Nemours Principles of Management MGT 212 Nathan Butterbaugh December 2011 I. Purpose/Objective Through an in depth analysis of DuPont I plan on utilizing the principles and concepts studied throughout the textbook to break down the structure and provide a tangible valuation on how management works to stimulate the future growth of the company. With a tough several years embroiled in a downturned economy, a focus will be put on how DuPont has responded and
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2013 DuPont Case Study Introduction Tom Harris is the General Manager of DuPont, which is the major employer in their community. Big changes had taken place when the Orlon plant had closed down, but few changes had taken place. Projects such as getting rid of one operation and installing another was being seen as regular business so there was no change management rubric. The root problem/key issues facing DuPont are closing of the Orlon Plant without creating a change management rubric
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Department of Management Information Systems Group London School of Economics and Political Science Working Paper Series 150 Leslie Willcocks, David Feeny and Nancy Olson “The Feeny-Willcocks Governance Framework Revisited: Implementing Core IS Capabilities" October 2006 Department of Management Information Systems Group London School of Economics and Polical Science Houghton Street London WC2A 2AE telephone +4 4 (0)20 7 955 7655 fax +44 (0 )20 7 955 7385 e-mail is@ lse.ac.uk home page
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Introduction The root problem/key issues facing Dupont are closing of the Orlon Plant without creating a change management rubric that would frame the changes being made. Management did not meet with the employees to obtain feedback as to how the changes would affect them and causing management to miss the language and culture already established by its workers. Case Questions 1. To what extent are the following approaches to change embedded in the DuPont story (justify your answer, provide specific
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to drive sustainable business growth. Conoco is not satisfied until it succeeds in eliminating all injuries, occupational illnesses, unsafe practices and incidents of environmental harm from their activities. Solution In 1998, with the help of DuPont, the goal of zero incidents became reality for the 425 employees of ConocoPhillips Limited in the U.K. Not only had there been zero lost-time incidents, but zero days of restricted activity and zero medical treatment cases. In other words, the
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Change at DuPont The case of Change at DuPont did not involve a particular problematic scenario. Change was constant at the plant and it was part of doing business hence the lack of change management as a rubric. More change was anticipated regardless of any formal change management practices. In order to guide the anticipated changes, the plant manager, Tom, was seeking new business insights from the academic community. Tom’s main focus was to educate managers on new ideas to apply them for further
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INDIAN INSTITUTE OF MANAGEMENT CALCUTTA BEHAVIOURAL SCIENCE II (BS-102) (PGP-1 Compulsory Course) Term 2 – (September 16, 2013 – November 2, 2013) Instructors |Prof. Vidyanand Jha |Prof. Nimruji Prasad | |E 206, New Teaching Block |K 402, New Academic Block | |Ext: 519 |Ext:
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MAKING ENTERPRISE RISK MANAGEMENT PAY OFF Thomas L. Barton William G. Shenkir Paul L. Walker Prentice Hall PTR One Lake Street Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458 www.phptr.com Editorial/Production Supervision: KATHLEEN M. CAREN Executive Editor: JIM BOYD Marketing Manager: BRYAN GAMBREL Manufacturing Manager: MAURA ZALDIVAR Cover Design: TALAR BOORUJY ©2002 Financial Executives Research Foundation, Inc. Published by Financial Times/Prentice Hall PTR Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River
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type of management and brought all of the companies into GM and expanded the organization. A CEO who reported to the new executive committee managed each corporate division. The next restructuring was to define the production of automobiles by quality and price point. There were many brands owned by GM and the need to appeal to targeted customers with various demands was made a priority. Product policy was enacted with each brand targeting a different consumer and GM solidified its management policy
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DuPont Performance Coatings Case By Jake Greenstein and Andrew Rubenstein October 28, 2015 Introduction In January 2012, Ellen Kullman, CEO and chairman of DuPont, had to decide on the future of DuPont Performance Coatings (“DPC”), a division of DuPont that produced paint for the auto and trucking industries. From the beginning of Kullman’s term as CEO in January 2009, she sought to transition the Company from an economically struggling commodity chemical business (with a 2009 stock price below
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