Getting Started Exercises Q.1 Please share what you learned from the getting started exercises.? Plz, Do find the attachments as well.Capstone_Team_Member_Guide.pdf
Getting Started Exercises
Q.1 Please share what you learned from the getting started exercises.
Plz, Do find the attachments as well.
BUSINESS SIMULATIONS
USA & Canada 877.477.8787
Outside USA & Canada +1.312.477.7200
WWW.CAPSIM.COM
1 introduction …………………………………………………….. 1 1.1 The Industry Conditions Report …………………………….1 1.2 Management Tools ……………………………………………….1 1.3 Company Departments ……………………………………….. 2 1.4 Inter-Department Coordination …………………………… 3 1.5 Practice and Competition Rounds ………………………… 3 1.6 Company Success …………………………………………………3
2 industry conditions …………………………………… 3 2.1 Buying Criteria …………………………………………………….. 3 2.2 Buying Criteria by Segment …………………………………. 5
3 the customer survey score ……………………….. 5 3.1 Buying Criteria and the Customer Survey Score …………. 6 3.2 Estimating the Customer Survey Score …………………. 8 3.3 Stock Outs and Seller’s Market ……………………………..9
4 managing your company …………………………… 9 4.1 Research & Development (R&D) …………………………..10 4.2 Marketing …………………………………………………………..11 4.3 Production ………………………………………………………….13 4.4 Finance ……………………………………………………………….15
5 the capstone courier ……………………………….. 17 5.1 Front Page …………………………………………………………. 17 5.2 Stock & Bond Summaries …………………………………… 17 5.3 Financial Summary …………………………………………….. 17 5.4 Production Analysis …………………………………………….17 5.5 Segment Analysis Reports …………………………………..18 5.6 Market Share Report …………………………………………..19 5.7 Perceptual Map …………………………………………………. 19
5.8 Other Reports ……………………………………………………..19
6 proformas and annual reports…………………. 19 6.1 Balance Sheet …………………………………………………….. 19 6.2 Cash Flow Statement …………………………………………. 20 6.3 Income Statement ……………………………………………… 20
7 additional modules ………………………………….. 20 7.1 TQM/Sustainability …………………………………………….. 20 7.2 HR (Human Resources) ………………………………………. 20
8 plug-ins ……………………………………………………. 21
8.1 Making Decisions ………………………………………………. 21
9 situation analysis …………………………………….. 2110
forecasting ……………………………………………… 22 10.1 Basic Forecasting Method …………………………………. 22 10.2 Qualitative Assessment ……………………………………… 22 10.3 Forecasts, Proformas and the December 31 Cash Position ……………………………………………………… 23 10.4 Worst Case/Best Case ……………………………………….. 23
11 balanced scorecard ………………………………… 23
12 six basic strategies ……………………………….. 24 12.1 Broad Cost Leader …………………………………………….. 24 12.2 Broad Differentiator …………………………………………… 24 12.3 Niche Cost Leader (Low Technology) ………………….. 24 12.4 Niche Differentiator (High Technology) ………………. 24 12.5 Cost Leader with Product Lifecycle Focus …………… 24 12.6 Differentiator with Product Lifecycle Focus ………… 24
Most instructors include team Practice rounds. When the Practice is over, the simulation will restart from the beginning, using the unique model selected by your instructor.
When the Competition begins, your decisions count! Additional tasks could include:
» Optional Homework Assignments » Peer Evaluations
See your Dashboard for complete information.
Login with your User ID and Password at capsim.com. Click on Capstone. Go to Getting Started and follow the steps that include:
» Reviewing the Rehearsal Tutorial » Opening the Capstone
Spreadsheet » Forming your company
The Course Road Map
Getting Started
Practice Rounds (if applicable)
Competition Rounds (if applicable)
Your instructor might include a Comp-XM exam. Go to the Course Page and choose Comp-XM. Follow the instructions on the Dashboard which include: » Decision making
using the Comp-XM
Spreadsheet » Board Queries (quizzes)
Go to capsim.com/register, follow the onscreen instructions and register into your Industry.* Create your User ID and Password.
*Your instructor may have given you an Industry ID Number. If not, you can locate your industry by using your school name/campus and either the course section number, start date or your instructor’s initials.
Registration
Table of Contents
SUPPORT TICKETS:
If you need assistance, please submit a support ticket. Login at capsim.com, click Capstone, then in the left menu, select Help > Support. If you have problems registering, send an email to [email protected]
Team Member Guide
Management Tools
1
1 Introduction
Congratulations, you are now in charge of a multimillion dollar company. You manufacture sensors, which you market to other manufacturers. They put your products into the devices they sell. Your company was created when the government split a monopoly into identical competitors. As a monopoly, operating inefficiencies and poor product offerings were not addressed because:
• Increasing costs could be passed onto customers; and • Mediocre products would sell because customers had no
other choices.
Although last year’s financial results were decent, your products are getting old, your marketing efforts are falling short, your production lines need revamping and your financial management is almost nonexistent.
Competition in the post-monopoly era means you can no longer ignore these issues. If you do, competitors with better products and/ or lower prices will take your market share.
Sensors Are Everywhere…
Sensors are devices that observe physical conditions. For
example, the average cell phone contains dozens of sensors
that allow it to interpret touch, spatial orientation and
signal strength.
New sensor businesses are created every day in areas as
diverse as security, aeronautics and biomedical engineering.
You are in a business-to-business market, not a direct-to-
consumer market; the sensors your company manufactures
are incorporated into the products your customers sell.
1.1 The Industry Conditions Report
Each simulation industry is unique. As your simulation starts, the Industry Conditions Report, which is explained in Chapter 2, will outline the beginning business environment, including customer buying criteria.
The Industry Conditions Report is available from your
simulation Dashboard.
1.2 Management Tools
Here are the tools you need to run your company.
1.2.1 The Rehearsal Tutorial Think of the Rehearsal Tutorial as a driving school for the simulation. The tutorial will show you ways to steer the company, including how to:
• Invent and revise products; • Make marketing decisions; • Schedule production and buy/sell equipment; and • Ensure your company has the financial resources it needs for
the upcoming year.
The sample resources used for the Rehearsal, including its Capstone Courier (see below) and Industry Conditions Report, mirror those used in the actual simulation.
The Rehearsal is available from your simulation Dashboard.
1.2.2 The Capstone Courier Every round, you and your competitors will have access to an industry newsletter called the Capstone Courier. The Courier (described in Chapter 5) is an extensive year-end report of the sensor industry. It includes customer buying patterns, product positioning, public financial records and other information that will help you get ahead. In business, knowledge is power. If you want to evaluate your company’s performance or analyze your competitors, the Courier is the place to start.
Customer Survey Scores for each product (Chapter 3) can be found in the Courier’s Segment Analysis pages. These scores determine sales distribution. In general, the higher the score, the better the sales.
The Courier Reports “Last Year’s Results”
The Courier available at the start of Round 1 displays results
for Round 0, when all companies were equal just after the
monopoly’s breakup. The Courier available at the start of
Round 2 will display the results for Round 1. As the simulation
progresses and strategies are implemented, results among
the competing companies will begin to vary.
Company Departments
2
1.3 Company Departments
The Rehearsal Tutorial and Chapter 4 discuss company activities. You have four main departments or functional areas:
• Research & Development, or R&D • Marketing • Production • Finance
Many simulations utilize modules such as Human Resources and TQM (Total Quality Management)/Sustainability. Modules require additional management decisions. Your simulation Dashboard will tell you if any modules are included.
Companies use the Capstone Spreadsheet to enter departmental decisions.
1.3.1 Research & Development (R&D) Your R&D Department designs your product line. The department needs to invent and revise products that appeal to your customers’ changing needs.
1.3.2 Marketing Your Marketing Department prices and promotes your products. It interacts with your customers via its sales force and distribution system. Marketing is also responsible for sales forecasts.
1.3.3 Production Your Production Department determines how many units will be manufactured during the year. It is also responsible for buying and selling production lines.
1.3.4 Finance Your Finance Department makes sure your company has the financial resources it needs to run through the year. The department can raise money via one-year bank notes, 10-year bonds or stock issues.
The department can also issue stock dividends, buy back stock or retire bonds before their due dates.
1.3.5 Plug-ins Plug-ins are different than modules. Plug-ins and their decisions have a greater overall impact on your organization.
For example, the simulation might include the Ethics plug-in, which presents you with an unexpected dilemma. Group discussion and consensus is imperative because your decisions will affect your financial results.
Your simulation Dashboard will notify you if a plug-in has been scheduled.
The Courier is available from two locations:
• From the Capstone Spreadsheet, click Reports in the
menu bar; and
• On the website, log into your simulation and click the
Reports link.
1.2.3 The Situation Analysis Completing the Situation Analysis (described in Chapter 9) will enable you to understand current market conditions and how the industry will evolve in the next few years. It will assist you with your operational planning.
The Situation Analysis comes in two versions:
• Online interactive • Downloadable PDF (pen and paper)
The Situation Analysis is available from your
simulation Dashboard.
1.2.4 Proformas & Annual Reports Proformas and annual reports are specific to your company. Proformas are projections for the upcoming year. Annual reports are the results from the previous year.
The proformas will help you envision the impacts of your pending decisions and sales forecasts. The annual reports will help you analyze last year’s results.
Proformas are only available from the Capstone
Spreadsheet’s Proformas menu.
To access the annual reports:
• From the Capstone Spreadsheet, click Reports in the menu
bar; or
• On the website, log into your simulation then click the
Reports link.
1.2.5 The Capstone Spreadsheet The Capstone Spreadsheet is the nerve center of your company where you formulate and finalize management decisions for every department. The spreadsheet comes in two versions:
• A Web Version that allows you to work via any Internet browser; and
• An XLS Version that runs via Microsoft® Excel®.
After you log into your simulation, the spreadsheet is
available from the Decisions link.
1.2.6 Just in Time Information In the spreadsheet decision areas, look for the flag symbol shown to the right. Clicking it will give you detailed information about the area you are viewing.
Team Member Guide
Buying Criteria
3
to success! Companies compete for up to eight rounds, with each round simulating one year in the life of your company.
1.5.1 Decision Audits The Decision Audit is a complete trail of all team decisions. It will help you identify your decision-making strengths and weaknesses.
The audit is available from two locations:
• From the Capstone Spreadsheet, click Help in the menu
bar; or
• On the website, log into your simulation then click the
Decision Audit link.
1.6 Company Success
The board of directors, shareholders and other stakeholders expect you to make the company a market leader. Successful managers will:
• Analyze the market and its competing products; • Create and execute a strategy; and • Coordinate company activities.
Best of luck in running a profitable and sustainable company!
2 Industry Conditions
The information in your Industry Conditions Report will help you understand your customers.
Your customers fall into different groups, which are represented by market segments. Customers within a market segment have similar needs. The segments are named for the customer’s primary requirements such as:
• Traditional • Low End • High End • Performance • Size
The Industry Conditions Report lists market segment sales percentages and projected growth rates unique to your simulation.
The Industry Conditions Report is published once at the
beginning of the simulation. It is available from your
simulation Dashboard.
2.1 Buying Criteria
Customers within each market segment employ different standards as they evaluate products. They consider four buying criteria: Price, Age, MTBF (Mean Time Before Failure) and Positioning.
1.4 Inter-Department Coordination
1.4.1 R&D and Marketing
R&D works with Marketing to make sure products meet customer expectations.
1.4.2 R&D and Production R&D works with Production to ensure assembly lines are purchased for new products. If Production discontinues a product, it should notify R&D.
1.4.3 Marketing and Production Marketing works with Production to make sure manufacturing quantities are in line with forecasts. Marketing’s market growth projections also help Production determine appropriate levels of capacity. If Marketing decides to discontinue a product, it tells Production to sell the product’s production line.
1.4.4 Marketing and Finance Marketing works with Finance to project revenues for each product and to set the Accounts Receivable policy, which is the amount of time customers can take to pay for their purchases.
1.4.5 Finance and Production Production tells Finance if it needs money for additional equipment. If Finance cannot raise enough money, it can tell Production to scale back its requests or perhaps sell idle capacity.
1.4.6 Finance and All Departments The Finance Department acts as a watchdog over company expenditures. Finance should review Marketing and Production decisions. Finance should cross-check Marketing’s forecasts and pricing. Are forecasts too high or too low? Will customers be willing to pay the prices Marketing has set? Is Production manufacturing too many or too few units? Does Production need additional capacity? Has Production considered lowering labor costs by purchasing automation?
1.5 Practice and Competition Rounds
Practice Rounds allow you to organize workflow among the members of your company. You will begin to compete against the other companies in your simulation or, if you are in a Footrace competition, against a common set of computer-run companies.
Don’t confuse the Rehearsal Tutorial with the Practice
Rounds! During the Rehearsal Tutorial, you are shown how to
make decisions in a scripted environment. During the
Practice Rounds, you can experiment with your decisions in a
competitive environment.
After the conclusion of the Practice Rounds the simulation is reset and the real competition begins. Now it’s time to drive your company
Buying Criteria
4
2.1.5 Market Segment Positions on the Perceptual Map
Market segments have different positioning preferences. The Low End segment is satisfied with inexpensive products that are large in size and slow performing. It wants products that fall inside the upper-left set of dashed and solid circles in Figure 2.2. The High End segment wants products that are faster performing and smaller in size. It wants products that fall within the lower-right set of dashed and solid circles.
Over time, your customers expect products that are smaller and faster. This causes the segments to move or drift a little each month. As the years progress the locations of the circles significantly change. The example in Figure 2.3 shows the location of the market segments at the end of the fourth year. Figure 2.4 shows the segments at the end of the eighth year.
2.1.1 Price Each segment has different price expectations. One segment might want inexpensive products while another, seeking advanced technology, might be willing to pay higher prices.
2.1.2 Age Each segment has different age expectations, that is, the length of time since the product was invented or revised. One segment might want brand-new technology while another might prefer proven technology that has been in the market for a few years.
2.1.3 MTBF (Mean Time Before Failure) or Reliability MTBF (Mean Time Before Failure) is a rating of reliability measured in hours. Segments have different MTBF criteria. Some might prefer higher MTBF ratings while others are satisfied with lower ratings.
2.1.4 Positioning Sensors vary in their dimensions (size) and the speed/sensitivity with which they respond to changes in physical conditions (performance). Combining size and performance creates a product attribute called positioning.
The Perceptual Map
Positioning is such an important concept that marketers developed a tool to track the position of their products and those of their competitors. This tool is called a Perceptual Map.
Note the Perceptual Map in Figure 2.1. You will see this map quite often through the course of the simulation.
The map measures size on the vertical axis and performance on the horizontal axis. Each axis extends from 0 to 20 units. The arrow in Figure 2.1 points to a product called Able with a performance measurement of 8.0 and a size of 12.0.
Figure 2.1 The Perceptual Map Used in the Simulation: The Perceptual Map plots product size and performance characteristics.
Figure 2.2 Beginning Segment Positions: At the beginning of the simulation, segment positions are clustered in the upper-left portion of the perceptual map.
Figure 2.3 Segment Positions at the End of Year 4: The overlap between the seg- ments decreases because the Low End and Traditional segments move at slower speeds.
Figure 2.4 Segment Positions at the End of Year 8: The segments have moved to the lower right; very little overlap remains.
Example! See your Industry Conditions Report for exact segment locations.
A product with a
performance of 8
and a size of 12 is
positioned here
Team Member Guide
Buying Criteria by Segment
5
In the simulation, there are zero customers interested in
products positioned outside of the dashed circles.
Your R&D and Marketing Departments have to make sure your products keep up with changing customer preferences. To do this, R&D must reposition products, keeping them within the moving segment circles. See “4.1 Research & Development (R&D)” for more information.
2.2 Buying Criteria by Segment
Buyers in each segment place a different emphasis upon the four buying criteria. For example, some customers are more interested in price, while others are more interested in positioning.
Positioning and price criteria change every year. Age and
MTBF criteria always remain the same.
Buying Criteria for the previous year are reported in the Capstone Courier’s Segment Analysis pages. As you take over the company to make decisions for Round 1, your reports reflect customer expectations as of December 31, Round 0 (yesterday). The Industry Conditions Report displays the Round 0 buying criteria for each market segment. Here are two example segments.
Example 1: Customers seek proven products at a modest price.
• Age, 2 years– importance: 47% • Price, $20.00-$30.00– importance: 23% • Ideal Position, size 16.0/performance 4.0– importance: 21% • MTBF, 14,000-19,000– importance: 9%
Example 2: Customers seek cutting-edge technology in size/ performance and new designs.
• Ideal Position, size 11.1/performance 8.9– importance: 43% • Age, 0 years– importance: 29% • MTBF, 20,000-25,000– importance: 19% • Price, $30.00-$40.00– importance: 9%
3 The Customer Survey Score
In any month, a product’s demand is driven by its monthly customer survey score. Assuming it does not run out of inventory, a product with a higher score will outsell a product with a lower score.
Each year, some market segments demand greater improvement than others. Therefore segments drift at different rates. Segments demanding greater improvement will move faster and farther than others. As time goes by, the overlap between the segments diminishes.
Drift rates are published in the Industry Conditions Report.
Market segments will not move faster to catch up with products that are better than customer expectations. Customers will refuse to buy a product positioned outside the circles. Customers are only interested in products that satisfy their needs. This includes being within the circles on the Perceptual Map!
Perceptual Maps Can Be Used for
Many Types of Products…
Perceptual Maps can be used to plot any two product
characteristics. For example, cereal manufacturers could plot
nutrition and taste. The dots in the figure below represent
sales of breakfast cereals based on ratings of taste and
nutrition. There are few sales in the lower-left corner– not
many consumers want products that have poor taste and
poor nutrition.
As they review product sales, marketers would notice three
distinct clusters. The cluster to the upper left indicates a
group of customers that is more interested in nutrition than
taste. The cluster to the lower right indicates a group that is
more interested in taste than nutrition. The cluster to the
upper right indicates a group that wants both good taste and
good nutrition.
The clusters, or market segments, could then be named
“Taste,” “Nutrition” and “Taste/Nutrition.” The simulation uses
a similar positioning method to name its market segments.
Watch a video overview at: http://capsim.com/go/v/ccss
Buying Criteria and the Customer Survey Score
6
3.1.1 Positioning Score Marketers must understand both what customers want and their boundaries. In terms of a product’s size and performance (as discussed in “Section 2.1.5”), the Perceptual Map illustrates these ideas with circles. Each segment is described with a dashed outer circle, a solid inner circle and a dot we call the ideal spot (Figure 3.1).
Rough Cut Circle
The dashed outer circle defines the outer limit of the segment. Customers are saying, “I will NOT purchase a product outside this boundary.” We call the dashed circle the rough cut boundary because any product outside of it “fails the rough cut” and is dropped from consideration. Rough cut circles have a radius of 4.0 units.
Fine Cut Circle
The solid inner circle defines the heart of the segment. Customers prefer products within this circle. We call the inner circle the fine cut because products within it “make the fine cut.” Fine cut circles have a radius of 2.5 units.
Ideal Spot
The ideal spot is that point in the heart of the segment where, all other things being equal, demand is highest.
Segment Movement
Each segment moves across the Perceptual Map a little each month. In a perfect world your product would be positioned in front of the
Customer survey scores are calculated 12 times a year. The
December customer survey scores are reported in the
Capstone Courier’s Segment Analysis pages.
A customer survey score reflects how well a product meets its segment’s buying criteria. Company promotion, sales and accounts receivable policies also affect the survey score.
Scores are calculated once each month because a product’s age and positioning change a little each month. If during the year a product is revised by Research and Development, the product’s age, positioning and MTBF characteristics can change quite a bit. As a result, it is possible for a product with a very good December customer survey score to have had a much poorer score–and therefore poorer sales– in the months prior to an R&D revision.
Prices, set by Marketing at the beginning of the year, will not change during the year.
3.1 Buying Criteria and the Customer Survey Score
The customer survey starts by evaluating each product against the buying criteria. Next, these assessments are weighted by the criteria’s level of importance. For example, some segments assign a higher importance to positioning than others. A well-positioned product in a segment where positioning is important will have a greater overall impact on its survey score than a well-positioned product in a segment where positioning is not important.
The Industry Conditions Report and the Courier’s Market
Segment Analysis pages break down each segment’s criteria
in order of importance.
A perfect customer survey score of 100 requires that the product: Be posi
Collepals.com Plagiarism Free Papers
Are you looking for custom essay writing service or even dissertation writing services? Just request for our write my paper service, and we'll match you with the best essay writer in your subject! With an exceptional team of professional academic experts in a wide range of subjects, we can guarantee you an unrivaled quality of custom-written papers.
Get ZERO PLAGIARISM, HUMAN WRITTEN ESSAYS
Why Hire Collepals.com writers to do your paper?
Quality- We are experienced and have access to ample research materials.
We write plagiarism Free Content
Confidential- We never share or sell your personal information to third parties.
Support-Chat with us today! We are always waiting to answer all your questions.