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What is impact investing

CEO of Qantas highlights that some private investors explicitly do not focus on financial returns but on social impact. This is called impact investing. 

Joyce writes on LinkedIn: It’s not a well-known term in Australia, perhaps because our economic prosperity makes it seem less relevant. But the impact investment market here is growing, targeting areas of social disadvantage that government funding alone can’t fix, from unemployment to homelessness. The point of difference is that an investment relationship requires much more sustained engagement between the investor and the business they’re supporting, compared with a one-off donation or grant.

Indigenous businesses have a particular interest in the potential for impact investment. The Forrest report found that Indigenous enterprises are 100 times more likely to employ Indigenous Australians than other businesses, so building the capacity of these enterprises is vital. Organisations like the CAPE Fund in Canada and Indigenous Business Australia show the way forward, and Qantas is playing a role through our Reconciliation Action Plan, partnerships with Career Trackers and Supply Nation, and backing for ventures such as the North Kimberley carbon offset project.

To read more about impact investing on the Inside Policy blog, click here, and to read John Simon’s landmark report, More than Money, click here.

Categories: Strategic Management 1 | Topics | Fundamental Objective |

Posted on Apr 10, 15

A Good Strategy is like a Good Story

Tan Story

andresse

In this context this quote by Jim March also is relevant: 

“Leadership involves plumbing as well as poetry.”

Categories: Strategic Management 1 | Topics | Communication | Strategic Management 4 |

Posted on Feb 21, 15

John Borghetti calls on the government not to pick winners in the Australian airline industry

Borghetti Interview

Categories: Strategic Management 1 | Topics | Communication | Strategic Management 4 | Update on Case Studies |

Posted on Feb 28, 14

Founders sell WhatsApp to Facebook: Motives not clear

The founders of Whatsapp were very clear that did not not what to sell advertisement through the messaging app.  (See their 2012 statement.They did not even want to collect data on their users.  So why did they sell themselves to Facebook, which is all about collecting more data on us to sell it to advertisers?  Here is a clue in their blog.  Maybe they were tired of having to manage a business rather than just design a product.

Categories: Strategic Management 1 | Topics | Fundamental Objective | Strategic Management 3 | Topics | Corporate Growth |

Posted on Feb 21, 14

Home Depot changes its strategy in China after failing to achieve its targets

Home Depot is not the first company to find out that the strategy that worked well back home does not work in a foreign country. Wal-Mart failed in Germany not realizing that the competitive landscape was different. Starbucks failed in Australia, closing most of its shops because the Australian consumer was used to much sophisticated coffee. The WSJ journal reports on the changes in the Home Depot China strategy after failing to implement the previous one successfully.

Home Depot Learns Chinese Prefer ‘Do-It-for-Me’
The largest U.S. home-improvement retailer, which entered China in 2006, has struggled to gain traction in a country where cheap labor has stunted the do-it-yourself ethos and apartment-based living leaves scarce demand for products like lumber.
Home Depot conceded that it misread the country’s appetite for do-it-yourself products. “The market trend says this is more of a do-it-for-me culture,” a Home Depot spokeswoman said of China.Home Depot is shaking up its strategy by focusing on specialty stores. Three months ago, it opened one paint-and-flooring store and one home-decorations outlet in the northern port city of Tianjin to cater to specific needs and shopping preferences shown by Chinese consumers, the spokeswoman said. It also plans to launch online operations with a Chinese partner, she said, without naming the company.

Home Depot debuted in China with a 12-store acquisition six years ago and the number has since dwindled as it found that Chinese consumers differ from their global counterparts. As Swedish furniture giant IKEA discovered, Chinese consumers will pay for people to do the work for them. Several years ago, the furniture store added services to help customers assemble their furniture.

Home Depot’s closures will cause the company to take a $160 million after-tax charge in the third quarter, a company statement said. The charge will be equal to about 10 cents per diluted share, and will include the impairment of goodwill and other assets, lease terminations, severance and other charges associated with closing the stores.

Full Story

Categories: Strategic Management 1 | Topics | Strategic Misfit | Strategic Management 4 | Topics | Turnarounds | Strategy Implementation - 782 | Topics | Positioning Strategy First |

Posted on Sep 15, 12

Deutsche Bank lowers ROE target from 25% to 12%

When a company has a very high financial targets, employees are encouraged to do everything possible to achieve it, which in turn may lead to an unwanted increase in the level of risk that the firm faces. As the FT.com reports, the new leadership of the Deutsche Bank determined that the target was to high. They may have felt that they needed to curb the risk taking in the bank.

Deutsche’s new co-chief executives are expected to make a decisive break with the decade-long era of Josef Ackermann, their predecessor, when they will drop a target of generating a 25 per cent pre-tax return on equity. At a strategy presentation in Frankfurt after 100 days in charge of the bank, Anshu Jain and Jürgen Fitschen are set to announce a “substantially lower return on equity target”, one person close to the situation said.High quality global journalism requires investment. They are also expected to unveil a strategy for much closer integration of the bank’s business lines, make significant changes to the bank’s bonus model and give more details on a plan to take out €3bn of costs.Analysts estimate that the new goal could be in the region of 12 to 13 per cent ROE after tax – a benchmark more commonly looked at by investors than the pre-tax figure.

Full Story on ft.com

Categories: Strategic Management 1 | Topics | Fundamental Objective | Strategy Implementation - 782 | Topics | Fundamental Objective |

Posted on Sep 11, 12

With 8.8% market share, Apple has 73% of cell phone profits

image

Full Story by Philip Elmer-Dewit

Categories: Strategic Management 1 | Topics | Market Segmentation | Strategy Implementation - 782 | Case Studies | Apple |

Posted on May 03, 12

Fundamental Objective of Cambridge University Press is not profits

Categories: Strategic Management 1 | Topics | Fundamental Objective | Strategy Implementation - 782 | Topics | Fundamental Objective |

Posted on Feb 27, 12

Fundamental Objective for Founder of HTC is making unique products rather than margin

Chou [CEO of HTC] said he cares more about making unique products than making good profit margins. He listens and acts quickly. Often, when Beats co-founder and music producer Jimmy Iovine calls with an idea, Chou will have sent off an e-mail about it before the conversation is over, Iovine said. Chou said he tests the music himself. A $300 million controlling stake in Beats Electronics LLC, the headphones maker backed by rapper Dr. Dre, was part of a strategy to lure music enthusiasts with a marketing plan that included bringing singer Lady Gaga to an Oct. 6 audio party in London to release the HTC Sensation XL, its first handset featuring Beats audio technology and headphones.

Source: Bloomberg BusinessWeek

Categories: Strategic Management 1 | Topics | Fundamental Objective | Strategy Implementation - 782 | Topics | Fundamental Objective |

Posted on Nov 10, 11

Funny Description of what the life of an entrepreneurs is like

Categories: Strategic Management 1 | Topics | Entrepreneurship |

Posted on Jun 27, 11

Short Introduction to the Strategic Management Year of the AGSM MBA (Executive) by Peter Murmann

Categories: Strategic Management 1 | Strategic Management 2 | Strategic Management 3 | Strategic Management 4 |

Posted on Sep 05, 10

Lehman Brothers’ did not Walk to Talk of its Mission Statement

BRW reports:  “Lehman Brothers’ mission statement nodded in all the right directions. It told employees and investors that

We are one firm, defined by our unwavering commitment to our clients, our shareholders, and each other. Our mission is to build unrivalled partnerships with, and value for, our clients, through knowledge, creativity, and dedication of our people, leading to superior returns to our shareholders.

However, the investment bank did exactly the opposite, gorging on low-quality mortgages and nearly felling the global financial system. Rather than ‘set and forget’,  [mission statements] should be part of a conversation between staff and management.”

(BRW August 26-October 6, 2010, p. 78)

Categories: Strategic Management 1 | Topics | Fundamental Objective | Communication | Strategy Implementation - 782 | Topics | Fundamental Objective |

Posted on Aug 29, 10

Apple with only 7% of Sales account today for 35% of Industry Profits

According to a Business Insider article, the banking giant has aggregated numbers from the top ten PC makers in the world and determined that, while Apple only commands 7 percent of overall revenues in the PC market, its products account for 35 percent of the operating profits. See Full Article.

Categories: Strategic Management 1 | Update on Case Studies | Strategy Implementation - 782 | Case Studies | Apple |

Posted on Mar 24, 10

Richard Branson’s Fundamental Objective

The Financial Times posed twenty questions to Richard Branson. Here are the two important ones that touch upon the idea of a fundamental objective.

How important is money?
My priority is learning and trying to improve the world – not being rich.

How do you want to be remembered?
That I have made a difference.

Read full interview.

Categories: Strategic Management 1 | Topics | Fundamental Objective | Strategy Implementation - 782 | Topics | Fundamental Objective |

Posted on Jan 09, 10

Duplicity

Rarely is a Hollywood movie such a great teaching instrument. Duplicity gives a wonderful picture of how far large companies go in figuring out what their competition is up to. What’s more, the principles of game theory are very well illustrated by Julia Roberts and Clive Owen, who make a wonderful pair. I recommend that every Strategic Management student watch this film.

Categories: Strategic Management 1 | Topics | Strategy Formulation | Strategic Management 4 | Topics | Decision Making |

Posted on Apr 02, 09

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