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Digital Business: in The Digital Age
Digital Business: in The Digital Age
Digital Business: in The Digital Age
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Digital Business: in The Digital Age

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This book provides a holistic picture of the digital age as it emerges in the 2010s. On the background of business analysis concepts from firm to megatrends and all business sectors of the World, the digital age of information systems and digital drivers are thoroughly laid out.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateFeb 27, 2015
ISBN9788771454901
Digital Business: in The Digital Age
Author

Jens Christensen

Lektor, dr.phil. Jens Christensen ved Aarhus Universitet har gennem mange år arbejdet med det historiske og aktuelle samspil mellem forretning og teknologi i et både samfundsmæssigt og virksomhedsmæssigt perspektiv.

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    Digital Business - Jens Christensen

    Contents

    Abbreviations

    Chapter 1 Introduction

    Chapter 2 Business Analysis

    Business

    The Firm

    The Value Chain

    Sustained Competitive Advantage

    Functions of the Value Chain

    Manufacturing

    Procurement/Supply Chain

    Marketing and CRM

    Corporate Finance

    Human Resources

    Communications

    R & D

    Data Center

    Strategy

    Business Model

    The Organization

    Definition

    Importance of Organizations

    Organizational Design

    Organizations and IT

    Project Management

    The Industry

    Positioning

    Clusters

    Nations

    Stages of National Development

    Megatrends

    Globalization

    Digitization

    Biotechnology

    Nanotechnology

    Resources and Sustainability

    Economic Growth

    Demographic Change

    Urbanization

    Individualization

    Supplementary Methods

    PESTLE

    SWOT

    Four Corners

    Early Warning

    Case Studies

    Chapter 3 Business Sectors

    Business World

    Food

    Agriculture

    Food Industries

    Dairy Cluster

    Beverages

    Forest, Paper & Packaging

    Textiles, Clothing & Accessories

    Minerals and Metals

    Construction

    Energy

    Chemicals

    Healthcare, Pharma & Medical Equipment

    Personal Care

    Transportation

    Automotive

    Aircraft

    Shipyard

    Trains and Infrastructure

    Airline Passenger Service

    Freight

    Bicycle

    Wholesale

    Retail

    ICT

    Finance & Insurance

    Business Services

    Facility Services

    Tourism, Leisure, Entertainment & Media

    Military

    Police and Courts

    Social Care

    Education & Research

    Government

    Non-Governmental Organizations

    Crime

    Household and Family

    Chapter 4 Digital Systems

    IT Infrastructure

    Eras of IT Infrastructure

    Infrastructure Components

    New Hardware Platforms

    Networking

    Databases

    Business Intelligence

    Analytical Tools for Structured Data

    Analytical Tools for Unstructured Data

    Databases and the Web

    Enterprise Systems

    Core Business Processes and IT

    Information Systems of the Value Chain

    Enterprise Software

    Supply Chain Management Systems

    Customer Relationship Man. Systems

    Digital Strategy

    Chapter 5 Digital Drivers

    The Digital Age

    Mobile

    History of Mobile Technology and Usage

    Mobile in the Broad Electronic Picture

    Mobile Sector

    Mobile Enterprise

    Cloud Computing

    Social Media

    Social Media Industry

    Social Media in Organizations

    Competition in the Sharing Economy

    Big Data

    Accelerating Data Production and Traffic

    The Gap between Data Growth and Value

    The Internet of Things

    Smart Manufacturing

    Security

    Interface

    Gamification

    Games in the Value Chain

    Digital Business Models

    Ecosystem

    Social Media Business

    Freemium

    E-Commerce

    Chapter 6 Conclusions

    Index

    Abbreviations

    Chapter 1

    Introduction

    In the 1990s and 2000s, computers and the Internet became part of people’s work and daily life in developed and increasingly developing countries. This became even more so as were entered the 2010s. Digital technologies took hold of all devices and information processes. In our vocabulary, digital replaced information and communications technology and signaled a new transformation of societies. Digital economy became titles of books and research to capture a more profound change of the economy. Some even talked about the arrival of the digital age.

    In this context, we shall use the concepts of ‘digital business’ and ‘digital age’ to denote recent transformations. The prevailing economy of the world is a market economy or capitalism, which is based on the activities and competitiveness of businesses and their applied technologies. Although national governments are important and necessary for the economy as well as its organizations and people (such as, infrastructure, rights, and order), the wealth and values of society are created by companies. That is why we start by laying out the principles and drivers of business in the first part. In addition, we outline the subsectors of the global economy and their leading and consolidating companies. In the wake as well as the front of new technologies and economic drivers, we see thousands of innovative firms arise throughout the world. They are important characteristics of contemporary developments, but they cannot replace the dominant position of consolidated businesses. In order to remain leaders of their industries, they also tend to merge with the most advanced and successful start-ups. That is why big business form and continue to form the core of modern capitalism.

    The concept of ‘digital age’ is used to signal that we are entering a new age. Not only are digital technologies becoming ubiquitous, they are also making their way into the heart of business and social activities. In this context, we focus on how digital technologies are developing and transforming business in the contemporary world of the 2010s. In the second part of the book, we seek to present the nature and developments of new digital technologies which are increasingly affecting business. This includes the core enterprise systems as well as the rapidly new and influential mobile, cloud and social technologies and businesses. In addition, recent new trends of embedded systems in things are likely to rise in importance during the second half of the 2010s. That is the case with new interfaces and the use of games in business activities.

    Multiple sources are used in order to create a meaningful and holistic picture of contemporary developments. First of all, I draw on a general understanding of drivers and trends in global business and technology, as they have taken place in recent decades. Next, a palette of research in books and articles has been applied to lay out the details of business and new technologies. Finally, many kinds of market research, white papers, reports, and company websites are indispensable for an updated and practice near coverage of realities.

    Chapter 2

    Business Analysis

    Business

    Market economy is the primary driving force and contextual framework of all societies of the world. It is based on the relationship between firms that supply goods and services and firms and consumers that demand these goods and services. While firms and consumers choose products or services from the companies that meet their needs in the best way, firms compete to gain a profitable position by being the preferred supplier of these goods or services. Firms and markets are segmented in matters of product and geographic scope, and the business world is divided into numerous industries and markets. Understanding the dynamics and structure of business is based on fundamental concepts of competitiveness on the one hand and overall market trends that drive consumers and businesses on the other.

    Government and governmental agencies and institutions, the state, are not directly part of the market economy. Indirectly the state is based on the market economy through taxes. As current taxes and the use of tax funds represent a large proportion of national GDPs, they affect businesses and societies in many ways. It influences the way companies make investments and the level of salaries. By social payment transfers, it increases the purchasing power of unemployed and disabled people. The state invests in and supports functions such as military, security, police, justice, education and research as well as health and social care. Governments are heavily involved in infrastructure building, including roads, ports, airports, energy, sewers, and telecommunication. So, they are important customers for many sectors of the economy. Generally, the state affects business and firms by way of laws and regulations, securing property rights, standards, etc. Accordingly, there is a strong interrelationship between business and state, but business always comes first.

    In this context, we shall mainly focus on the private sector, because that is where the fundamental wealth and values are created and the drivers of society are working. Governmental organizations just exist in the wake of business and on the basis of taxes drawn from the value creating market economy. The firm is the core unit of business, and the crucial challenge to any business is to become and stay competitive in a dynamic business environment. In the following, we outline the rationale of the firm, the industry, and the broader context of clusters, nations, globalization and other megatrends. The purpose is to understand how a company develops and sustains a competitive advantage, focusing on its sources and drivers as well as the nature of these drivers. In addition, a whole section presents the various business sectors of the global economy.

    The Firm

    The Value Chain

    Competitive advantage results from the way firms organize and perform discrete activities.¹ Firms create value for their buyers through a unique organization of these activities. This value is measured by what buyers are willing to pay for a company’s products or services and how many buyers who are willing to do so. A firm is profitable if this value or income exceeds the total cost of performing all the required activities. A firm gains competitive advantage over its rivals, either by providing value more efficiently than its competitors (lower cost), or perform its activities in a way that creates greater buyer value at a premium price than its competitors (higher value).

    The Value Chain

    Source: www.wikpedia.org.

    The activities of any firm can be divided into a series of operations that might be called the value chain. Activities can be divided into two groups. One group might be named ‘primary activities’, which include supply, production, marketing and sales, and after-sale service, i.e., the actual production of products and services. Another group might be called ‘support activities’, which include the management and support of the primary activities and thereby the whole company, such as procurement, IT, HR, finance, R & D, communications and marketing, and overall strategy.

    Strategy determines the way a firm performs its activities and organizes its value chain. The activities’ importance to competitive advantage varies in different industries. In most production industries, for instance cars, technology is crucial as well as supplies. Service industries such as marketing and architecture depend in a higher degree on professional skills. Generally speaking, recent developments have clearly upgraded the importance of IT and strategy.

    The Value System

    Source: www.wikipedia.org.

    A firm is more than the sum of its activities. A firm’s value chain is a system or network of connected activities. The connection or linkage means that the way one activity is performed affects the cost or effectiveness of other activities. In order to achieve competitive advantage from such connections, they must be integrated according to its strategy. For instance just-in-time delivery without costly inventory requires careful coordination of supplies and sales. Competitive advantage arises from managing the value chain as a system. Improvement of a company’s competitive position is often the result of reconfiguring the value chain, for instance outsourcing of varies parts of the value chain in order to be able to focus more on the core competence. The task of strategy is to create a unique organization of the value system enabling the firm to provide unique values to its customers.

    A firm’s value chain is part of a larger stream of activities that may be termed the value system or more often called the supply chain. The supply chain includes suppliers of products and services, who provide inputs to the firm’s value chain, and distribution channels to reach end users. As a result of globalization and digitization, competitive advantage is increasingly depending on how a company can manage this entire and growing system and network of interrelated companies (see below, the section on globalization).

    Firms create competitive advantage by devising and marketing new and better ways of competing in an industry. This is what is meant by innovation. Innovation includes both improvements in technology and products as well as better ways of doing things. It might include product changes, process changes, new approaches to marketing, new forms of distribution, new markets. Much innovation is incremental, rather than radical. Incremental innovation depends more on organizational learning than from technological breakthroughs or R & D efforts. Incremental innovation is based on investments in skills and knowledge and other assets.

    Innovations often create competitive advantage that brings about changes in the strength of rivals in an industry, particularly if some firms fail to respond to new initiatives. For example Swiss watch producers overcame the challenge of electronic watches by upgrading design and specialized functions. New technology can even reconfigure an industry, as was the case with the advent of the smart phone. The most typical causes of innovations that shift competitive advantage are the so-called megatrends (see below, the section on R & D).

    Sustained Competitive Advantage

    It is vital for companies to make competitive advantage lasting. The sustainability of competitive advantage depends on three conditions. The first is the order of advantages. Lower-order advantages, such as cheap labor or materials, are relatively easy to imitate. In this case, companies primarily compete on costs, including low-cost countries or economies of scale using easily available technology. Cost advantages disappear, however, when undermined by even lower-cost labor countries and new technology.

    In contrast, higher-order advantages are more durable. They include for example unique products and services, brand reputation, and high barriers of entry for newcomers, based on advanced skills and capabilities. They make up the second condition. These higher-order advantages depend on history. I.e., they are the result of often many years of sustained investment and continuous development of core competences, located in specialized facilities and unique innovative knowledge capabilities. Unlike low-cost, such special and dynamic competencies are very difficult for competitors to copy.

    The third condition of sustained competitive advantage is constant improvement and upgrading. The source of this advantage is the mentioned higher-order core competencies, but such superiority might vanish if management rest on its laurels and continue to upgrade capabilities according to market developments. To do so, any company must be able to change and adapt to its business environment. In times of radical transformation as in recent years, this might require a ‘creative destruction’ of old advantages in order to carry out a needed upgrading of a company’s competitive advantage. Such change of strategy and business model is difficult, because a company’s strategy is embodied in its core competencies, including skills, specialized facilities, and brands. A general reorganization of businesses has taken place during the past couple of decades, eventually turning them into market oriented, flexible, and innovative organizations. As a result of rapid technological developments, this process is speeding up during the 2010s, causing much disruption and change of business models.

    Functions of the Value Chain

    Each function within the value chain is developing according to a combination of its basic purpose and the external dynamics of business and technology.

    Manufacturing

    Manufacturing has experienced two radical transformations in the past century.² The first and fundamental change came with the introduction and breakthrough of the so-called ‘American system’. It consisted of the following methods: standardized interchangeable parts, a high division of labor as a basis of the assembly line, mechanized and eventually automatic machine tools, electricity, mass production, and professional manufacturing management. In addition to this manufacturing system, all other parts of the value chain developed similar professionalized functions, creating the new management paradigm of a multifunctional organization.

    History of manufacturing systems

    This original American system dominated American manufacturing during most of the 20th century and spread from the USA to Western Europe, Japan and other advanced economies after the Second World War, and eventually to newly industrialized countries. Furthermore, the rationality of professionally managed functions diversified into governmental organizations, too, as the modern bureaucracy.³

    Since the 1960s and 1970s, electro-mechanical and computer-based tool-makers gradually entered production technologies. Single machines were combined into whole automated factories, so-called computer-aided manufacturing (CAM), and technical design, called computer-aided design (CAD), during the 1980s. This saved costs and labor, but it did little to really increase productivity.

    The true revolution of the original American system, or perhaps better its radical transformation, did not occur until the 1990s and beyond. This was the so-called ‘lean manufacturing’ system. It was a management philosophy derived from the Japanese ‘Toyota production system’ or Toyotism.⁴ Toyota and other Japanese manufacturers focused much on reducing waste. A key concept in Toyotism and Lean Management is the identification of which steps add value and which don’t. By classifying all process activities into these two categories, it is possible to start improving value creation and eliminating non-value activities. Wastes to be removed in order to realize lean management (and other similar methods, for example Six Sigma) include: overproduction, inventory, waiting (for the next step in a process), extra-processing (more work or higher quality than demanded), defects, motion (unnecessary movements by people), non-utilized talent, transportation (unnecessary movements of products and materials). A business process reengineering project was carried out to achieve the primary goals of heightened productivity.⁵

    All leading organizations of advanced economies and all companies striving for international competitiveness reorganized their business accordingly. In the end, all firms had to follow suit in order to survive. Lean management spread to all kinds of organizations, even governmental ones. Globalization of the economy and the liberalization of markets had created new business conditions characterized by rapid development and intensive competition. These changes called for organizational transformation.

    Four other dimensions were included in this radical business change. First, the organization should focus determinedly on its core competence and eventually outsource all non-strategically important activities. Second, the value chain as well as the supply chain must be coordinated in a continuous flow connected to the marketplace and focusing on customers, i.e., a demand-driven firm contrary to the supply driven organizations of the previous age. Third, IT and business had to be aligned. An adequate IT infrastructure and relevant software must be adapted to business strategy and integrated into the organizational infrastructure and value chain, taking advantage of new non-legacy technology and common standards. Otherwise neither higher productivity nor globalization could come true. Fourth, the organizational culture had to be changed. The traditional we-and-them contradiction between management and employees was incompatible with the new change management objectives. Everybody and all activities of the organization must focus on core competence and value creation, creating a new organizational culture.

    In this way, the radical change of manufacturing led the general transformation of business that took place in the 1990s and beyond.

    Operations management and IT

    Operations management is the more practical dimension of managing manufacturing. It is concerned with overseeing, designing, and controlling the process and costs of production and redesigning of business operations in the production of goods and services, i.e., manufacturing and the process that converts inputs (raw materials, components, labor, and energy) into outputs (goods and services).

    Historically, around 1900, operations management originated in large American corporations’ use of systematic analysis and measurement of work performance, materials, machines, and logistics.⁷ Plans were refined in the following decades with the spread of mass sourcing, mass production and mass distribution (material resource planning). During the Second World War, operations research was widely used to optimize production and logistics. The next step in the development of manufacturing management came with the rise of modern computer systems in the 1960s and beyond. Systems of material requirements planning for supply and master production schedule plans for manufacturing were developed by IBM on its mainframes, first separately and next integrated and run on a database management system. In the 1980s, these so-called MRP II-systems on mainframes emerged as tools for the integration of all aspects of the manufacturing process, including materials, finance, and labor, based on a centralized database. The technology of the 1980s, however, was not advanced enough to provide the speed and capacity to run these systems in real-time. Furthermore, high prices made them prohibitive for most businesses.

    The reorganization of the 1990s along with rapid advances in technology led to the more affordable enterprise systems that most companies of all sizes use today, i.e., Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP). Continuous advances in technology and the breakthrough of the Internet since the 2000s have made ERP systems increasingly advanced – and integrated with connected systems of suppliers (SCM) and customers (CRM). These systems do not deal with the proper manufacturing process, requiring more technical systems.

    One is embedded technology or system, i.e., dedicated or programmable computer systems in physical products such as machine tools, assembly lines, robots, transportation vehicles, medical equipment, durable goods, energy, etc.⁸ With the rapid spread of wireless sensors, people and companies are being able to measure, monitor and regulate more and more parts of the physical world, creating the so-called ‘Internet of things’ and the potentials of Augmented reality. While ERP systems are developed by software companies, embedded technology mostly is provided by industrial firms as crucial parts of their machinery products.

    The other technology in addition to ERP is Product lifecycle management (PLM).⁹ PLM is the process of managing the entire lifecycle of a product from inception, through engineering design and manufacture, to service and disposal of manufactured products. PLM managers the total lifecycle of companies’ products by integrating people, data, processes and business systems.

    A third system is ‘Manufacturing process management’ (MPM) and related systems.¹⁰ MPM is a collection of technologies and methods used to define how products are to be manufactured. MPM differs from MRP and ERP, which is applied to plan the ordering of materials and other resources, set manufacturing schedules, and compile cost data. MPM is used to make assembly lines more efficient with the aim of reducing lead time to product launch, shorter production times and reduced work in progress and inventories as well as allowing rapid response to product changes. MPM include several fields of technology and functions. Production process planning, or scheduling, is an information system that coves the planning and analysis of work flow and assembly. In manufacturing, the purpose of scheduling is to minimize the production time and costs, by telling a production facility when to make, with which staff, and on which equipment. Computer-aided manufacturing (CAM) is the use of computer software to control machine tools in manufacturing components or more generally, the use of a computer to assist in all operations of manufacturing plant (planning, management, transportation, and storage). CAM is a subsequent computer-aided process after computer-aided design (CAD).

    CAD is the use of computer systems to assist in the creation, modification, analysis, and optimization of a product design. It creates a database for manufacturing. CAD has seen radically technological advances and is used in many contexts and industries during recent decades, including rapid prototyping, 3D modeling, scanning, rendering, printing, simulating, and films animating. Leading suppliers of CAD systems are Autodesk, CATIA (Dessault Systèmes), and NX (Siemens PLM Software).

    In addition to CAM and CAD systems, Computer-aided engineering (CAE) systems have been developed for engineering analysis tasks. CAE is used to analyze, validate, simulate and optimize, for example, the robustness of components and assemblies, casting, fluid flows, the dynamic behavior of interconnected bodies, such as engines and aircraft, and safety in nuclear reactors. CAE systems are important supporters for design teams.

    Today, all these manufacturing-oriented systems are completely integrated as computer systems control the entire production process, creating computer-integrated manufacturing (CIM) and flexible manufacturing systems (FMS) as well as rapid manufacturing (using 3D printing).

    3D printing is various computer methods of making three-dimensional objects, where successive layers of material are laid down.¹¹ A 3D printer is a type of industrial robot. 3D printable models may be created with CAD or via a 3D scanner and even a digital camera. 3d scanning is a process of analyzing and collecting digital data on the shape of a real object. Based on this data, three-dimensional models of the scanned object can be produced. In the 2010s, 3D printing seems to move from an emerging to almost a mature technology, used in prototyping, design and manufacturing of objects based on polymer, metal, and other materials in industries such as, architecture, construction, automotive, aerospace, defense, medical, fashion, etc. Still an emerging technology, 3D printing will most likely have disruptive consequences, as it enters a more mature stage.

    Except for IT providers of ERP, PLM, CAD and other supporting systems, strategic embedded computer systems in all manufactured products and manufacturing plants are part of the core competences of industrial competences. I.e., producers of cars, airplanes, tractors, heavy machines, weapons, computers, and production plants, etc., also provide the crucial information systems to run the machines. As a result, the manufacturing sector and its technology and organizations form the core of all industrialized societies and include a huge number of industries and the leading corporations of the global economy, such as GM, GE, Ford, VW, Toyota, Boeing, Airbus, Lockheed, Caterpillar, Kawasaki, John Deere, Mitsubishi, IBM, GE, AT&T, etc. (see the section on business sectors below). The growing importance of software as well as data in manufacturing and after-service is starting a transformation process of these industries, as their focus move from physical objects to software and data, approaching the ICT sector, too.

    Procurement/Supply Chain

    Procurement is the acquisition of goods and services from external sources. Factors of cost-benefit, value, and risk are involved in procurement decisions. Procurement may be divided in two: direct procurement, which is production-related procurement, and indirect procurement, which is non-production related procurement. Today, direct procurement has been replaced by the concept of supply chain management (SCM).¹² SCM is the vital part of a firm’s relationships with suppliers, but it is more than this. While procurement more or less is considered a separate function originating in past organizational structures, SCM includes new business thinking and practice. A holistic and value creating perspective is applied to encompass all activities from raw material to consumption.

    SCM is the management of the flow of goods. It includes the movement and storage of raw materials, work-in-process inventory, and finished goods from point of origin to point of consumption. It is the object of SCM to create net value, build a competitive infrastructure, and synchronize supply with demand. The full vertically integrated supply chain with upstream suppliers and downstream customers began to spread in the 2000s and even more in the 2010s. Integrated supply chains are highly dependent on IT. It started with the development of electronic data interchange (EDI) in the 1990s, but real integration did not take-off until the spread of resource planning systems (ERP) across the internal value chain and the rise of the Internet, which enabled electronic interchange and integration beyond organizational boundaries.

    Except technological developments, what really triggered the breakthrough of SCM was the rise of globalization. Globalization was the result of liberalized international trade and reorganized companies in advanced economies, now focusing on their core competence and outsourcing non-core activities. Global sources were integrated into core competence, creating global supply chains that had to be controlled and managed as a whole. Suppliers, too, must control their own supply chain. Global supplier relationships depended on smooth and just-in-time delivery of raw materials and components.

    The era of primary vertical integration dominated the late 1990s and early 2000s. A new era emerged during the 2000s and is breaking through in the 2010s. Supply chains are increasingly being outsourced to specialized companies in the field, i.e., large transportation and logistics companies such as UPS, FedEx, Deutsche Bahn, DHL, and DSV, as well as ship container (Maersk, and others) and air cargo corporations (in addition to UPS and FedEx, all leading airlines).

    Collaborative platforms have enabled automatic information and money supply chains following the movement of physical goods, benefitting from Web 2.0 and the ability to share and collaborate among users. SCM 2.0 is combining processes and tools to manage through a growing complexity and speed of the supply chain in an increasing global competition with rapid price fluctuations, short product life cycles, and growing specialization. To realize the benefits of integrated activities and technologies, SCM has to be part of a totally integrated system.

    Marketing and CRM

    Marketing

    Marketing is all activities used to communicate the value of a product or service to customers, for the purpose of selling it.¹³ Marketing includes methods to target markets through market analysis and market segmentation, as well as understanding consumer behavior and advertising a product’s value to customers. Marketing is an applied social science, which increasingly makes use of IT. Until the 1990s, marketing was primarily a push activity, using all kinds over means to persuade the customer to buy a product. Since the 1970s, marketing gradually began to orient itself towards customer needs. This so-called pull perspective broke through in 1990s and has been predominant ever since.

    Customer orientation in marketing is not only prevailing and growing. With globalization and the digital revolution, marketing has become a holistic as well as an interactive activity. A broad and integrated approach is necessary. In doing so, marketing is taking advantage of two important developments among customers. One is the rapid and ubiquitous digitization of communication by way of the Internet and mobile devices, which makes people available everywhere at all times. Two is the breakthrough of social media as a widespread means of communication. As a result, the pull perspective of marketing has turned interactive and holistic in order to meet customers in their electronic environments. At the same time, customers’ social media activities have deposited huge numbers of personnel data that allow companies to streamline marketing more individually and precisely. By analyzing these so-called ‘big data’, businesses can more exactly create patterns of customer behavior and needs.

    The advertising industry is not only based on internal company marketing departments. Marketing campaigns and market research are largely run by a globally consolidated industry, which is led by WPP, Omnicom, Publicis, Interpublic, Dentsu, Havas, and Hakuhodo – placed in New York, London, Paris and Tokyo. They encompass hundreds of subsidiary agencies. Although challenged by the Internet and social media, creating new start-ups and convergence as well as customer demands, these large agencies have managed to keep their globally leading positions in the advertising industry. In the wake of these global leaders, nationally consolidated and innovative advertising agencies manage to reap part of the marketing market. Market research in certain technical and manufacturing fields are often dominated by specialized agencies, such as IDC, Gartner and Forrester Research in IT.

    CRM

    Computer-based marketing systems have been developed since the 1990s, based on shifting customer relations.¹⁴ As a result of the breakthrough of the Internet and new digital and mobile devices, what used to be a push activity has been turned into a pull driven relationship with customers.

    Customer relationship management (CRM) is a system for managing a company’s interactions with current and future customers. It involves using technology to organize, automate and synchronize sales, marketing, customer service, and technical support. CRM systems track and measure marketing campaigns over multiple networks. These systems can track by clicks and sales, record, store in databases, and then data mine the information in a way that increases customer relations. CRM is used in call centers, social media, direct mail, data storage files, banks, and customer data queries. By analyzing the interactions between a company and its customers (key performance indicators), CRM systems can be used to maximize sales and profits. CRM is primarily used in B2C relations, but may also be applied in B2B relations.

    In the 2010s, a true CRM system includes the use of Big data, i.e., the analysis and real-time use of millions of unstructured data being produced every minute on social media and other external media, which is not controlled by a company. As a result, the integration of CRM into organizational activities as well as the other major systems (CIM, SCM, and ERP) is no simple case, but might include organizational changes in order to benefit from these advanced customer relations and systems. Software market leaders are Salesforce.com, SAP, Oracle, and Microsoft. All are moving into cloud-based applications, which during the 2010 will be covering 90% of systems.

    Corporate Finance

    Corporate Finance

    Corporate finance is no longer just a matter of bookkeeping and budgeting. In a large corporation, the chief financial officer (CFO) is responsible for financial planning, record-keeping, accounting, investment, investors, cost and profit analysis of data, cash flow, budgeting, forecasting, funding, managing financial risks, and compliance across the entire operation and based on international and national standards.¹⁵ The CFO reports directly to the Chief executive officer (CEO) and assists the CEO in shaping the company’s strategy. Globalization and the financial crisis have increased the critical role of the CFO.

    Methods such as Economic value added (EVA) for profit measuring and Activity-Based Costing (ABC) developed since the 1990s to improve profit- and cost measuring.¹⁶ They have recently been supplemented by lean accounting methods to support lean management, focusing on value creation, while separating between value- and non-value creating activities. Balanced Scorecard (BS) is a more strategically oriented performance management tool. BS is measuring actual performance when a company’s strategy is implemented. It includes financial as well as non-financial data. BS’ measures are compared to a ‘target’ value. It is not a replacement for traditional financial and operational reports but a summary that captures the information most relevant to implementing the

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