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Crisis, Resilience and Survival charts the evolution of the global
automotive industry, revealing the pressures and challenges facing
firms in this huge but turbulent realm of business. Long-term
overcapacity and swings of the economic cycle mean that many car
companies are in financially perilous positions. Yet failures of
auto companies are rare, and many have bounced back from the brink.
Using the concept of the 'survival envelope', Holweg and Oliver
argue that the ability to design, develop, manufacture and
distribute vehicles competitively is not the only factor in
ensuring success. Using detailed analyses of two failures (Rover
and Saab) and two near-misses (Chrysler and Nissan) they explore
how scale, market reach and supportive stakeholder relations can
make the difference between success and failure in this global
industry. This book will appeal to anyone working in, or studying
the auto industry, as well as those interested in corporate success
and failure.
The motivation for this book came out of a shared belief that what
passed as 'theory' in operations management (OM) was all too often
inadequate. In one respect, OM scholars were bending over backwards
to make theories from other fields fit our research problems. In
another, questionable assumptions were being used to apply
mathematics to OM problems. Neither proved a good match with what
the authors' had observed in practice. Successful operations were
managed by considerations that were far more straightforward than
much of what was being published. The authors of this book codify
these practical considerations into a set of ten fundamental
principles that bring together a century of operations management
thinking. The authors then apply these principles to important
topics such as process design, process improvement, the supply
chain, new product development, project management, environmental
sustainability, and the interfaces between operations management
and other business school disciplines.
Growing the UK auto supply chain is seen as an issue of the highest
priority by the Automotive Council. This 'sourcing roadmap'
provides and overview of current and prospective patterns in the UK
automotive industry. It serves and the empirical grounding for
determining and prioritising activities by the Automotive Council
to retain and build supply chain capabilities in the UK automotive
industry.
The motivation for this book came out of a shared belief that what
passed as 'theory' in operations management (OM) was all too often
inadequate. In one respect, OM scholars were bending over backwards
to make theories from other fields fit our research problems. In
another, questionable assumptions were being used to apply
mathematics to OM problems. Neither proved a good match with what
the authors' had observed in practice. Successful operations were
managed by considerations that were far more straightforward than
much of what was being published. The authors of this book codify
these practical considerations into a set of ten fundamental
principles that bring together a century of operations management
thinking. The authors then apply these principles to important
topics such as process design, process improvement, the supply
chain, new product development, project management, environmental
sustainability, and the interfaces between operations management
and other business school disciplines.
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