Navigating

Case Solution for Alaska Airlines: Navigating Change

Complete Case details are given below :

Case Name :      Alaska Airlines: Navigating Change
Authors :           Bruce J. Avolio, Chelley Patterson, Bradford Baker
Source :             Ivey Publishing
Case ID :            W14722
Discipline :        Organizational Behavior
Case Length :    22 pages
Solution Sample availability : YES
Plagiarism : NO (100% Original work)
Description for case is given below :
Alaska Airlines has recently recovered from a period of operational instability, yet its executives worry the airline is draining its reserves of customer loyalty and goodwill, due to losses over the past two years and variability in its statistics for on-time flights and mishandled baggage. After focusing many resources on operations in an effort to regain stability, the senior executives wonder whether the organization could endure if performance were to slip again. Is remaining status quo good enough, or should the airline’s leadership take action to transform the performance culture?
 
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Case Solution for Mustika Ratu: Navigating Through Social and Economic Crisis

Complete Case details are given below :
Case Name :      Mustika Ratu: Navigating Through Social and Economic Crisis
Authors :           Louis Hebert, Donna Everatt
Source :             Ivey Publishing
Case ID :            99M045
Discipline :        Strategy
Case Length :    24 pages
Solution Sample availability : YES
Plagiarism : NO (100% Original work)
Description for case is given below :
Mustika Ratu is a leading Indonesian manufacturer of health and beauty products and traditional herbal supplements that began as a modest enterprise and had grown to become one of Indonesia’s most successful consumer products companies. However, in May 1998, in response to the social, political, and economic chaos Indonesia was experiencing (sparked by the Asian financial crisis of 1997), the capital erupted in a sea of violence. The rioting affected almost every business operating in Indonesia. Mustika Ratu’s managing director must decide whether to design and implement a new strategic marketing plan in light of the external environment and a potential decline in revenue growth or to remain true to the strategies that had garnered success in the past.
 
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Case Solution for River Bend Trading: Navigating Rough Waters

Complete Case details are given below :
Case Name :      River Bend Trading: Navigating Rough Waters
Authors :           Tom D. Hinthorne, Patricia A. Holman
Source :             North American Case Research Association (NACRA)
Case ID :            NA0182
Discipline :        General Management
Case Length :    15 pages
Solution sample availability : YES
Plagiarism : NO (100% Original work)
Description for case is given below :
The case challenges students to develop a turnaround strategy for a small-town retail business following the loss of a major supplier. The students must develop a retrenchment strategy (i.e., cost and asset reductions) and a recovery strategy to rebuild the core business and develop the adjacent possibilities (i.e., adjacencies). It was February 2009 in Columbus, Montana, population 2,000. Lois Frerck (frair ic) owned River Bend Trading (RBT), an apparel and gift shop located next to the Montana Silversmiths Outlet (Silversmiths). Silversmiths manufactured silver jewelry, rodeo trophy belt buckles, and other western products in Columbus. RBT was a Silversmiths’ dealer, and 50 percent of its sales came from Silversmith’s products. In 2006, RBT’s sales peaked at $485,951, and Silversmiths decided to sell directly to its customers over the internet. In January 2007, it revoked RBT’s dealer status. Devastated, Lois and Mary analyzed their options, but they were unable to offset the loss of Silversmiths’ products with new products. With the onset of the recession in 2007, RBT’s sales plummeted. In November 2008, Mary told Lois, “The business is dying. I can’t handle it. I’m out of here! I’ll take my half of the debt,” and she left. As the recession took its toll on local businesses and the tourist trade, RBT’s 2008 sales fell to $220,023. In February 2009 Lois asked her sister Amy, “What should I do?”

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