topic desired order. If you are satisfied and happy with the results, go local and order finale.Le UK and U.S. students pursuing their academic courses of the universities, the service is incredible. With our experienced and professional writers, educators and experts from our panel, the final product delivered to you truly world class.

Intersection 911 Case Study: Martin Luther King Blvd Crossing – Portland, OR

Friday, August 13th, 2010


A video study with proposed solutions to repair one of the worst intersections in Portland, Oregon.

A Model Case Study on ?Organizational Culture Misconception’

Monday, August 9th, 2010

This case study was written by a writer’s case study was written for the online editorial team for many years. The HP case shown here is an example / model for case writing and analysis. The case demonstrates HP company comply in all, with sentences of life cycle of the organization revealed in the work of many researchers. Among these is the work of Larry Griener remarkable. In analyzing the case, we consider factors including, but not necessarily in the same order: influence of culture on the performance of HP organisationnelle.Culture rule on the structure of the management of HP.Les phases of the life cycle of HP.Modification corporate strategy and its impact on culture.changement head of HP and its creativity and dynamism conséquences.La two eager entrepreneurs have an organization that grown to serve customers has created the world through the mobilization of more than 1,40,000 employees. HP, led by Lewis Platt, who passed the critical phase of growth, in which questions of control, autonomy and leadership of the acid tests for all organizations. Teaching staff internalized the values of society as in the Charter of the objectives of the company developed and institutionalized outlined by the founders. Culture affects the employees, because they had prepared to suffer wage cuts and other monetary disadvantages. Culture has thus aims of the organization takes precedence over the objectives and aspirations, if need be sentir.la culture of HP was by an implicit message of the job for life, spirit team dominated, open-door policy and encouraging innovation. More importantly, it comes to benefit sharing of profits and growth with the members of the organization and all other conditions for happy employees and produce eagerly. The fruit of this rich culture is the fact that HP sales and profit growth could consistently win more décennies.domaine activity of the enterprise information technology (IT) is evident, based primarily on the production process knowledge. The renewal of the mind by the concerned employee is an integral part of the creation of knowledge and culture of HP was fertile ground for easy même.Culture and performance: The strong culture of an organization is a driving force for the performance of employees increased. On the other hand, a strong structure of people in a state of mind tight functional space. Culture allows people, but the structure might think the will and determination, and act outside the box also disarm. This pattern is very important for an organization focused on knowledge as HP. However, the management of anxiety, whether the concept of contributing to the HP team to a consensus single mode behavior fonction.Future initiatives, corrective action HPFiorina to be careful so as not to had slipped on the benefits of strong jeopardize HP culture. You should consider other options to stay at the front, instead of just driving around success formulas such as the elimination of the work. The effect of the motion to pay the providers by linking their goals is well thought out. However, other incentives must be aware of those who innovate in the workplace. would bring a good estate planning process on the market for spouses of active people are provided within the company to lead in times difficiles.En conclusion Fiorina’s strategy is to weaken the culture does not connect. Always remember that easy to destroy but hard to construire.L author is an expert in case study writing service and helped the students to the case of the Editorial Board. The case study says, the company has been in a decade and all the cases, assistance in writing this essay writing service is for one.