N.B.: 1) Attempt any Four Questions
2) All
questions carry equal marks.
NO. 1
ZIP ZAP ZOOM CAR COMPANY
Zip Zap Zoom
Company Ltd is into manufacturing cars in the small car (800 cc) segment. It was set up 15 years back and since its
establishment it has seen a phenomenal growth in both its market and
profitability. Its financial statements
are shown in Exhibits 1 and 2 respectively.
The company enjoys the confidence of
its shareholders who have been rewarded with growing dividends year after year. Last year, the company had announced 20 per
cent dividend, which was the highest in the automobile sector. The company has never defaulted on its loan
payments and enjoys a favourable face with its lenders, which include financial
institutions, commercial banks and debenture holders.
The competition in the car industry
has increased in the past few years and the company foresees further
intensification of competition with the entry of several foreign car
manufactures many of them being market leaders in their respective
countries. The small car segment
especially, will witness entry of foreign majors in the near future, with
latest technology being offered to the Indian customer. The Zip Zap Zoom’s senior management realizes
the need for large scale investment in up gradation of technology and
improvement of manufacturing facilities to pre-empt competition.
Whereas on the one hand, the
competition in the car industry has been intensifying, on the other hand, there
has been a slowdown in the Indian economy, which has not only reduced the
demand for cars, but has also led to adoption of price cutting strategies by
various car manufactures. The industry
indicators predict that the economy is gradually slipping into recession.
Exhibit 1 Balance sheet as at March 31,200
x
Source of
Funds
Share capital 350
Reserves
and surplus 250 600
Loans
:
Debentures
(@ 14%) 50
Institutional
borrowing (@ 10%) 100
Commercial
loans (@ 12%) 250
Total
debt 400
Current
liabilities 200
1,200
Application
of Funds
Fixed
Assets
Gross
block 1,000
Less
: Depreciation 250
Net
block 750
Capital
WIP 190
Total
Fixed Assets 940
Current
assets :
Inventory
200
Sundry
debtors 40
Cash
and bank balance 10
Other
current assets 10
Total
current assets 260
-1200
Exhibit 2 Profit and
Loss Account for the year ended March 31, 200x
Sales
revenue (80,000 units x Rs. 2,50,000) 2,000.0
Operating
expenditure :
Variable
cost :
Raw
material and manufacturing expenses 1,300.0
Variable
overheads 100.0
Total 1,400.0
Fixed cost
:
R
& D 20.0
Marketing
and advertising 25.0
Depreciation
250.0
Personnel
70.0
Total 365.0
Total
operating expenditure 1,765.0
Operating
profits (EBIT) 235.0
Financial expense :
Interest on
debentures 7.7
Interest on
institutional borrowings 11.0
Interest on
commercial loan 33.0 51.7
Earnings before tax (EBT) 183.3
Tax (@ 35%) 64.2
Earnings after tax (EAT) 119.1
Dividends 70.0
Debt redemption (sinking fund obligation)** 40.0
* Includes the
cost of inventory and work in process (W.P) which is dependent on demand
(sales).
** The loans
have to be retired in the next ten years and the firm redeems Rs. 40 crore
every year.
The company
is faced with the problem of deciding how much to invest in up
gradation of its plans and technology. Capital investment up to a maximum of Rs. 100
crore is
required. The problem areas are
three-fold.
- The company cannot forgo the capital investment as that could lead to reduction in its market share as technological competence in this industry is a must and customers would shift to manufactures providing latest in car technology.
- The company does not want to issue new equity shares and its retained earning are not enough for such a large investment. Thus, the only option is raising debt.
- The company wants to limit its additional debt to a level that it can service without taking undue risks. With the looming recession and uncertain market conditions, the company perceives that additional fixed obligations could become a cause of financial distress, and thus, wants to determine its additional debt capacity to meet the investment requirements.
Mr. Shortsighted, the company’s Finance Manager, is given the task of
determining the additional debt that the firm can raise. He thinks that the firm can raise Rs. 100
crore worth debt and service it even in years of recession. The company can raise debt at 15 per cent
from a financial institution. While
working out the debt capacity. Mr.
Shortsighted takes the following assumptions for the recession years.
a)
A maximum of 10 percent reduction in sales
volume will take place.
b)
A maximum of 6 percent reduction in sales price
of cars will take place.
Mr. Shorsighted prepares a projected income statement which is
representative of the recession years.
While doing so, he determines what he thinks are the “irreducible
minimum” expenditures under recessionary conditions. For him, risk of insolvency is the main
concern while designing the capital structure.
To support his view, he presents the income statement as shown in
Exhibit 3.
Exhibit 3
projected Profit and Loss account
Sales
revenue (72,000 units x Rs. 2,35,000) 1,692.0
Operating
expenditure
Variable
cost :
Raw
material and manufacturing expenses 1,170.0
Variable
overheads 90.0
Total 1,260.0
Fixed cost
:
R
& D ---
Marketing
and advertising 15.0
Depreciation
187.5
Personnel
70.0
Total 272.5
Total
operating expenditure 1,532.5
EBIT 159.5
Financial expenses :
Interest on existing
Debentures 7.0
Interest on existing
institutional borrowings 10.0
Interest on commercial
loan 30.0
Interest on additional
debt 15.0 62.0
EBT 97.5
Tax (@ 35%) 34.1
EAT 63.4
Dividends --
Debt redemption (sinking fund
obligation) 50.0*
Contribution to reserves and surplus
13.4
* Rs. 40
crore (existing debt) + Rs. 10 crore (additional debt)
Assumptions of Mr. Shorsighted
- R & D expenditure can be done away with till the economy picks up.
- Marketing and advertising expenditure can be reduced by 40 per cent.
- Keeping in mind the investor confidence that the company enjoys, he feels that the company can forgo paying dividends in the recession period.
He goes with his worked out statement to the Director Finance, Mr.
Arthashatra, and advocates raising Rs. 100 crore of debt to finance the
intended capital investment. Mr.
Arthashatra does not feel comfortable
with the statements and calls for the company’s financial analyst, Mr.
Longsighted.
Mr. Longsighted carefully analyses Mr. Shortsighted’s assumptions and
points out that insolvency should not be the sole criterion while determining
the debt capacity of the firm. He points
out the following :
- Apart from debt servicing, there are certain expenditures like those on R & D and marketing that need to be continued to ensure the long-term health of the firm.
- Certain management policies like those relating to dividend payout, send out important signals to the investors. The Zip Zap Zoom’s management has been paying regular dividends and discontinuing this practice (even though just for the recession phase) could raise serious doubts in the investor’s mind about the health of the firm. The firm should pay at least 10 per cent dividend in the recession years.
- Mr. Shortsighted has used the accounting profits to determine the amount available each year for servicing the debt obligations. This does not give the true picture. Net cash inflows should be used to determine the amount available for servicing the debt.
- Net Cash inflows are determined by an interplay of many variables and such a simplistic view should not be taken while determining the cash flows in recession. It is not possible to accurately predict the fall in any of the factors such as sales volume, sales price, marketing expenditure and so on. Probability distribution of variation of each of the factors that affect net cash inflow should be analyzed. From this analysis, the probability distribution of variation in net cash inflow should be analysed (the net cash inflows follow a normal probability distribution). This will give a true picture of how the company’s cash flows will behave in recession conditions.
The management recognizes that the alternative suggested by Mr.
Longsighted rests on data, which are complex and require expenditure of time
and effort to obtain and interpret.
Considering the importance of capital structure design, the Finance
Director asks Mr. Longsighted to carry out his analysis. Information on the behaviour of cash flows
during the recession periods is taken into account.
The methodology
undertaken is as follows :
(a) Important
factors that affect cash flows (especially contraction of cash flows), like
sales volume, sales price, raw materials expenditure, and so on, are identified
and the analysis is carried out in terms of cash receipts and cash
expenditures.
(b) Each
factor’s behaviour (variation behaviour) in adverse conditions in the past is
studied and future expectations are combined with past data, to describe limits
(maximum favourable), most probable and maximum adverse) for all the factors.
(c) Once
this information is generated for all the factors affecting the cash flows, Mr.
Longsighted comes up with a range of estimates of the cash flow in future
recession periods based on all possible combinations of the several
factors. He also estimates the
probability of occurrence of each estimate of cash flow.
Assuming
a normal distribution of the expected behaviour, the mean expected
value of net
cash inflow in adverse conditions came out to be Rs. 220.27 crore with standard
deviation of Rs. 110 crore.
Keeping in mind the looming
recession and the uncertainty of the recession behaviour, Mr. Arthashastra
feels that the firm should factor a risk of cash inadequacy of around 5 per
cent even in the most adverse industry conditions. Thus, the firm should take up only that
amount of additional debt that it can service 95 per cent of the times, while maintaining
cash adequacy.
To maintain an annual dividend of 10
per cent, an additional Rs. 35 crore has to be kept aside. Hence, the expected available net cash inflow
is Rs. 185.27 crore (i.e. Rs. 220.27 – Rs. 35 crore)
Analyse the debt
capacity of the company.
NO.
2
COOKING
LPG LTD
DETERMINATION
OF WORKING CAPTIAL
Introduction
Cooking LPG Ltd,
Gurgaon, is a private sector firm dealing in the bottling and supply of
domestic LPG for household consumption since 1995. The firm has a network of
distributors in the districts of Gurgaon and Faridabad. The bottling plant of
the firm is located on National Highway – 8 (New Delhi – Jaipur), approx. 12
kms from Gurgaon. The firm has been
consistently performing we.” and plans
to expand its market to include the whole National Capital Region.
The production process of the plant
consists of receipt of the bulk LPG through tank trucks, storage in tanks,
bottling operations and distribution to dealers. During the bottling process, the cylinders
are subjected to pressurized filling of LPG followed by quality control and
safety checks such as weight, leakage and other defects. The cylinders passing through this process
are sealed and dispatched to dealers through trucks. The supply and distribution section of the
plant prepares the invoice which goes along with the truck to the distributor.
Statement of the
Problem :
Mr. I. M. Smart,
DGM(Finance) of the company, was analyzing the financial performance of the
company during the current year. The
various profitability ratios and parameters of the company indicated a very
satisfactory performance. Still, Mr.
Smart was not fully content-specially with the management of the working
capital by the company. He could recall
that during the past year, in spite of stable demand pattern, they had to, time
and again, resort to bank overdrafts due to non-availability of cash for making
various payments. He is aware that such
aberrations in the finances have a cost and adversely affects the performance
of the company. However, he was unable
to pinpoint the cause of the problem.
He discussed the problem with Mr.
U.R. Keenkumar, the new manager (Finance).
After critically examining the details, Mr. Keenkumar realized that the
working capital was hitherto estimated only as approximation by some rule of
thumb without any proper computation based on sound financial policies and,
therefore, suggested a reworking of the working capital (WC) requirement. Mr. Smart assigned the task of determination
of WC to him.
Profile of
Cooking LPG Ltd.
1) Purchases :
The company purchases LPG in bulk from various importers ex-Mumbai and Kandla,
@ Rs. 11,000 per MT. This is transported
to its Bottling Plant at Gurgaon through 15 MT capacity tank trucks (called
bullets), hired on annual contract basis.
The average transportation cost per bullet ex-either location is Rs.
30,000. Normally, 2 bullets per day are
received at the plant. The company make
payments for bulk supplies once in a month, resulting in average time-lag of 15
days.
2) Storage and
Bottling : The bulk storage capacity at the plant is 150 MT (2 x 75 MT storage
tanks) and the plant is capable of
filling 30 MT LPG in cylinders per day.
The plant operates for 25 days per month on an average. The desired level of inventory at various
stages is as under.
·
LPG in bulk (tanks and pipeline quantity in the
plant) – three days average production / sales.
·
Filled Cylinders – 2 days average sales.
·
Work-in Process inventory – zero.
3) Marketing :
The LPG is supplied by the company in 12 kg cylinders, invoiced @ Rs. 250 per
cylinder. The rate of applicable sales
tax on the invoice is 4 per cent. A
commission of Rs. 15 per cylinder is paid to the distributor on the invoice
itself. The filled cylinders are
delivered on company’s expense at the distributor’s godown, in exchange of
equal number of empty cylinders. The
deliveries are made in truck-loads only, the capacity of each truck being 250
cylinders. The distributors are required
to pay for deliveries through bank draft.
On receipt of the draft, the cylinders are normally dispatched on the
same day. However, for every truck
purchased on pre-paid basis, the company extends a credit of 7 days to the
distributors on one truck-load.
4) Salaries and
Wages : The following payments are made :
- Direct labour – Re. 0.75 per cylinder (Bottling expenses) – paid on last day of the month.
- Security agency – Rs. 30,000 per month paid on 10th of subsequent month.
- Administrative staff and managers – Rs. 3.75 lakh per annum, paid on monthly basis on the last working day.
5) Overheads :
- Administrative (staff, car, communication etc) – Rs. 25,000 per month – paid on the 10th of subsequent month.
- Power (including on DG set) – Rs. 1,00,000 per month paid on the 7th Subsequent month.
- Renewal of various licenses (pollution, factory, labour CCE etc.) – Rs. 15,000 per annum paid at the beginning of the year.
- Insurance – Rs. 5,00,000 per annum to be paid at the beginning of the year.
- Housekeeping etc – Rs. 10,000 per month paid on the 10th of the subsequent month.
- Regular maintenance of plant – Rs. 50,000 per month paid on the 10th of every month to the vendors. This includes expenditure on account of lubricants, spares and other stores.
- Regular maintenance of cylinders (statutory testing) – Rs. 5 lakh per annum – paid on monthly basis on the 15th of the subsequent month.
- All transportation charges as per contracts – paid on the 10th subsequent month.
- Sales tax as per applicable rates is deposited on the 7th of the subsequent month.
6) Sales :
Average sales are 2,500 cylinders per day during the year. However, during the winter months (December
to February), there is an incremental demand of 20 per cent.
7) Average
Inventories : The average stocks maintained by the company as per its policy
guidelines :
- Consumables (caps, ceiling material, valves etc) – Rs. 2 lakh. This amounts to 15 days consumption.
- Maintenance spares – Rs. 1 lakh
- Lubricants – Rs. 20,000
- Diesel (for DG sets and fire engines) – Rs. 15,000
- Other stores (stationary, safety items) – Rs. 20,000
8) Minimum cash balance including bank
balance required is Rs. 5 lakh.
9) Additional Information for Calculating
Incremental Working Capital During Winter.
- No increase in any inventories take place except in the inventory of bulk LPG, which increases in the same proportion as the increase of the demand. The actual requirements of LPG for additional supplies are procured under the same terms and conditions from the suppliers.
- The labour cost for additional production is paid at double the rate during wintes.
- No changes in other administrative overheads.
- The expenditure on power consumption during winter increased by 10 per cent. However, during other months the power consumption remains the same as the decrease owing to reduced production is offset by increased consumption on account of compressors /Acs.
- Additional amount of Rs. 3 lakh is kept as cash balance to meet exigencies during winter.
- No change in time schedules for any payables / receivables.
- The storage of finished goods inventory is restricted to a maximum 5,000 cylinders due to statutory requirements.
NO. 3
M/S HI-TECH ELECTRONICS
M/s. Hi – tech
Electronics, a consumer electronics outlet, was opened two years ago in Dwarka,
New Delhi. Hard work and personal attention shown by the proprietor, Mr. Sony,
has brought success. However, because of
insufficient funds to finance credit sales, the outlet accepted only cash and
bank credit cards. Mr. Sony is now
considering a new policy of offering installment sales on terms of 25 per cent
down payment and 25 per cent per month for three months as well as continuing
to accept cash and bank credit cards.
Mr. Sony feels this policy will
boost sales by 50 percent. All the
increases in sales will be credit
sales. But to follow through a new
policy, he will need a bank loan at the rate of 12 percent. The sales projections for this year without
the new policy are given in Exhibit 1.
Exhibit 1 Sales
Projections and Fixed costs
|
Month
|
Projected sales without instalment option
|
Projected sales with instalment option
|
|
January
|
Rs. 6,00,000
|
Rs. 9,00,000
|
|
February
|
4,00,000
|
6,00,000
|
|
March
|
3,00,000
|
4,50,000
|
|
April
|
2,00,000
|
3,00,000
|
|
May
|
2,00,000
|
3,00,000
|
|
June
|
1,50,000
|
2,25,000
|
|
July
|
1,50,000
|
2,25,000
|
|
August
|
2,00,000
|
3,00,000
|
|
September
|
3,00,000
|
4,50,000
|
|
October
|
5,00,000
|
7,50,000
|
|
November
|
5,00,000
|
15,00,000
|
|
December
|
8,00,000
|
12,00,000
|
|
Total Sales
|
48,00,000
|
72,00,000
|
|
Fixed cost
|
2,40,000
|
2,40,000
|
He further
expects 26.67 per cent of the sales to be cash, 40 per cent bank credit card
sales on which a 2 per cent fee is paid, and 33.33 per cent on instalment
sales. Also, for short term seasonal
requirements, the film takes loan from chit fund to which Mr. Sony subscribes @
1.8 per cent per month.
Their success has been due to their
policy of selling at discount price. The
purchase per unit is 90 per cent of selling price. The fixed costs are Rs. 20,000 per
month. The proprietor believes that the
new policy will increase miscellaneous cost by Rs. 25,000.
The business being cyclical in
nature, the working capital finance is done on trade – off basis. The proprietor feels that the new policy will
lead to bad debts of 1 per cent.
(a) As a financial
consultant, advise the proprietor whether he should go for the extension of
credit facilities.
(b) Also prepare
cash budget for one year of operation of the firm, ignoring interest. The minimum desired cash balance & Rs.
30,000, which is also the amount the firm has on January 1. Borrowings are possible which are made at the
beginning of a month and repaid at the end when cash is available.
NO.4
SMOOTHDRIVE TYRE LTD
Smoothdrive Tyre
Ltd manufacturers tyres under the brand name “Super Tread’ for the domestic car
market. It is presently using 7 machines
acquired 3 years ago at a cost of Rs. 15 lakh each having a useful life of 7
years, with no salvage value.
After extensive research and
development, Smoothdrive Tyre Ltd has recently developed a new tyre, the ‘Hyper
Tread’ and must decide whether to make the investments necessary to produce and
market the Hyper Tread. The Hyper Tread
would be ideal for drivers doing a large amount of wet weather and off road
driving in addition to normal highway usage.
The research and development costs so far total Rs. 1,00,00,000. The Hyper Tread would be put on the market beginning
this year and Smoothdrive Tyrs expects it to stay on the market for a total of
three years. Test marketing costing Rs. 50,00,000, shows that there is
significant market for a Hyper Tread type tyre.
As
a financial analyst at Smoothdrive Tyre, Mr. Mani asked by the Chief Financial
Officer (CFO), Mr. Tyrewala to evaluate the Hyper-Tread project and to provide
a recommendation or whether or not to proceed with the investment. He has been informed that all previous
investments in the Hyper Tread project are sunk costs are only future cash
flows should be considered. Except for
the initial investments, which occur immediately, assume all cash flows occur
at the year-end.
Smoothedrive Tyre must initially
invest Rs. 72,00,00,000 in production equipments to make the Hyper Tread. They would be depreciated at a rate of 25 per
cent as per the written down value (WDV) method for tax purposes. The new production equipments will allow the
company to follow flexible manufacturing technique, that is both the brands of
tyres can be produced using the same equipments. The equipments is expected to have a 7-year
useful life and can be sold for Rs. 10,00,000 during the fourth year. The company does not have any other machines
in the block of 25 per cent depreciation.
The existing machines can be sold off at Rs. 8 lakh per machine with an
estimated removal cost of one machine for Rs. 50,000.
Operating
Requirements
The operating
requirements of the existing machines and the new equipment are detailed in
Exhibits 11.1 and 11.2 respectively.
Exhibit
11.1 Existing Machines - Labour costs (expected to increase 10 per cent annually to account for inflation) :
(a)
20 unskilled labour @ Rs. 4,000 per month
(b)
20 skilled personnel @ Rs. 6,000 per month.
(c)
2 supervising executives @ Rs. 7,000 per month.
(d)
2 maintenance personnel @ Rs. 5,000 per month.
·
Maintenance cost :
Years 1-5 : Rs. 25 lakh
Years 6-7 : Rs. 65 lakh
- Operating expenses : Rs. 50 lakh expected to increase at 5 per cent annually.
- Insurance cost / premium :
Year 1 : 2 per cent of the original cost of machine
After year 1 : Discounted by 10 per cent.
Exhibit
11.2 New production Equipment - Savings in cost of utilities : Rs. 2.5 lakh
- Maintenance costs :
Year 1 – 2 : Rs. 8 lakh
Year 3 – 4 : Rs. 30 lakh
- Labour costs :
9 skilled personnel @ Rs. 7,000 per month
1 maintenance personnel @ Rs. 7,000 per month.
- Cost of retrenchment of 34 personnel : (20 unskilled, 11 skilled, 2 supervisors and 1 maintenance personnel) : Rs. 9,90,000, that is equivalent to six months salary.
- Insurance premium
Year 1 : 2 per cent of the purchase cost of machine
After year 1 : Discounted by 10 per cent.
The opening expenses do not change
to any considerable extent for the new equipment and the difference is
negligible compared to the scale of operations.
Smoothdrive Tyre
intends to sell Hyper Tread of two distinct markets :
1. The original
equipment manufacturer (OEM) market : The OEM market consists primarily of the
large automobile companies who buy tyres for new cars. In the OEM market, the Hyper Tread is
expected to sell for Rs. 1,200 per tyre. The variable cost to produce each
Hyper Tread is Rs. 600.
2. The
replacement market : The replacement market consists of all tyres purchased
after the automobile has left the factory.
This markets allows higher margins and Smoothdrive Tyre expects to sell
the Hyper Tread for Rs. 1.500 per tyre.
The variable costs are the same as in the OEM market.
Smoothdrive
Tyre expects to raise prices by 1 percent above the inflation rate.
The variable
costs will also increase by 1 per cent above the inflation rate. In addition, the Hyper Tread project will
incur Rs. 2,50,000 in marketing and general administration cost in the first
year which are expected to increase at the inflation rate in subsequent years.
Smoothdrive Tyre’s corporate tax
rate is 35 per cent. Annual inflation is
expected to remain constant at 3.25 per cent.
Smoothdrive Tyre uses a 15 per cent discount rate to evaluate new
product decisions.
The Tyre Market
Automotive
industry analysts expect automobile manufacturers to have a production of
4,00,000 new cars this year and growth in production at 2.5 per year
onwards. Each new car needs four new
tyres (the spare tyres are undersized and fall in a different category)
Smoothdrive Tyre expects the Hyper Tread to capture an 11 per cent share of the OEM market.
The industry analysts estimate that
the replacement tyre market size will be one crore this year and that it would
grow at 2 per cent annually. Smoothdrive
Tyre expects the Hyper Tread to capture an 8 per cent market share.
You also decide to consider net
working capital (NWC) requirements in this scenario. The net working capital requirement will be
15 per cent of sales. Assume that the
level of working capital is adjusted at the beginning of the year in relation
to the expected sales for the year. The
working capital is to be liquidated at par, barring an estimated loss of Rs.
1.5 crore on account of bad debt. The bad debt will be a tax-deductible
expenses.
As a finance analyst, prepare a
report for submission to the CFO and the Board of Directors, explaining to them
the feasibility of the new investment.
No. 5
COMPUTATION OF COST OF CAPITAL OF PALCO
LTD
In October 2003,
Neha Kapoor, a recent MBA graduate and newly appointed assistant to the
Financial Controller of Palco Ltd, was given a list of six new investment
projects proposed for the following year.
It was her job to analyse these projects and to present her findings
before the Board of Directors at its annual meeting to be held in 10 days. The new project would require an investment
of Rs. 2.4 crore.
Palco Ltd was founded in 1965 by
Late Shri A. V. Sinha. It gained recognition as a leading producer of high
quality aluminum, with the majority of its sales being made to Japan. During the rapid economic expansion of Japan
in the 1970s, demand for aluminum boomed, and palco’s sales grew rapidly. As a result of this rapid growth and
recognition of new opportunities in the energy market, Palco began to diversify
its products line. While retaining its
emphasis on aluminum production, it expanded operations to include uranium
mining and the production of electric generators, and finally, it went into all
phases of energy production. By 2003,
Palco’s sales had reached Rs. 14 crore level, with net profit after taxes attaining
a record of Rs. 67 lakh.
As Palco expanded its products line
in the early 1990s, it also formalized its caital budgeting procedure. Until 1992, capital investment projects were
selected primarily on the basis of the average return on investment
calculations, with individual departments submitting these calculations for
projects falling within their division.
In 1996, this procedure was replaced by one using present value as the
decision making criterion. This change was made to incorporate cash flows
rather than accounting profits into the decision making analysis, in addition
to adjusting these flows for the time value of money. At the time, the cost of capital for Palco
was determined to be 12 per cent, which has been used as the discount rate for
the past 5 years. This rate was
determined by taking a weighted average cost Palco had incurred in raising
funds from the capital market over the previous 10 years.
It had originally been Neha’s
assignment to update this rate over the most recent 10-year period and
determine the net present value of all the proposed investment opportunities
using this newly calculated figure.
However, she objected to this procedure, stating that while this
calculation gave a good estimate of “the past cost” of capital, changing
interest rates and stock prices made this calculation of little value in the
present. Neha suggested that current
cost of raising funds in the capital market be weighted by their percentage
mark-up of the capital structure. This
proposal was received enthusiastically by the Financial Controller of the
Palco, and Neha was given the assignment of recalculating Palco’s cost of
capital and providing a written report for the Board of Directors explaining
and justifying this calculation.
To determine a weighted average cost
of capital for Palco, it was necessary for Neha to examine the cost associated
with each source of funding used. In the
past, the largest sources of funding had been the issuance of new equity shares
and internally generated funds. Through
conversations with Financial Controller and other members of the Board of
Directors, Neha learnt that the firm, in fact, wished to maintain its current
financial structure as shown in Exhibit 1.
Exhibit 1 Palco
Ltd Balance Sheet for Year Ending March 31, 2003
|
Assets
|
Liabilities and Equity
|
||
|
Cash
Accounts receivable
Inventories
Total current assets
Net fixed assets
Goodwill
Total assets
|
Rs. 90,00,000
3,10,00,000
1,20,00,000
5,20,00,000
19,30,00,000
70,00,000
25,20,00,000
|
Accounts payable
Short-term debt
Accrued taxes
Total current liabilities
Long-term debt
Preference shares
Retained earnings
Equity shares
Total liabilities and equity shareholders fund
|
Rs. 8,50,000
1,00,000
11,50,000
1,20,00,000
7,20,00,000
4,80,00,000
1,00,00,000
11,00,000
25,20,00,000
|
She further
determined that the strong growth patterns that Palco had exhibited over the
last ten years were expected to continue indefinitely because of the dwindling
supply of US and Japanese domestic oil and the growing importance of other
alternative energy resources. Through
further investigations, Neha learnt that Palco could issue additional equity
share, which had a par value of Rs. 25 pre share and were selling at a current
market price of Rs. 45. The expected
dividend for the next period would be Rs. 4.4 per share, with expected growth
at a rate of 8 percent per year for the foreseeable future. The flotation cost is expected to be on an
average Rs. 2 per share.
Preference shares at 11 per cent
with 10 years maturity could also be issued with the help of an investment
banker with an investment banker with a per value of Rs. 100 per share to be
redeemed at par. This issue would
involve flotation cost of 5 per cent.
Finally, Neha learnt that it would
be possible for Palco to raise an additional Rs. 20 lakh through a 7 – year
loan from Punjab National Bank at 12 per cent.
Any amount raised over Rs. 20 lakh would cost 14 per cent. Short-term debt has always been usesd by
Palco to meet working capital requirements and as Palco grows, it is expected
to maintain its proportion in the capital structure to support capital
expansion. Also, Rs. 60 lakh could be
raised through a bond issue with 10 years maturity with a 11 percent coupon at
the face value. If it becomes necessary
to raise more funds via long-term debt, Rs. 30 lakh more could be accumulated
through the issuance of additional 10-year bonds sold at the face value, with
the coupon rate raised to 12 per cent, while any additional funds raised via
long-term debt would necessarily have a 10 – year maturity with a 14 per cent
coupon yield. The flotation cost of
issue is expected to be 5 per cent. The
issue price of bond would be Rs. 100 to be redeemed at par.
In the past, Palco had calculated a
weighted average of these sources of funds to determine its cost of
capital. In discussion with the current
Financial Controller, the point was raised that while this served as an
appropriate calculation for external funds, it did not take into account the
cost of internally generated funds. The
Financial Controller agreed that there should be some cost associated with
retained earnings and need to be incorporated in the calculations but didn’t
have any clue as to what should be the cost.
Palco Ltd is subjected to the
corporate tax rate of 40 per cent.
From the facts outlined above, what
report would Neha submit to the Board of Directors of palco Ltd ?
NO. 6
ARQ LTD
ARQ Ltd is an
Indian company based in Greater Noida, which manufactures packaging materials
for food items. The company maintains a
present fleet of five fiat cars and two Contessa Classic cars for its chairman,
general manager and five senior managers.
The book value of the seven cars is Rs. 20,00,000 and their market value
is estimated at Rs. 15,00,000. All the
cars fall under the same block of depreciation @ 25 per cent.
A German multinational company (MNC)
BYR Ltd, has acquired ARQ Ltd in all cash deal.
The merged company called BYR India Ltd is proposing to expand the
manufacturing capacity by four folds and the organization structure is
reorganized from top to bottom. The
German MNC has the policy of providing transport facility to all senior
executives (22) of the company because the manufacturing plant at Greater Noida
was more than 10 kms outside Delhi where most of the executives were
staying.
Prices of the
cars to be provided to the Executives have been as follows :
|
Manager (10)
|
Santro King
|
Rs. 3,75,000
|
|
DGM and GM (5)
|
Honda City
|
6,75,000
|
|
Director (5)
|
Toyota Corolla
|
9,25,000
|
|
Managing Director (1)
|
Sonata Gold
|
13,50,000
|
|
Chairman (1)
|
Mercedes benz
|
23,50,000
|
The company is
evaluating two options for providing these cars to executives
Option 1 : The
company will buy the cars and pay the executives fuel expenses, maintenance
expenses, driver allowance and insurance (at the year – end). In such case, the ownership of the car will lie
with the company. The details of the
proposed allowances and expenditures to be paid are as follows :
a) Fuel expense and maintenance Allowances
per month
|
Particulars
|
Fuel expenses
|
Maintenance allowance
|
|
Manager
DGM and GM
Director
Managing Director
Chairman
|
Rs. 2,500
5,000
7,500
12,000
18,000
|
Rs. 1,000
1,200
1,800
3,000
4,000
|
b) Driver
Allowance : Rs. 4,000 per month (Only Chairman, Managing Director and Directors
are eligible for driver allowance.)
c) Insurance
cost : 1 per cent of the cost of the car.
The useful life for the cars is
assumed to be five years after which they can be sold at 20 per cent salvage
value. All the cars fall under the same
block of depreciation @ 25 per cent using written down method of
depreciation. The company will have to
borrow to finance the purchase from a bank with interest at 14 per cent
repayable in five annual equal instalments payable at the end of the year.
Option 2 : ORIX,
The fleet management company has offered the 22 cars of the same make at lease
for the period of five years. The
monthly lease rentals for the cars are as follows (assuming that the total of
monthly lease rentals for the whole year are paid at the end of each year.
Santro Xing Rs. 9,125
Honda City 16,325
Toyota Corolla 27,175
Sonata Gold 39,250
Mercedes Benz 61,250
Under this lease agreement the
leasing company, ORIX will pay for the fuel, maintenance and driver expenses
for all the cars. The lessor will claim
the depreciation on the cars and the lessee will claim the lease rentals
against the taxable income. BYR India
Ltd will have to hire fulltime supervisor (at monthly salary of Rs. 15,000 per
month) to manage the fleet of cars hired on
lease. The company will have to bear additional miscellaneous expense of
Rs. 5,000 per month for providing him the PC, mobioe phone and so on.
The company’s effective tax rate is
40 per cent and its cost of capital is 15 per cent.
Analyse the
financial viability of the two options.
Which option would you recommend ?
Why ?
ENTERPRENEURSHIP MANAGEMENT
CASE I
Provide Advice to an entrepreneur
about websites
It’s
easy to educate prospects about your product or service once they’re on your
website, but how do you get them there? One way is by getting your company’s
name and URL out on the Web. You can do that by writing content for online
newsletters, trading links and posting messages on chat sites. Communicating
through other Web site attracts quality visitors to your site – and it can be
done for free.
Content
may still be king, but it’s an expensive kingdom to maintain. Many
organizations can’t afford webmasters whose only job is to develop new site
content. But because you’re an exper in your field, many companies will be more
than thrilled if you give them content in exchange for a link to your site.
Your content can be posted on Web sites or sent out in their e-mail. The
“publisher” benefits by offering relevant information to their site visitors.
When you teach these visitors something new, you also create a ‘soft sell’
marketing opportunity. Don’t pitch your business. Rather, share some
educational information to establish trust and brand awareness.
Just
what is “educational information?” its content that addresses your prospects’
problems. For example, if your company sells exercise equipment, you can
provide tips, case studies or statistics about fitness. Your readers will want
to know how you, the fitness expert, can help them achieve their goals. With a
simple click on your URL, prospects can travel to your site and discover your
company’s line of fitness products.
Of
course, you aren’t limited to providing articles to Web sites. Try asking for a
link to your site or a link trade. Just don’t put someone else’s link on your
home page – that encourages people to leave your site as soon as they arrive!
Links from sites related to yours provide another benefit: they boost your
site’s position in search engines that rank sites according to “link
popularity.” If you would like feedback in addition to getting free exposure,
try hanging out in chat rooms. As a fitness expert, for example, you can ask
people what prevents them from exercising consistently. Let people know you are
doing market research. Chat room participants may happily share their thoughts
with you online.
Find
your target audience by starting with the industry Web sites you frequent.
Also, run a key-word query in search engines. Tell Web site managers what your
company does and how your information can help their visitors. You may be
offered a link or a writing opportunity. In addition, try posting chat room
messages that reveal valuable information. You’ll be greatly rewarded with free
PR opportunities that can lead to immediate and long-term sales.
ADVICE TO AN ENTREPRENEUR
An entrepreneur, who has a website for
his business, has read the above article and comes to you for advice:
1. Seems like a lot of work in writing
articles and time in chat rooms. Although it might be a way of getting people
to my website with only a small expense, do you think that this approach is
worth the investment of time?
2. What are the other benefits of this
approach over and above simple a cost saving?
3. Are there particular businesses and
products more suitable for this approach?
CASE II
PROVIDE ADVICE TO AN ENTREPRENEUR
ABOUT SOME LEGAL ASPECTS OF STARTING A BUSINESS
You
just started your business – who has time to think about an exit strategy? If
you’re committed a very common legal mistake, says Alan S. Kopit, partner at
Hahn Loeser & Parks LLP in Cleveland and advisor to Lawyers.com. “Now is
the time to decide those issues – not after a problem develops,” he says. Here,
kopit runs down a few more common legal blunders to avoid:
1.
Failing to get good advice. Don’t ever go
it alone. Instead, Kopit suggests entrepreneurs enlist the services and counsel
of a good lawyer, an accountant and an insurance agent at the very beginning of
their start-up ventures. “ Younger [entrepreneurs] particularly need people to
bounce their ideas off of,” he says.
2.
Neglecting important employment
consideration for start-ups. Consider whether you need a written non-compete
contract with employees, whether you’ll use independent contractors and so on.
3.
Selecting the wrong business structure.
Should you classify your business as a
sole proprietorship, an LLC, an LLP or a corporation? “There are tax
implications that go along with [each choice]” cautions Kopit. Be sure to with
each option with the help of your advisors to determine which form will best
serve your business plan.
Advice to an entrepreneur
An entrepreneur, who is looking to
create a new business, has read the above article and comes to you for advice:
1. It is not surprising that a lawyer
should say that an entrepreneur needs a lawyer to start a business. I certainly
do not have money to burn on unnecessary legal fees. Which things do I need a
lawyer for now, which things need a lawyer but can be delayed and finally which
things can I do myself?
2. Other than the costs, are there any
disadvantages to “bouncing ideas” of a lawyer?
3. I certainly don’t want to pay more
taxes than I must. What the tax implications of the different legal structures
for the business?
CASE III
ANALYSIS AND ADVICE ON SIMPLE IMAGES
Founded
in 1990 by RichardSquire, Breckenridge Brewery began with the goal of making
great beer in a Colorado
town better known for skiing than anything else. Originally producing just
3,000 barrels per year, it now operates seven pubs and restaurant and produces
almost 30,000 barrels. Though the brewery was nabbing top honors at
microbrewery competitions in the late 1990s, competitors were entering not only
its core markets, but also its hometown of only its core markets, but also its
hometown of Denver “the Napa Valley
of microbreweries,” according to marketing director Steve Kurowski.
During
Teaming
up with design firm Barnhart/CMI, the brewery poured out its compute-generated
logo and created one as handcrafted as its beer, eliminating complicated
elements that were difficult to translate into packaging and merchandising,
such as the drop-shadow effect on the mountain. A more colloquial voice was
adopted for ads, with taglines such as “Brewed the way it is because we
drinking most of it.” The new visuals debuted on materials for the brewery’s
Summer Bright Ale.
After
Today,
Breckenridge is ready to uncap the new packaging of its flagship brand,
Avalanche Amber Ale, and its new Hefeweizen. SummerBright sales overflowed
expectations, by 25 percent. And for the first time, consumers can buy
promotional items such as pint glasses and T-shirts. Sometimes, the best way to
show great taste is with simplicity rather than flash.
Advice to an entrepreneur
1. A cheaper way of advertising that is
more effective at attracting customers – is this too good to be true? Why has
the “simpler is better” approach worked for Breckenridge Brewery?
2. Assume that the CEO asked you about
pricing its pint glasses and T-shirts to maximize profit from these items, or
should I have a lower price to increase volume and benefit from the promotional
impact the purchase these items have on the sales of my beer?”
3. Would you avise this approach to an
entrepreneur whose primary products are highly technological? What about an
entrepreneur whose products are sold to industrial buyers?
Case IV
Provide advice to an entrepreneur
about being more innovative
When
Neil Franklin began offering round-the-clock telephone customer service in
1998, customers loved it. The offering fit the strategic direction Franklin had in mind for
Dataworkforce, his Dallas-based telecommunications – engineer staffing agency,
so he invested in a phone system to route after hours calls to his 10
employees’ home and mobile phones. Today, Franklin ,
38, has nearly 50 employees and continues to explore ways to improve
Dataworkforce’s service. Twenty-four-hour phone service has stayed, but other
trials have not. One failure was developing individual Web sites for each
customer. “We took it too far and spent $30,000 then abandoned it,” Franklin recalls. A try at
globally extending the brand by advertising in major world cities was also
dropped. “It worked pretty well,” Franklin
says, “until you added up the cost.”
Franklin’s
efforts are similar to an approach called “portfolios of initiatives” strategy.
The idea, according to Lowell Bryan, a principal in McKinney & Co., the NYC
consulting firm that developed it, is to always have a number of efforts
underway to offer new products and services, attack new markets or otherwise
implement strategies, and to actively manage these experiments so you don’t
miss an opportunity or over commit to an unproven idea.
The
portfolio of initiatives approach addresses a weakness of conventional business
plans-that they make assumptions about uncertain future developments, such as
market and technological trends, customer responses, sales and competitor
reactions. Bryan
compares the portfolio of initiatives strategy to the ship convoys used in
World War II to get supplies across oceans. By assembling groups of military
and transport vessels and sending them in a mutually supportive group, planners
could rely on at least some reaching their destination. In the same way,
entrepreneurs with a portfolio of initiatives can expect some of them to pan
out.
Making a Plan
Three
steps define the portfolio of initiatives approach. First, you search for
initiatives in which you have or can readily acquire a familiarity advantage –
meaning you know more than competitors about a business. You can gain
familiarity advantage using low-cost pilot programs and experiments, or by
partnering with more knowledgeable allies. Avoid business in which you can’t
acquire a familiarity advantage, Bryan
says.
After
you identify familiarity-advantaged initiatives, began investing in them using
a disciplined, dynamic management approach. Pay attention to how initiatives
relate to each other. They should be diverse enough that the failure of one
wont endanger the others, but should also all fit into your overall strategic
direction. Investments, represented by product development efforts, pilot
programs, market tests and the like, should start small and increase only as
they prove themselves. Avoid over investing before initiatives have proved
themselves. The third step is to pull the plug on initiatives that aren’t
working out, and step up investment in others. A portfolio of initiatives will
work in any size company. Franklin
pursues 20 to 30 at any time, knowing 90 percent wont pan out, “The main idea
is to keep those initiatives running,” he says. “If you don’t, you’re slowing
down.”
Advice to an entrepreneur
An entrepreneur, who wants his firm to
be more innovative, has read the above article and come to you for advice:
1. This whole idea of experimentation
seems to make sense, but all those little failures can add up, and if there
enough of them, then this could lead to one big failure-the business going down
the drain. How can I best get the advantages of experimentation in terms of
innovation while also reduction the costs so that I don’t run the risk of
losing my business?
2. My employees, buyers, and suppliers
like working for my company because we have a lot of wins. I am not sure how
they will take it when our company begins to have a lot more failures (even if
those failures are small)- it is a psychological thing. How can I handle this
trade-off?
3. Even if everyone else accepts it, I am
not sure how I will cope. When projects fail it hits me pretty hard
emotionally. Is it just that I am not cut out for this type of approach?
Case V
PROVIDE ADVICE TO AN ENTREPRENEUR
ABOUT NONTRADITIONAL FINANCING
When
Lissa D’Aquanni created a gourmet chocolate business in her Albany , New York ,
basement in 1998, she had not only a passion for candy-making, but also a knack
for spurring citizen involvement. The former nonprofit executive had worked for
women’s advocacy groups, most recently promoting breast cancer awareness. If
there was one thing she knew, it was how to rally community support.
Her
ability to leverage local resources would be invaluable as she made her
business a fixture of her Albany
neighborhood. And in no area were those skills as critical as in financing last
year, D’Aquanni wanted to move her business, the chocolate Gecko, to an
abandoned building three blocks away, she needed $25,000.” Volunteers also
helped renovate the building, cutting project costs form an estimated
$3,00,000.
Check
out D’Aquanni’s unorthodox and creative financing plan: An economic development
group, the Albany Local Development Corp., loaned her $95,000 to buy the
building. D’Aquanni obtained a $1,00,000 government guaranteed loan from a
local credit union to renovate the structure. Façade improvements were funded
through a matching grant program to encourage commercial development in Albany . A local community
development financial institution used a state program to fund energy-efficient
upgrades, including new windows, light fixtures, furnaces and siding. Says
D’Aquanni, “ There were lots of different pieces of the puzzle to identify and
figure out how to access.”
Conventional
financing wasn’t an option. “I was looking at a business that did about $44,000
in sales doing a $260,000 project, and the traditional funders were
apprehensive,” explains D’Aquanni, 37. They urged her to rent a storefront
rather than buy the rundown building. Undeterred, D’Aquanni met with a
neighborhood group to develop her expansion plan. It wasn’t the first time the
community had helped out. In 1999, the cashstrapped chocolatier needed molds
and a temperer for the Christmas rush. Recalling a strategy she had seen in a
magazine, she sold discounted gift certificates to raise capital. D’Aquanni
offered customers $25 in free chocolates for every $100 in gift certificates
purchase. “A lot of folks mailed them as gifts to friends, family and
co-workers,” D’Aquanni says. “ And most of those people ordered chocolates. My
customer base expanded.”
Indeed,
many entrepreneurs successfully launch a business only to encounter funding
hardships as they attempt to grow. The ability to think outside the box,
experts say, is critical for firms short on funding. “There are pockets of
money out there, whether it be municipalities, counties, chambers of commerce,”
says Bill Brigham, Director of the Small
Business Development
Center in Albany . “Those are the loan programs that no
one seems to have information about. A lot of these programs will not require
the collateral and cash that is typical of traditional [loans]. They may be a
little more lenient as far as credit history goes. That’s one of the key roles
we can play-what entrepreneur is going to think [he or she] can qualify for HUD
money?
Advice to an entrepreneur
An entrepreneur, who is looking to
expand but has limited access to traditional financing, has read the above
article and comes to you for advice:
1. I want to find a little pot of gold
like Lissa D’Aquanni. Where should I look?
2. I like the gift certificate idea to
raise money and build my business. What other types of products do you think
that approach will work for?
3. Over the years I have paid a lot of
taxes. Should I feel guilty for accessing government – subsidized monies to
build my business, or should I feel justified?
Case
Study 1 : Structuring global companies
As the chapter illustrates, to carry out their activities
in pursuit of their objectives, virtually all organisations adopt some
form of organisational structure. One traditional method of organisation is to
group individuals by function or purpose, using a departmental structure to allocate
individuals to their specialist areas (e.g. Marketing, HRM and so on ). Another is
to group activities by product or service, with each product group normally responsible
for providing its own functional requirements. A third is to combine the
two in the form of a matrix structure with its vertical and horizontal flows of
responsibility and authority, a method of organisation much favoured in
university Business Schools.
What of companies with a global reach: how do they usually
organise them-
selves?
selves?
Writing in the Financial Times in November 2000 Julian Birkinshaw,
Associate Professor of Strategic and International Management at
London Business School, identifies four basic models of global company
structure:
● The International Division - an arrangement in which the company
establishes a
separate division to deal with business outside its own country. The
International Division would typically be concerned with tariff and trade issues,
foreign agents/partners and other aspects involved in selling overseas. Normally
the division does not make anything itself, it is simply responsible for interna-
tional sales. This arrangement tends to be found in medium-sized companies
with limited international sales.
separate division to deal with business outside its own country. The
International Division would typically be concerned with tariff and trade issues,
foreign agents/partners and other aspects involved in selling overseas. Normally
the division does not make anything itself, it is simply responsible for interna-
tional sales. This arrangement tends to be found in medium-sized companies
with limited international sales.

The Global Product Division - a product-based structure with
managers responsible
for their product line globally. The company is split into a number of global busi-
nesses arranged by product (or service) and usually overseen by their own
president. It has been a favoured structure among large global companies such as
BP, Siemens and 3M.
for their product line globally. The company is split into a number of global busi-
nesses arranged by product (or service) and usually overseen by their own
president. It has been a favoured structure among large global companies such as
BP, Siemens and 3M.
● The Area
Division - a geographically based structure in
which the major line of
authority lies with the country (e.g. Germany) or regional (e.g. Europe) manager who
is responsible for the different product offerings within her/his geographical area.
● The Global Matrix - as the name suggests a hybrid of the two previous structural
types. In the global matrix each business manager reports to two bosses, one
responsible for the global product and one for the country/region. As we indi-
cated in the previous edition of this book, this type of structure tends to come
into and go out of fashion. Ford, for example, adopted a matrix structure in the
later 1990s, while a number of other global companies were either streamlining
or dismantling theirs (e.g. Shell, BP, IBM).
authority lies with the country (e.g. Germany) or regional (e.g. Europe) manager who
is responsible for the different product offerings within her/his geographical area.
● The Global Matrix - as the name suggests a hybrid of the two previous structural
types. In the global matrix each business manager reports to two bosses, one
responsible for the global product and one for the country/region. As we indi-
cated in the previous edition of this book, this type of structure tends to come
into and go out of fashion. Ford, for example, adopted a matrix structure in the
later 1990s, while a number of other global companies were either streamlining
or dismantling theirs (e.g. Shell, BP, IBM).
As Professor Birkinshaw indicates, ultimately there is no
perfect structure and organisations tend to change their approach over time
according to changing circumstances,
fads, the perceived
needs of the
senior executives or the
predispositions of powerful individuals. This observation is no less true
of universities than it is of traditional businesses.
Case study questions
1 Professor Birkinshaw’s
article identifies the advantages and disadvantages of
being a global business. What are his major arguments?
being a global business. What are his major arguments?
2 In your opinion what are
likely to be the key factors determining how a global
company will organise itself?
company will organise itself?
Case 2 : Resource prices
As we saw in Chapter 1, resources such as labour,
technology and raw materials
constitute inputs into the production process that are utilised by organisations to
produce outputs. Apart from concerns over the quality, quantity and availability of
the different factors of production, businesses are also interested in the issue of
input prices since these represent costs to the organisation which ultimately have
to be met from revenues if the business is to survive. As in any other market, the
prices of economic resources can change over time for a variety of reasons, most, if
not all, of which are outside the direct control of business organisations. Such fluc-
tuations in input prices can be illustrated by the following examples:
constitute inputs into the production process that are utilised by organisations to
produce outputs. Apart from concerns over the quality, quantity and availability of
the different factors of production, businesses are also interested in the issue of
input prices since these represent costs to the organisation which ultimately have
to be met from revenues if the business is to survive. As in any other market, the
prices of economic resources can change over time for a variety of reasons, most, if
not all, of which are outside the direct control of business organisations. Such fluc-
tuations in input prices can be illustrated by the following examples:
● Rising labour costs - e.g. rises in wages or salaries and
other labour-related costs
(such as pension contributions or healthcare schemes) that are not offset by
increases in productivity or changes in working practices. Labour costs could rise
for a variety of reasons including skills shortages, demographic pressures, the
introduction of a national minimum wage or workers seeking to maintain their
living standards in an inflationary period.
(such as pension contributions or healthcare schemes) that are not offset by
increases in productivity or changes in working practices. Labour costs could rise
for a variety of reasons including skills shortages, demographic pressures, the
introduction of a national minimum wage or workers seeking to maintain their
living standards in an inflationary period.
● Rising raw material costs - e.g. caused by increases in
the demand for certain raw
materials and/or shortages (or bottlenecks) in supply. It can also be the result of
the need to switch to more expensive raw material sources because of customer
pressure, environmental considerations or lack of availability.
materials and/or shortages (or bottlenecks) in supply. It can also be the result of
the need to switch to more expensive raw material sources because of customer
pressure, environmental considerations or lack of availability.
● Rising energy costs - e.g. caused by demand and/or supply
problems as in the oil
market in recent years, with growth in India and China helping to push up
demand and coinciding with supply difficulties linked to events such as the war
in Iraq, hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico or decisions by OPEC.
● Increases in the cost of purchasing new technology/capital equipment - e.g.
caused by the need to compete with rivals or to meet more stringent government
regulations in areas such as health and safety or the environment.
market in recent years, with growth in India and China helping to push up
demand and coinciding with supply difficulties linked to events such as the war
in Iraq, hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico or decisions by OPEC.
● Increases in the cost of purchasing new technology/capital equipment - e.g.
caused by the need to compete with rivals or to meet more stringent government
regulations in areas such as health and safety or the environment.
As the above examples illustrate, rising input prices can
be the result of factors operating at both the micro and macro level and these can
range from events which are linked to natural causes to developments of a
political, social and/or economic kind. While many of these influences in the business
environment are uncontrollable, there are steps business organisations can
(and do) often take to address the issue of rising input prices that may threaten
their competitiveness. Examples include the following:
● Seeking cheaper sources of labour (e.g. Dyson moved its
production of vacuum
cleaners to the Far East).
cleaners to the Far East).
● Abandoning salary-linked pension schemes or other fringe
benefits (e.g. com-
pany cars, healthcare provisions, paid holidays).
pany cars, healthcare provisions, paid holidays).
● Outsourcing certain activities (e.g. using call centres
to handle customer com-
plaints, or outsourcing services such as security, catering, cleaning, payroll, etc.). ● Switching raw materials or energy suppliers (e.g. to take advantage of discounts
plaints, or outsourcing services such as security, catering, cleaning, payroll, etc.). ● Switching raw materials or energy suppliers (e.g. to take advantage of discounts
by entering into longer agreements to purchase). 

● Energy-saving measures (e.g. through better insulation,
more regular servicing of
equipment, product and/or process redesign).
equipment, product and/or process redesign).
● Productivity gains (e.g. introducing incentive schemes).
In addition to measures such as these, some organisations
seek cost savings through
divestment of parts of the business or alternatively through merger or takeover
activity. In the former case the aim tends to be to focus on the organisation’s core
products/services and to shed unprofitable and/or costly activities; in the latter the
objective is usually to take advantage of economies of scale, particularly those asso-
ciated with purchasing, marketing, administration and financing the business.
divestment of parts of the business or alternatively through merger or takeover
activity. In the former case the aim tends to be to focus on the organisation’s core
products/services and to shed unprofitable and/or costly activities; in the latter the
objective is usually to take advantage of economies of scale, particularly those asso-
ciated with purchasing, marketing, administration and financing the business.
Case study questions
1
If a company is considering switching production to a country where wage costs
are lower, what other factors will it need to take into account before doing so?
are lower, what other factors will it need to take into account before doing so?
2 Will increased environmental standards imposed by
government on businesses
inevitably result in higher business costs?
inevitably result in higher business costs?
Case 3 : Government and business - friend or foe?
As we have seen, governments intervene in the day-to-day
working of the economy
in a variety of ways in the hope of improving the environment in which industrial
and commercial activity takes place. How far they are successful in achieving this
goal is open to question. Businesses, for example, frequently complain of over-
interference by governments and of the burdens imposed upon them by
government legislation and regulation. Ministers, in contrast, tend to stress how
they have helped to create an environment conducive to entrepreneurial activity
through the different policy initiatives and through a supportive legal and fiscal
regime. Who is right?

in a variety of ways in the hope of improving the environment in which industrial
and commercial activity takes place. How far they are successful in achieving this
goal is open to question. Businesses, for example, frequently complain of over-
interference by governments and of the burdens imposed upon them by
government legislation and regulation. Ministers, in contrast, tend to stress how
they have helped to create an environment conducive to entrepreneurial activity
through the different policy initiatives and through a supportive legal and fiscal
regime. Who is right?


While there is no simple answer to this question, it is
instructive to examine the
different surveys which are regularly undertaken of business attitudes and condi-
tions in different countries. One such survey by the European Commission - and
reported by Andrew Osborn in the Guardian on 20 November 2001 - claimed that
whereas countries such as Finland, Luxembourg, Portugal and the Netherlands
tended to be regarded as business-friendly, the United Kingdom was perceived as
the most difficult and complicated country to do business with in the whole of
Europe. Foreign firms evidently claimed that the UK was harder to trade with than
other countries owing to its bureaucratic procedures and its tendency to rigidly
enforce business regulations. EU officials singled out Britain’s complex tax formali-
ties, employment regulations and product conformity rules as particular problems
for foreign companies - criticisms which echo those of the CBI and other represen-
tative bodies who have been complaining of the cost of over-regulation to UK firms
over a considerable number of years.
different surveys which are regularly undertaken of business attitudes and condi-
tions in different countries. One such survey by the European Commission - and
reported by Andrew Osborn in the Guardian on 20 November 2001 - claimed that
whereas countries such as Finland, Luxembourg, Portugal and the Netherlands
tended to be regarded as business-friendly, the United Kingdom was perceived as
the most difficult and complicated country to do business with in the whole of
Europe. Foreign firms evidently claimed that the UK was harder to trade with than
other countries owing to its bureaucratic procedures and its tendency to rigidly
enforce business regulations. EU officials singled out Britain’s complex tax formali-
ties, employment regulations and product conformity rules as particular problems
for foreign companies - criticisms which echo those of the CBI and other represen-
tative bodies who have been complaining of the cost of over-regulation to UK firms
over a considerable number of years.
The news, however, is not all bad. The Competitive
Alternatives study (2002) by
KPMG of costs in various cities in the G7 countries, Austria and the Netherlands
indicated that Britain is the second cheapest place in which to do business in the
nine industrial countries (see www.competitivealternatives.com). The survey, which
looked at a range of business costs - especially labour costs and taxation -, placed
the UK second behind Canada world-wide and in first place within Europe. The
country’s strong showing largely reflected its competitive labour costs, with manu-
facturing costs estimated to be 12.5 per cent lower than in Germany and 20 per
cent lower than many other countries in continental Europe. Since firms frequently
use this survey to identify the best places to locate their business, the data on rela-
tive costs are likely to provide the UK with a competitive advantage in the battle for
foreign inward investment (see Mini case, above).
KPMG of costs in various cities in the G7 countries, Austria and the Netherlands
indicated that Britain is the second cheapest place in which to do business in the
nine industrial countries (see www.competitivealternatives.com). The survey, which
looked at a range of business costs - especially labour costs and taxation -, placed
the UK second behind Canada world-wide and in first place within Europe. The
country’s strong showing largely reflected its competitive labour costs, with manu-
facturing costs estimated to be 12.5 per cent lower than in Germany and 20 per
cent lower than many other countries in continental Europe. Since firms frequently
use this survey to identify the best places to locate their business, the data on rela-
tive costs are likely to provide the UK with a competitive advantage in the battle for
foreign inward investment (see Mini case, above).
Case study questions
1 : How would you account for the difference in perspective
between firms who often
complain of government over-interference in business matters and ministers who
claim that they have the interests of business at heart when taking decisions?
complain of government over-interference in business matters and ministers who
claim that they have the interests of business at heart when taking decisions?
2 : To what extent do you think that relative costs are the
critical factor in determining
inward investment decisions?
inward investment decisions?
Case 4 : The end of the block exemption
As we have seen in the chapter, governments frequently use
laws and regulations to promote competition within the marketplace in the belief
that this has significant benefits for the consumer and for the economy generally.
Such interventions occur not only at national level, but also in situations where
governments work together to provide mutual benefits, as in the European Union’s
attempts to set up a ‘Single Market’ across the member states of the EU.
While few would deny that competitive markets have many
benefits, the search
for increased competition at national level and beyond can sometimes be
restrained by the political realities of the situation, a point underlined by a previous
decision of the EU authorities to allow a block exemption from the normal rules of
competition in the EU car market. Under this system, motor manufacturers operat-
ing within the EU were permitted to create networks of selective and exclusive dealerships and to engage in certain other activities normally outlawed under the competition provisions of the single market. It was argued that the system of selective and exclusive distribution (SED) benefited consumers by providing them with a cradle-to-grave service, alongside what was said to be a highly competitive supply situation within the heavily branded global car market.
for increased competition at national level and beyond can sometimes be
restrained by the political realities of the situation, a point underlined by a previous
decision of the EU authorities to allow a block exemption from the normal rules of
competition in the EU car market. Under this system, motor manufacturers operat-
ing within the EU were permitted to create networks of selective and exclusive dealerships and to engage in certain other activities normally outlawed under the competition provisions of the single market. It was argued that the system of selective and exclusive distribution (SED) benefited consumers by providing them with a cradle-to-grave service, alongside what was said to be a highly competitive supply situation within the heavily branded global car market.
Introduced in 1995, and extended until the end of
September 2002, the block
exemption was highly criticised for its impact on the operation of the car market in
Europe. Following a critical report by the UK competition authorities in April 2000,
the EU published a review (in November 2000) of the workings of the existing
arrangement for distributing and servicing cars, highlighting its adverse conse-
quences for both consumers and retailers and signalling the need for change. Despite
intensive lobbying by the major car manufacturers, and by some national govern-
ments, to maintain the current rules largely intact, the European Commission
announced its intention of replacing the block exemption regulation when it expired
in September, subject of course to consultation with interested parties.
exemption was highly criticised for its impact on the operation of the car market in
Europe. Following a critical report by the UK competition authorities in April 2000,
the EU published a review (in November 2000) of the workings of the existing
arrangement for distributing and servicing cars, highlighting its adverse conse-
quences for both consumers and retailers and signalling the need for change. Despite
intensive lobbying by the major car manufacturers, and by some national govern-
ments, to maintain the current rules largely intact, the European Commission
announced its intention of replacing the block exemption regulation when it expired
in September, subject of course to consultation with interested parties.
In essence the Commission’s proposals aimed to give
dealers far more independ-
ence from suppliers by allowing them to solicit for business anywhere in the EU
and to open showrooms wherever they want; they would also be able to sell cars
supplied by different manufacturers under the same roof. The plan also sought to
open up the aftersales market by breaking the tie which existed between sales and
servicing. The proposal was that independent repairers would in future be able to
get greater access to the necessary spare parts and technology, thereby encouraging
new entrants to join the market with reduced initial investment costs.
ence from suppliers by allowing them to solicit for business anywhere in the EU
and to open showrooms wherever they want; they would also be able to sell cars
supplied by different manufacturers under the same roof. The plan also sought to
open up the aftersales market by breaking the tie which existed between sales and
servicing. The proposal was that independent repairers would in future be able to
get greater access to the necessary spare parts and technology, thereby encouraging
new entrants to join the market with reduced initial investment costs.
While these proposals were broadly welcomed by groups
representing consumers
(e.g. the Consumer Association in the UK), some observers felt that the planned
reforms did not go far enough to weaken the power of the suppliers over the market
(see e.g. the editorial in the Financial Times, 11 January 2002). For instance it
appeared to be the case that while manufacturers would be able to supply cars to
supermarkets and other new retailers, they would not be required by law to do so,
suggesting that a market free-for-all was highly unlikely to emerge in the foreseeable
future. Equally the Commission’s plans appeared to do little to protect dealers from
threats to terminate their franchises should there be a dispute with the supplier.
(e.g. the Consumer Association in the UK), some observers felt that the planned
reforms did not go far enough to weaken the power of the suppliers over the market
(see e.g. the editorial in the Financial Times, 11 January 2002). For instance it
appeared to be the case that while manufacturers would be able to supply cars to
supermarkets and other new retailers, they would not be required by law to do so,
suggesting that a market free-for-all was highly unlikely to emerge in the foreseeable
future. Equally the Commission’s plans appeared to do little to protect dealers from
threats to terminate their franchises should there be a dispute with the supplier.
In the event the old block exemption scheme expired at the
end of September
2002 and the new rules began the next day. However, the majority of the provisions
under the EC rules did not come into effect until the following October (2003) and
the ban on ‘location clauses’ - which limit the geographical scope of dealer opera-
tions - only came into effect two years later. Since October 2005 dealers have been
free to set up secondary sales outlets in other areas of the EU, as well as their own
countries. This is expected to stengthen competition between dealers across the
Single Market to the advantage of consumers (e.g. greater choice and reduced prices).
2002 and the new rules began the next day. However, the majority of the provisions
under the EC rules did not come into effect until the following October (2003) and
the ban on ‘location clauses’ - which limit the geographical scope of dealer opera-
tions - only came into effect two years later. Since October 2005 dealers have been
free to set up secondary sales outlets in other areas of the EU, as well as their own
countries. This is expected to stengthen competition between dealers across the
Single Market to the advantage of consumers (e.g. greater choice and reduced prices).
Case study questions
1 Can you suggest any reasons why the European Commission
was willing to grant
the block exemption in the first place, given that it ran counter to its proposals for
a Single Market?
the block exemption in the first place, given that it ran counter to its proposals for
a Single Market?
2 Why might the new reforms make cars cheaper for
European consumers?
Case
5 : The sale of goods on the
Internet
The sale of consumer goods on the Internet (particularly
those between European member states) raises a number of legal issues. First,
there is the issue of trust, with-
out which the consumer will not buy; they will need assurance that the seller is genuine, and that they will get the goods that they believe they have ordered.
Second, there is the issue of consumer rights with respect to the goods in question: what rights exist and do they vary across Europe? Last, the issue of enforcement: what happens should anything go wrong?
out which the consumer will not buy; they will need assurance that the seller is genuine, and that they will get the goods that they believe they have ordered.
Second, there is the issue of consumer rights with respect to the goods in question: what rights exist and do they vary across Europe? Last, the issue of enforcement: what happens should anything go wrong?
Information and trust
Europe
recognises the problems of doing business across the Internet or telephone
and it has attempted to address the main stumbling blocks via Directives. The
Consumer Protection (Distance Selling) Regulations 2000 attempts to address the
issues of trust in cross-border consumer sales, which may take place over the
Internet (or telephone). In short, the consumer needs to know quite a bit of infor-
mation, which they may otherwise have easy access to if they were buying face to
face. Regulation 7 requires inter alia for the seller to identify themselves and an
address must be provided if the goods are to be paid for in advance. Moreover, a
full description of the goods and the final price (inclusive of any taxes) must also
be provided. The seller must also inform the buyer of the right of cancellation available under Regulations 10-12, where the buyer has a right to cancel the contract for seven days starting on the day after the consumer receives the goods or services. Failure to inform the consumer of this right automatically extends the period to three months. The cost of returning goods is to be borne by the buyer, and the seller is entitled to deduct the costs directly flowing from recovery as a restocking fee. All of this places a considerable obligation on the seller; however, such data should stem many misunderstandings and so greatly assist consumer faith and confidence in non-face-to-face sales.
and it has attempted to address the main stumbling blocks via Directives. The
Consumer Protection (Distance Selling) Regulations 2000 attempts to address the
issues of trust in cross-border consumer sales, which may take place over the
Internet (or telephone). In short, the consumer needs to know quite a bit of infor-
mation, which they may otherwise have easy access to if they were buying face to
face. Regulation 7 requires inter alia for the seller to identify themselves and an
address must be provided if the goods are to be paid for in advance. Moreover, a
full description of the goods and the final price (inclusive of any taxes) must also
be provided. The seller must also inform the buyer of the right of cancellation available under Regulations 10-12, where the buyer has a right to cancel the contract for seven days starting on the day after the consumer receives the goods or services. Failure to inform the consumer of this right automatically extends the period to three months. The cost of returning goods is to be borne by the buyer, and the seller is entitled to deduct the costs directly flowing from recovery as a restocking fee. All of this places a considerable obligation on the seller; however, such data should stem many misunderstandings and so greatly assist consumer faith and confidence in non-face-to-face sales.
Another concern for the consumer is
fraud. The consumer who has paid by
credit card will be protected by section 83 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974, under
which a consumer/purchaser is not liable for the debt incurred, if it has been run
up by a third party not acting as the agent of the buyer. The Distance Selling
Regulations extend this to debit cards, and remove the ability of the card issuer to
charge the consumer for the first £50 of loss (Regulation 21). Moreover, section 75
of the Consumer Credit Act 1974 also gives the consumer/buyer a like claim against
the credit card company for any misrepresentation or breach of contract by the
seller. This is extremely important in a distance selling transaction, where the seller
may disappear.
credit card will be protected by section 83 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974, under
which a consumer/purchaser is not liable for the debt incurred, if it has been run
up by a third party not acting as the agent of the buyer. The Distance Selling
Regulations extend this to debit cards, and remove the ability of the card issuer to
charge the consumer for the first £50 of loss (Regulation 21). Moreover, section 75
of the Consumer Credit Act 1974 also gives the consumer/buyer a like claim against
the credit card company for any misrepresentation or breach of contract by the
seller. This is extremely important in a distance selling transaction, where the seller
may disappear.
What
quality and what rights?
The
next issue relates to the quality that may be expected from goods bought over
the Internet. Clearly, if goods have been bought from abroad, the levels of quality
required in other jurisdictions may vary. It is for this reason that Europe has
attempted to standardise the issue of quality and consumer rights, with the
Consumer Guarantees Directive (1999/44/EC), thus continuing the push to encour-
age cross-border consumer purchases. The implementing Sale and Supply of Goods
to Consumer Regulations 2002 came into force in 2003, which not only lays down
minimum quality standards, but also provides a series of consumer remedies which
will be common across Europe. The Regulations further amend the Sale of Goods
Act 1979. The DTI, whose job it was to incorporate the Directive into domestic law
(by way of delegated legislation) ensured that the pre-existing consumer rights were
maintained, so as not to reduce the overall level of protection available to con-
sumers. The Directive requires goods to be of ‘normal’ quality, or fit for any
purpose made known by the seller. This has been taken to be the same as our pre-
existing ‘reasonable quality’ and ‘fitness for purpose’ obligations owed under
sections 14(2) and 14(3) of the Sale of Goods Act 1979. Moreover, the pre-existing
remedy of the short-term right to reject is also retained. This right provides the
buyer a short period of time to discover whether the goods are in conformity with
the contract. In practice, it is usually a matter of weeks at most. After that time has
elapsed, the consumer now has four new remedies that did not exist before, which
are provided in two pairs. These are repair or replacement, or price reduction or
rescission. The pre-existing law only gave the consumer a right to damages, which
would rarely be exercised in practice. (However, the Small Claims Court would
ensure a speedy and cheap means of redress for almost all claims brought.) Now
there is a right to a repair or a replacement, so that the consumer is not left with an
impractical action for damages over defective goods. The seller must also bear the
cost of return of the goods for repair. So such costs must now be factored into any
the Internet. Clearly, if goods have been bought from abroad, the levels of quality
required in other jurisdictions may vary. It is for this reason that Europe has
attempted to standardise the issue of quality and consumer rights, with the
Consumer Guarantees Directive (1999/44/EC), thus continuing the push to encour-
age cross-border consumer purchases. The implementing Sale and Supply of Goods
to Consumer Regulations 2002 came into force in 2003, which not only lays down
minimum quality standards, but also provides a series of consumer remedies which
will be common across Europe. The Regulations further amend the Sale of Goods
Act 1979. The DTI, whose job it was to incorporate the Directive into domestic law
(by way of delegated legislation) ensured that the pre-existing consumer rights were
maintained, so as not to reduce the overall level of protection available to con-
sumers. The Directive requires goods to be of ‘normal’ quality, or fit for any
purpose made known by the seller. This has been taken to be the same as our pre-
existing ‘reasonable quality’ and ‘fitness for purpose’ obligations owed under
sections 14(2) and 14(3) of the Sale of Goods Act 1979. Moreover, the pre-existing
remedy of the short-term right to reject is also retained. This right provides the
buyer a short period of time to discover whether the goods are in conformity with
the contract. In practice, it is usually a matter of weeks at most. After that time has
elapsed, the consumer now has four new remedies that did not exist before, which
are provided in two pairs. These are repair or replacement, or price reduction or
rescission. The pre-existing law only gave the consumer a right to damages, which
would rarely be exercised in practice. (However, the Small Claims Court would
ensure a speedy and cheap means of redress for almost all claims brought.) Now
there is a right to a repair or a replacement, so that the consumer is not left with an
impractical action for damages over defective goods. The seller must also bear the
cost of return of the goods for repair. So such costs must now be factored into any
business sales plan. If
neither of these remedies is suitable or actioned within a ‘rea-
sonable period of time’ then the consumer may rely on the second pair of
remedies. Price reduction permits the consumer to claim back a segment of the pur-
chase price if the goods are still useable. It is effectively a discount for defective
goods. Rescission permits the consumer to reject the goods, but does not get a full
refund, as they would under the short-term right to reject. Here money is knocked
off for ‘beneficial use’. This is akin to the pre-existing treatment for breaches of
durability, where goods have not lasted as long as goods of that type ought reason-
ably be expected to last. The level of compensation would take account of the use
that the consumer has (if any) been able to put the goods to and a deduction made
off the return of the purchase price. However, the issue that must be addressed is as
to the length of time that goods may be expected to last. A supplier may state the
length of the guarantee period, so a £500 television set guaranteed for one year
would have a life expectancy of one year. On the other hand, a consumer may
expect a television set to last ten years. Clearly, if the set went wrong after six
months, the consumer would only get £250 back if the retailer’s figure was used,
but would receive £475 if their own figure was used. It remains to be seen how this
provision will work in practice.
sonable period of time’ then the consumer may rely on the second pair of
remedies. Price reduction permits the consumer to claim back a segment of the pur-
chase price if the goods are still useable. It is effectively a discount for defective
goods. Rescission permits the consumer to reject the goods, but does not get a full
refund, as they would under the short-term right to reject. Here money is knocked
off for ‘beneficial use’. This is akin to the pre-existing treatment for breaches of
durability, where goods have not lasted as long as goods of that type ought reason-
ably be expected to last. The level of compensation would take account of the use
that the consumer has (if any) been able to put the goods to and a deduction made
off the return of the purchase price. However, the issue that must be addressed is as
to the length of time that goods may be expected to last. A supplier may state the
length of the guarantee period, so a £500 television set guaranteed for one year
would have a life expectancy of one year. On the other hand, a consumer may
expect a television set to last ten years. Clearly, if the set went wrong after six
months, the consumer would only get £250 back if the retailer’s figure was used,
but would receive £475 if their own figure was used. It remains to be seen how this
provision will work in practice.
One problem with distance sales has been that
of liability for goods which arrive
damaged. The pre-existing domestic law stated that risk would pass to the buyer once
the goods were handed over to a third-party carrier. This had the major problem in
practice of who would actually be liable for the damage. Carriers would blame the
supplier and vice versa. The consumer would be able to sue for the loss, if they were
able to determine which party was responsible. In practice, consumers usually went
uncompensated and such a worry has put many consumers off buying goods over the
Internet. The Sale and Supply of Goods to Consumer Regulations also modify the
transfer of risk, so that now the risk remains with the seller until actual delivery. This
will clearly lead to a slight increase in the supply of goods to consumers, with the
goods usually now being sent by insured delivery. However, this will avoid the prob-
lem of who is actually liable and should help to boost confidence.
damaged. The pre-existing domestic law stated that risk would pass to the buyer once
the goods were handed over to a third-party carrier. This had the major problem in
practice of who would actually be liable for the damage. Carriers would blame the
supplier and vice versa. The consumer would be able to sue for the loss, if they were
able to determine which party was responsible. In practice, consumers usually went
uncompensated and such a worry has put many consumers off buying goods over the
Internet. The Sale and Supply of Goods to Consumer Regulations also modify the
transfer of risk, so that now the risk remains with the seller until actual delivery. This
will clearly lead to a slight increase in the supply of goods to consumers, with the
goods usually now being sent by insured delivery. However, this will avoid the prob-
lem of who is actually liable and should help to boost confidence.
Enforcement
Enforcement for domestic
sales is relatively straightforward. Small-scale consumer
claims can be dealt with expeditiously and cheaply under the Small Claims Court.
Here claims under £5000 for contract-based claims are brought in a special court
intended to keep costs down by keeping the lawyers’ out of the court room, as a vic-
torious party cannot claim for their lawyers’ expenses. The judge will conduct the
case in a more ‘informal’ manner, and will seek to discover the legal issues by ques-
tioning both parties, so no formal knowledge of the law is required. The total cost of
such a case, even if it is lost, is the cost of issuing the proceedings (approximately
claims can be dealt with expeditiously and cheaply under the Small Claims Court.
Here claims under £5000 for contract-based claims are brought in a special court
intended to keep costs down by keeping the lawyers’ out of the court room, as a vic-
torious party cannot claim for their lawyers’ expenses. The judge will conduct the
case in a more ‘informal’ manner, and will seek to discover the legal issues by ques-
tioning both parties, so no formal knowledge of the law is required. The total cost of
such a case, even if it is lost, is the cost of issuing the proceedings (approximately
10 per cent of the value
claimed) and the other side’s ‘reasonable expenses’. Expenses
must be kept down, and a judge will not award value which has been deliberately run
up, such first-class rail travel and stays in five star hotels. Residents of Northampton
have hosted a trial of an online claims procedure, so that claims may now be made
via the Internet. (www.courtservice.gov.uk outlines the procedure for MCOL, or
Money Claims Online.) Cases will normally be held in the defendant’s court, unless the complainant is a consumer and the defendant a business.
must be kept down, and a judge will not award value which has been deliberately run
up, such first-class rail travel and stays in five star hotels. Residents of Northampton
have hosted a trial of an online claims procedure, so that claims may now be made
via the Internet. (www.courtservice.gov.uk outlines the procedure for MCOL, or
Money Claims Online.) Cases will normally be held in the defendant’s court, unless the complainant is a consumer and the defendant a business.
Enforcement is the weak point in the European legislation,
for there is, as yet, no
European-wide Small Claims Court dealing with transnational European transac-
tions. The consumer is thus forced to contemplate expensive civil action abroad in a
foreign language, perhaps where no such small claims system exists - a pointless
measure for all but the most expensive of consumer purchases. The only redress lies
in EEJ-Net, the European Extra-Judicial Network, which puts the complainant in
touch with any applicable professional or trade body in the supplier’s home member
state. It does require the existence of such a body, which is unlikely if the transac-
tion is for electrical goods, which is one of the most popular types of Internet
purchase. Therefore, until Europe provides a Euro Small Claims Court, the consumer
cross-border buyer may have many rights, but no effective means of enforcement.
Until then it would appear that section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974, which
gives the buyer the same remedies against their credit card company as against the
seller, is the only effective means of redress.
European-wide Small Claims Court dealing with transnational European transac-
tions. The consumer is thus forced to contemplate expensive civil action abroad in a
foreign language, perhaps where no such small claims system exists - a pointless
measure for all but the most expensive of consumer purchases. The only redress lies
in EEJ-Net, the European Extra-Judicial Network, which puts the complainant in
touch with any applicable professional or trade body in the supplier’s home member
state. It does require the existence of such a body, which is unlikely if the transac-
tion is for electrical goods, which is one of the most popular types of Internet
purchase. Therefore, until Europe provides a Euro Small Claims Court, the consumer
cross-border buyer may have many rights, but no effective means of enforcement.
Until then it would appear that section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974, which
gives the buyer the same remedies against their credit card company as against the
seller, is the only effective means of redress.
Case study questions
1 Consider the checklist of data which a distance seller
must provide to a consumer
purchaser. Is this putting too heavy a burden on sellers?
purchaser. Is this putting too heavy a burden on sellers?
2 Is a consumer distance buyer any better off after the
European legislation?
3
Are there any remaining issues that must be tackled to increase European cross-
border consumer trade?
border consumer trade?

STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT
CASE – 1 MANAGING HINDUSTAN
UNILEVER STRATEGICALLY
Unilever is one of the world’s
oldest multinational companies. Its origin goes back to the 19th
century when a group of companies operating independently, produced soaps and
margarine. In 1930, the companies merged to form Unilever that diversified into
food products in 1940s. Through the next five decades, it emerged as a major
fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) multinational operating in several
businesses. In 2004, the Unilever 2010 strategic plan was put into action with
the mission to ‘bring vitality to life’ and ‘to meet everyday needs for
nutrition, hygiene and personal care with brands that help people feel good,
look good, and get more out of life’. The corporate strategy is of focusing on
bore businesses of food, home care and personal care. Unilever operates in more
than 100 countries, has a turnover of € 39.6 billion and net profit of € 3.685
billion in 2006 and derives 41 per cent of its income from the developing and
emerging economies around the world. It has 179,000 employees and is a
culturally-diverse organisation with its top management coming from 24 nations.
Internationalisation is based on the principle of local roots with global scale
aimed at becoming a ‘multi-local multinational’.
The genesis of
Hindustan Unilever (HUL) in India, goes back to 1888 when Unilever exported
Sunlight soap to India. Three Indian, subsidiaries came into existence in the
period 1931-1935 that merged to form Hindustan Lever in 1956. Mergers and
acquisitions of Lipton (1972), Brooke Bond (1984), Ponds (1986), TOMCO (1993),
Lakme (1998) and Modern Foods (2002) have resulted in an organisation that is a
conglomerate of several businesses that have been continually restructured over
the years.
HUL is one of
the largest FMCG company in India with total sales of Rs. 12,295 crore and net
profit of 1855crore in 2006. There are over 15000 employees, including more
than 1300 managers. The present corporate strategy of HUL is to focus on core
businesses. These core businesses are in home and personal care and food. There
are 20 different consumer categories in these two businesses. For instance,
home and personal care is made up of personal wash, laundry, skin care, hair
care, oral care, deodorants, colour cosmetics and ayurvedic personal and health care, while food businesses have tea,
coffee, ice creams and processed food brands. Apart from the two product
divisions, there are separate departments for specialty exports and new
ventures.
Strategic
management at HUL is the responsibility of the board of directors headed by a
chairman. There are five independent and five whole-time directors. The
operational management is looked after by a management committee comprising of
Vice Chairman, CEO and managing director and executive directors of the two
business divisions and functional areas. The divisions have a lot of autonomy
with dedicated assets and resources. A divisional committee having the
executive director and heads of functions of sales, commercial and
manufacturing looks after the business level decision-making. The
functional-level management is the responsibility of the functional head. For
instance, a marketing manager has a team of brand managers looking after the
individual brands. Besides the decentralised divisional structure, HUL has
centralised some functions such as finance, human resource management,
research, technology, information technology and corporate and legal affairs.
Unilever
globally and HUL nationally, operate in the highly competitive FMCG markets.
The consumer markets for FMCG products are finicky: it’s difficult to create
customers and much more difficult to retain them. Price is often the central
concern in a consumer purchase decision requiring producers to be on continual
guard against cost increases. Sales and distribution are critical functions
organisationally. HUL operates in such a milieu. It has strong competitors such
as the multinationals Procter & Gamble, Nivea or L’Oreal and formidable
local companies such as, Amul, Nirma or the Tata FMCG companies to contend
with. Rivals have copied HUL’s strategies and tactics, especially in the area
of marketing and distribution. Its innovations such as new style packaging or
distribution through women entrepreneurs are much valued but also copied
relentlessly, hurting its competitive advantage.
HUL is
identified closely with India. There is a ring of truth to its vision
statement: ‘to earn the love and respect of India by making a real difference
to every Indian’. It has an impeccable record in corporate social
responsibility. There is an element of nostalgia associated with brands like
Lifebuoy (introduced in 1895) and Dalda (1937) for senior citizens in India.
Consequently Indians have always perceived HUL as an Indian company rather than
a multinational. HUL has attempted to align its strategies in the past to the
special needs of Indian business environment. Be it marketing or human resource
management, HUL has experimented with new ideas suited to the local context.
For instance, HUL is known for its capabilities in rural marketing, effective
distribution systems and human resource development. But this focus on India
seems to be changing. This might indicate a change in the strategic posture as
well as recognition that Indian markets have matured to the extent that they
can be dealt with by the global strategies of Unilever. At the corporate level,
it could also be an attempt to leverage global scale while retaining local
responsiveness to some extent.
In line with
the shift in corporate strategy, the focus of strategic decision-making seems
to have moved from the subsidiary to the headquarters. Unilever has formulated
a new global realignment under which it will develop brands and streamline
product offerings across the world and the subsidiaries will sell the products.
Other subtle indications of the shift of decision-making authority could be the
appointment of a British CEO after nearly forty years during which there were
Indian CEOs, the changed focus on a limited number of international brands
rather than a large range of local brands developed over the years and the
name-change from Hindustan Lever to Hindustan Unilever.
The shift in
the strategic decision-making power from the subsidiary to headquarters could
however, prove to be double-edged sword. An example could be of HUL adopting
Unilever’s global strategy of focussing on a limited number of products, called
the 30 power brands in 2002. That seemed a perfectly sensible strategic
decision aimed at focusing managerial attention to a limited set of
high-potential products. But one consequence of that was the HUL’s strong
position in the niche soap and detergent markets suffering owing to neglect and
the competitors were quick to take advantage of the opportunity. Then there are
the statistics to deal with: HUL has nearly 80 per cent of sales and 85 per
cent of net profits from the home and personal care businesses. Globally,
Unilever derives half its revenues from food business. HUL does not have a
strong position in the food business in India though the food processing
industry remains quite attractive both in terms of local consumption as well as
export markets. HUL’s own strategy of offering low-price, competitive products
may also suffer at the cost of Unilever’s emphasis on premium priced, high end
products sold through modern outlets.
There are some
dark clouds on the horizon. HUL’s latest financials are not satisfactory. Net
profit is down, sales are sluggish, input costs have been rising and new food
products introduced in the market have yet to pick up. All this while, in one
market segment after another, a competitor pushes ahead. In a company of such a
big size and over-powering presence, these might still be minor events
developments in a long history that needs to be taken in stride. But,
pessimistically, they could also be pointers to what may come.
Questions:
1.
State the strategy of Hindustan Unilever in your own
words.
2.
At what different levels is strategy formulated in HUL?
3.
Comment on the strategic decision-making at HUL.
4.
Give your opinion on whether the shift in strategic
decision-making from India to Unilever’s headquarters could prove to be
advantageous to HUL or not.
CASE: 2 THE STRATEGIC
ASPIRATIONS OF THE RESERVE BANK OF INDIA
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI)
is India’s central bank or ‘the bank of the bankers’. It was established on
April 1, 1935 in accordance with the provisions of the Reserve Bank of India
Act, 1935. The Central Office of the RBI, initially set up at Kolkata, is at
Mumbai. The RBI is fully owned by the Government of India.
The history of
RBI is closely aligned with the economic and financial history of India. Most
central banks around the world were established around the beginning of the
twentieth century. The Bank was established on the basis of the Hilton Young
Commission. It began its operations by taking over from the Government the
functions so far being performed by the Controller of Currency and from the
Imperial Bank of India, the management of Government accounts and public debt.
After independence, RBI gradually strengthened its institution-building
capabilities and evolved in terms of functions from central banking to that of
development. There have been several attempts at reorganisation, restructuring
and creation of specialised institutions to cater to emerging needs.
The Preamble
of the RBI describes its basic functions like this: ‘….to regulate the issue of
Bank Notes and keeping of reserves with a view to securing monetary stability
in India and generally to operate the currency and credit system of the country
to its advantage.’ The vision states that the RBI ‘….aims to be a leading
central bank with credible, transparent, proactive and contemporaneous policies
and seeks to be a catalyst for the emergence of a globally competitive
financial system that helps deliver a high quality of life to the people in the
country.’ The mission states that ‘RBI seeks to develop a sound and efficient
financial system with monetary stability conductive to balanced and sustained
growth of the Indian economy’. The corporate values of underlining the mission
statement include public interest, integrity, excellence, independence of views
and responsiveness and dynamism.
The three
areas in which objectives of the RBI can be stated are as below.
1.
Monetary policy objectives such as containing inflation
and promoting economic growth, management of foreign exchange reserves and
making currency available.
2.
Objectives set for managing financial sector
developments such as supervision of systems and information access and
assisting banking and financial institutions to become competitive globally.
3.
Organisational development objectives such as
development of economic research facilities, creating information system for
supporting economic decision-making, financial management and human resource
management.
Strategic
actions taken to realise the objectives fall under four categories:
1.
The thrust area of monetary policy formulation and
managing financial sector;
2.
Evolving the legal framework to support the thrust
area;
3.
Customer service for providing support and creation of
positive relationship; and
4.
Organisational support such as structure, systems,
human resource development and adoption of modern technology.
The major
functions performed by the RBI are:
·
Acting as the monetary authority
·
Acting as the regulator and supervisor of the
financial system
·
Discharging responsibilities as the manager of
foreign exchange
·
Issue currency
·
Play as developmental role
·
Related functions such as acting as the banker
to the government and scheduled banks
The management
of the RBI is the responsibility of the central board of directors headed by the
governor and consisting of deputy governors and other directors, all of whom
are appointed by the government. There are four local boards based at Chennai,
Kolkata, Mumbai and New Delhi. The day-to-day management of RBI is in the hands
of the executive directors, managers at various levels and the support staff.
There are about 22000 employees at RBI, working in 25 departments and training
colleges.
The RBI
identified its strengths and weaknesses as under.
·
Strengths
A large body of competent officers and staff; access to key data on the
economy; wide organisational network with 22 regional offices; established
infrastructure; ability to attract talent; and financial self sufficiency.
·
Weaknesses
Structural rigidity, lack of accountability and slow decision-making;
eroded specialist know-how; strong employee unions with rigid industrial
relations stance; surplus staff; and weak market intelligence.
Over the
years, the RBI has evolved in terms of structure and functions, in response to
the role assigned to it. There have been sweeping changes in the economic,
social and political environment. The RBI has had to respond to it even in the
absence of a systematic strategic plan. In 1992, the RBI, with the assistance
of a private consultancy firm, embarked on a massive strategic planning
exercise. The objective was to establish a roadmap to redefine RBI’s role and
to review internal organisational and managerial efficacy, address the changing
expectations from external stakeholders and reposition the bank in the global
context. The strategic planning exercise was buttressed by departmental
position papers and documents on various subjects such as technology, human
resources and environmental trends. The strategic plan of the RBI emerged with
four sections dealing with the statement of mission, objectives and policy, a
review of RBI’s strengths and weaknesses and strategic actions required with an
implementation plan. The strategic plan reiterates anticipation of evolving
external environment in the medium-term; revisiting strengths and weaknesses
(evaluation of capabilities); and doing away with the outdated mandates for
enhancing efficiency in operations in furtherance of best public interests. The
results of these efforts are likely to manifest in attaining a visible focus,
reinforced proficiency, realisation of shared sense of purpose, optimising
resource use and build-up of momentum to achieve goals.
Historically,
the RBI adopted the time-tested technique of responding to external environment
in a pragmatic manner and making piecemeal changes. The dilemma in adoption of
a comprehensive strategic plan was the risk of trading off the flexibility of
the pragmatic approach to creating rigidity imposed by a set model of planning.
Questions:
1.
Consider the vision and mission statements of the
Reserve Bank of India. Comment on the quality of both these statements.
2.
Should the RBI go for a systematic and comprehensive
strategic plan in place of its earlier pragmatic approach of responding to
environmental events as and when they occur? Why?
CASE: 3 THE
INTERNATIONALISATION OF KALYANI GROUP
The Kalyani Group is a large
family-business group of India, employing more than 10000 employees. It has
diverse businesses in engineering, steel, forgings, auto components,
non-conventional energy and specialty chemicals. The annual turnover of the
Group is over US$2.1 billion. The Group is known for its impressive
internationalisation achievements. It has nine manufacturing locations spread
over six countries. Over the years, it has established joint ventures with many
global companies such as ArvinMeritor, USA, Carpenter Technology Corporation,
USA, Hayes Lemmerz, USA and FAW Corporation, China.
The flagship
company of the Group is Bharat Forge Limited that is claimed to be the second
largest forging company in the world and the largest nationally, with about 80
per cent share in axle and engine components. The other major companies of the
Group are Kalyani Steels, Kalyani Carpenter Special Steels, Kalyani Lemmerz,
Automotive Axles, Kalyani Thermal Systems, BF Utilities, Hikal Limited,
Epicenter and Synise Technologies
The emphasis
on internationalisation is reflected in the vision statement of the Group where
two of the five points relate to the Group trying to be a world-class
organisation and achieving growth aggressively by accessing global markets. The
Group is led by Mr. B.N. Kalyani, who is considered to be the major force
behind the Group’s aggressive internationalisation drive. Mr. Kalyani joined
the Group in 1972 when it was a small-scale diesel engine component business.
The corporate
strategy of the Group is a combination of concentration of its core competence
in its business with efforts at building, nurturing and sustaining mutually
beneficial partnerships with alliance partners and customers. The value of
these partnerships essentially lies in collaborative product development with
the partners who are the original equipment manufacturers. The foreign partners
are not intended to provide expansion in capacity, but to enable the Kalyani
Group to extend its global marketing reach.
In achieving
its successful status, the Kalyani Group has followed the path of integration,
extending from the upstream steel making to downstream machining for auto
components such as crank-shafts, front axle beams, steering knuckles,
cam-shafts, connecting rods and rocker arms. In all these products, the Group
has tried to move up the value chain instead of providing just the raw
forgings. In the 1990s, it undertook a restructuring exercise to trim its
unrelated businesses such as television and video products and concentrate on
its core business of auto components.
Four factors
are supposed to have influenced the growth of the Group over the years. These
are mentioned below:
·
Focussing on core businesses to maximise growth
potential
·
Attaining aggressive cost savings
·
Expanding geographically to build global
capacity and establishing leading positions
·
Achieving external growth through acquisitions
The Group
companies are claimed to be positioned at either number one or two in their
respective businesses. For instance, the Group claims to be number one in
forging and machined components, axle aggregates, wheels and alloy steel. The
technology used by the Group in its mainline business of auto components and
other businesses, is claimed to be state-of-the-art. The Group invests in
forging technology to enhance efficiency, production quality and design
capabilities. The Group’s emphasis on technology can be gauged from the fact
that in the 1990s, it took the risky decision of investing Rs. 100 crore in the
then latest forging technology, when the total Group turnover was barely Rs.
230 crore. Information technology is applied for product development, reducing
production and product development time, supply-chain management and marketing
of products. The Group lays high emphasis on research and development for
providing engineering support, advanced metallurgical analysis and latest
testing equipment in tandem with its high-class manufacturing facilities.
Being a
top-driven group, the pattern of strategic decision-making within seems to be
entrepreneurial. There was an attempt to formulate a five-year strategic plan
in 1997, with the participation of the company executives. But no much is
mentioned in the business press about that collaborative strategic
decision-making after that.
Recent
strategic moves include Kalyani Steels, a Group company, entering into a joint
venture agreement in may 2007, with Gerdau S.A. Brazil for installation of
rolling mills. An attempt to move out of the mainstream forging business was
made when the Group strengthened its position in the prospective business of
wind energy through 100 per cent acquisition of RSBconsult GmbH (RSB) of
Germany. Prior to the acquisition, the Group was just a wind farm operator and
supplier of components.
Questions:
1.
What is the motive for internationalisation by the
Kalyani Group? Discuss.
2.
Which type of international strategy is Kalyani Group
adopting? Explain.
CASE 4: THE STORY OF SYNERGOS
UNFOLDS
Synergos is a young management
and strategy consulting firm based at Mumbai. It was established in 1992 at a
time when there were a lot of expectations among the industry people from the
liberalisation policies that were started the previous year by the Government
of India.
The consulting
firm is an entrepreneurial venture started by Urmish Patel, a dynamic person
who worked with a multinational consulting firm at the time. He left his
comfortable position there to venture into the management consultancy industry.
The motivation was to be ‘the master of his own destiny’ rather than being an
employee working for others. Urmish comes from an upper middle-class Gujarati
family, settled in a small town in Rajasthan. His father was a government
servant who retired with a meagre pension. His mother is a housewife. His other
siblings are all educated and well-settled in their respective careers and
professions. Urmish is a creative individual, uncomfortable with the
status-quo. During his student days at a college at Jaipur, he was continually
coming up with bright ideas that some of his friends found to be preposterous. To
him, however, these were perfectly achievable ideas. He studied biotechnology
and then went to the US on a scholarship to do his Masters. After a semester at
a well-known university there, he lost interest and switched to pursue an MBA.
He liked it and soon settled down to work with an American consultancy firm and
toured several countries on varied assignments during the seven years he worked
there.
In 1992 came
the urge to Urmish to chuck his job and be on his own. It was risky, yet an
exciting step to take. His accumulated capital was limited—just enough to rent
office space, buy a few computers and hire an assistant. There were no
consultancy assignments for the first three months. But an acquaintance soon
came to his aid, introducing him to the CFO of a major family business group
who needed advice on a performance improvement project they wanted to launch.
The opportunity came in handy though the returns were nothing to write home
about. That project was the first step to many more that came gradually.
Synergos started gaining presence in the competitive management consultancy
industry and attracting attention from the people whom they worked for.
Word-of-mouth publicity led them from one project to another for the first
three years till 1995. Synergos took up whatever came its way, delivering a
cost-effective solution to its clients. A team of four had formed by now, each
member of the team specialising in services rendered to the clients. For
instance, one of the members is a specialist in engineering projects, while
another has expertise finance. The third one is a service sector specialist, also
having experience in dealing with government matters.
The phase of
rapid growth started some time in 1995 when the Synergos team decided to focus
on the small and medium enterprises (SMEs). These were firms that realised they
had problems needing specialist advice, but were apprehensive to approach the
big firms on account of their limited outlay and inexperience of dealing with
such firms. Synergos came to their aid by tailoring their services as near as
possible to their needs. Another differentiation platform Synergos offered to
its client was a fully-integrated consultancy service where it got involved
right from the stage of planning down to its implementation and monitoring.
Presently,
Synergos has grown to be a medium-sized consultancy firm, serving clients in
India and abroad, working for industries ranging from auto components to
financial services and for manufacturing organisations to service providers.
Some-how, nearly half of the assignments it has worked on have been for
mid-sized, upcoming, family-owned businesses, a niche it has served well. These
organisations typically need a boutique sort of consultancy that can offer
customised services dealing with a broad range of practices related to
strategy, organisation design, mergers and acquisitions and operational matter
such as logistics and supply-chain management. Synergos fits in with their
requirements owing to its personalised service and reasonable commission
structure.
The
organisational structure at Synergos has a board at the top, consisting of
seven people, including the four founding members and three independent
directors. One of the independent directors is the chairman of the board.
Urmish, as the founder CEO, also heads an executive management committee with
each of the founding members, leading three other top-level committees dealing
with business portfolio, service management and executive recruitment.
The management
team is called the professional group. The rest of the employees are referred
to as the staff. The professional group has young women and men who are
graduates from some of the best institutions in India and abroad. They are
assigned to taskforces based on their qualifications, experience and interests.
The departmentation at Synergos is flexible, based on an interplay of the three
categories: skill, service and specialty. For instance, a professional may have
IT skills, may have worked to provide supply-chain management services and
developed expertise in handling operational assignments for medium-sized food
and beverage firms. There is a lot of multi-tasking however, to utilise the
wide range of skills and special expertise that the professionals have. For
administrative matters, the professionals are assigned to client-service
departments of industry solutions, enterprise solutions and technology
solutions. The flexibility that such an organisational arrangement affords
seems to have been the major reason for the evolution of the organisation
structure at Synergos over the years.
The staff
group of employees consists of the support people who provide a variety of
services to the professionals. Among these are research assistants, industry
analysts, documentation experts and secretarial staff. There is no set pattern
for assignment of staff to the administrative departments and generally, a
need-based approach is followed, depending on the workload at a particular
time.
Recruitment
for professionals is stringent. Synergos typically looks for a good combination
of education and experience and lays much emphasis on the compatibility of the
prospective employee with the shared values. Creativity, broad range of
professional interests, intellectual acumen, team-working and physical fitness
to undertake demanding tasks and work for long hours are the criteria for
hiring. There are not many training opportunities except the on-the-job
learning. New professionals are assigned to a mentor for some time till they
are ready to handle assignments autonomously. The staff members are usually
recruited from fresh graduates, with good degrees from reputed institutions, in
arts, sciences and commerce. The staff positions are also open for persons
wanting to work on part-time or project-bases. Emphasis is given to the ability
of the prospective staff to undertake multi-tasking and work with documentation
and word processing and presentation software packages.
The
compensation system consists of a base salary with commission and bonus
depending on performance. There are other usual elements such as medical
reimbursement, loan facility and gratuity and retirement benefits. the
performance appraisal is informal, with at least one of the four founding
members being part of the evaluation committee for a professional. Usually, the
founding member closest to the work area of the employee is involved in
determining the rewards to be given. The time-cycle for appraisal is one year.
Management control is discreet and performance-based rather than
behaviour-based. The means for control are informal, such as direct
supervision.
Urmish is a
strong proponent of the emergent strategy and is not in favour of tying
Synergos to a fixed strategic posture. So are the other founder members, though
at times they do talk about deciding on a niche such as SME organisations as
clients and enterprise solutions as the core competence. In the highly
fragmented consultancy industry where it is possible for even one person to set
up an office in a commercial area and leverage connections to secure projects,
Synergos is open to opportunities as they emerge, while trying to maintain the
flexibility that has made it successful till now.
Questions:
1.
Identify the type of organisation structure being used
at Synergos and explain how it works. What are the benefits of using this type
of structure? What are the pitfalls?
2.
Express your opinion about whether the structure is in
line with the recruitments of the strategy that Synergos is implementing.
3.
Based on the information related to the information,
control and reward systems available in the case, examine whether these systems
are appropriate for the type of strategy being implemented.
CASE: 5 EXERCISING STRATEGIC
AND OPERATIONAL CONTROLS AT iGATE GLOBAL SOLUTIONS
The Bangalore-based iGATE Global
Solutions is the flagship company of iGATE Corporation, a NASDAQ-listed
US-based corporation. Known earlier as Mascot Systems, it was set up in India
in 1993, to offer staffing services. It acquired business process outsourcing
(BPO) and contact centre businesses in 2003, making it an end-to-end IT and
ITES service provider. Its service portfolio includes consulting, IT services,
data analytics, enterprise systems, BPO/BSP, contact centre and infrastructure
management services. iGATE has over 100 active clients and centres based in Canada,
China, Malaysia, India, the UK and the US. Chairman, Ashok Trivedi and CEO
Phaneesh Murthy, an ex-Infosys IT professional and their partners hold a major
stake, with some participation by institutional and public investors. The
revenues for 2006-2007 are over Rs. 805 crore and net profits, Rs. 49.6 crore.
The corporate
strategies of iGATE are offering integrated IT services and divesting the
legacy IT staffing business and possibly making acquisitions in the domain
expertise for financial services businesses. The business strategy is focused
differentiation based on the focal points of testing, infrastructure management
and enterprise solutions. The competitive tactic is avoiding head-on
competition with the formidable larger players in the industry by carving out a
niche. The business definition is serving large customers and staying away from
sub-contracting work.
iGATE adopts a
differentiation business model based on an integrated technology and operations
model which it calls as the iTOPS model. This is an advancement over the
prevalent model in the ITES industry based on low-cost arbitrage model. iTOPS
is based on transaction-based pricing for services and supporting the clients
by providing the platform, processes and services.
The strategic
evaluation and control has both the elements of strategic as well as
operational controls.
The functional
and operational implementation is aimed at achieving four sets of objectives:
(a)
Shifting from small customers to large customer
(Fortune 1000 companies)
(b)
Shifting away from stocking to project-consulting
assignments
(c)
Working directly with clients rather than with system
integrators
(d)
Moving from a local to international markets
Some
illustrations of the performance indicators that reflect these objectives are:
1.
On-shore versus off-shore mix of business revenues: In
2004, this ratio was 55:45 and in 2007, it has improved to 27:73, indicating a
much higher revenue generation from off-shore business.
2.
Billing rates:
Revenue charged from clients on assignments. With project consulting
assignments from off-shore clients, where the revenues are typically higher,
with lower costs and higher productivity in India, the realisations from
billing have to be higher. The industry norms for ITES are US$18-25 per hour
for off-shore and US$ 55-65 per hour for on-shore assignments.
3.
The number of large clients from Fortune 1000
companies: Presently, iGATE has nearly half of its more than 100 clients from
Fortune 1000 companies, of which the top 10 account for 70 per cent of its
business.
4.
Controlling employee costs: This is an area where concerted effort is
required from the HR and finance functions. Hiring less experienced employees
lowers the compensation bill. In the IT and ITES industry, attracting and
retaining well-qualified and experienced employees is a critical success
factor. The performance indicator for this objective is the cost per employee.
5.
Human resource metrics such as the hiring and attrition
rates: In the IT and ITES industry, the human resource metrics such as hiring
and attrition rates are critical indicators. Increasing the number of employees
and lowering the attrition rate by retaining the employees is a big challenge.
There are presently about 5800 employees, likely to go up to 8500 in the next
two years. The attrition of 20 per cent presently at iGATE is on the higher
side. But such attrition is common in the industry where the employee mobility
is high and employee pinching a widespread trend.
The human resource management
function being critical in an industry where so many challenges exist, needs a
strong emphasis on training and development, motivation, autonomy and
attractive incentives. iGATE has an integrated people management model focusing
on developing technical, behavioural and leadership competencies. The three
metrics by which the HR function is assessed are: human capital index, work
culture and employee affective commitment. The reward system at iGATE consists
of meritorious employees across all levels being granted restricted stock
options, thus providing an incentive to remain with the company till they
become due. The company, though, is an average paymaster, which disadvantage it
tries to trade-off offering a more challenging work environment, quicker
promotions and chances for practising innovation.
Critics say
that that iGATE lacks the big-brand appeal of the larger players such as
Infosys and Wipro, cannot compete on scale and is still under the shadow of its
original business of body-shopping IT personnel.
Questions:
1.
Analyse the iGATE case to highlight how it could apply
some of the strategic controls such as premise control, implementation control,
strategic surveillance and special alert control.
2.
Analyse and describe the process of setting of
standards at iGATE.
3.
Give your opinion on the effectiveness of the role of
reward system in exercising HR performance management at iGATE and suggest what
improvements are possible, given the environmental conditions in the IT/ITES
industry in India at present.
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