subject
Business, 15.04.2021 15:00 pikachu20040

When most firms were struggling in 2008, Wal-Mart increased its revenues from $348 billion in 2007 to $378 billion in 2008. Wal-Mart’s net income increased too, from $11.2 billion to $12.7 billion—quite impressive. Fortune magazine in 2009 rated Wal-Mart as their 11th “Most Admired Company in the World” in terms of their management and performance. Wal-Mart Stores continues to expand internationally, particularly in emerging countries such as Brazil and India. From 2009 to 2013, Wal-Mart plans to devote percent of its international spending to emerging markets, up from 33 percent in the prior five years. The company plans include remodeling U. S. stores rather than adding new stores and going to smaller stores.

Wal-Mart’s capital expenditures in the year ending January 2010 were $5.3 billion, up from $4.8 billion the prior year. As electronics retailer Circuit City was declaring bankruptcy and liquidating in 2008, Wal-Mart was beefing up its electronics product line, directly attacking Best Buy. The two firms today are in a dogfight to obtain the millions of electronics products customers. Best Buy was Fortune’s 44th “Most Admired Company in the World” in 2009. Wal-Mart recently revamped the electronics departments in its 3,500 U. S. stores to make them much more interactive and roomier. The company wants all the business that Circuit City’s failure left and also wants all of Best Buy’s and Amazon’s business.

Wal-Mart now carries sophisticated electronics products such as Research in Motion Ltd.’s Blackberry smart phones, Palm Inc.’s Pre smart phone, and Blu-ray disc players. Wal-Mart in June 2009 began selling Dell Inc.’s new Studio One 19 touch-screen computers. Wal-Mart Stores is bigger than Europe’s Carrefour, Tesco, and Metro AG combined. It is the world’s number one retailer, with more than 7,870 stores, including about 890 discount stores, 2,970 combination discount and grocery stores (Wal-Mart Supercenters in the United States and ASDA in the United Kingdom), and 600 warehouse stores (Sam’s Club). About 55 percent of its Wal-Mart stores are in the United States, but the company continues expanding internationally; it is the number one retailer in Canada and Mexico and it has operations in Asia (where it owns a 95 percent stake in Japanese retailer SEIYU), Europe, and South America. Founder Sam Walton’s heirs own about 40 percent of Wal-Mart. Wal-Mart is a corporate leader in sustainability. The company in 2009 alone installed rooftop solar arrays on 20 stores and warehouses in California and Hawaii.

A Wal-Mart partner, BP Solar, installs, maintains, and owns these systems. Perhaps more importantly, Wal-Mart in July 2009 unveiled a new environmental labeling program that requires all its vendors to calculate and disclose the full environmental costs of making their products. All vendors must soon distill that information into Wal-Mart’s new labeling system, thus providing product environmental impact information to all Wal-Mart shoppers. This new Wal-Mart program may redefine the whole consumer products labeling process globally by the year 2012.

REQUIRED
Discuss any three qualitative factors that have contributed to Wal-Mart’s success. Illustrate your answer. (3mks)
If Wal-Mart were to set foot in Kenya, what three pieces of advice would you give them about Kenya’s business environment and why? (6mks)
Explain in what three ways the Internet has boosted Wal-Mart’s success. Vividly illustrate your answer. (6mks)
Critically evaluate Wal-Mart’s expansion strategy. Illustrate your answer.​

ansver
Answers: 1

Another question on Business

question
Business, 21.06.2019 21:30
Which of these things did galileo not do? a. stop publishing his scientific work after being convicted of heresy b. invent the concept of acceleration c. experiment with rolling balls down ramps of increasing steepness to test how objects would fall d. argue that earth moves around the sun e. make up a thought experiment that indicated that objects would fall at the same rate
Answers: 3
question
Business, 21.06.2019 21:30
Gino's restaurant is a popular restaurant in boston, massachusetts. the owner of the restaurant has been trying to better understand costs at the restaurant and has hired a student intern to conduct an activity-based costing study. the intern, in consultation with the owner, identified the following major activities: activity cost pool activity measure serving a party of diners number of parties served serving a diner number of diners served serving drinks number of drinks ordered some costs, such as the cost of cleaning the linens that cover the restaurant's tables, vary with the number of parties served. other costs, such as washing plates and glasses, depends on the number of diners served or the number of drinks served. data concerning these activities are shown below. serving a party serving a dinner serving drinks total total cost $47,600 $153,000 $59,800 $260,400 total activity 7,000 parties 30,000 diners 46,000 drinks prior to the activity-based costing study, the owner knew very little about the costs of the restaurant. she knew that the total cost for the month was $260,400 and that 30,000 diners had been served. therefore, the average cost per diner was $8.68.required: 1. compute the activity rates for each of the three activities 2. according to the activity-based costing system, what is the total cost of serving each of the following parties of diners? a. a party of four diners who ordered three drinks in total b. a party of two diners who do not order any drinks c. a lone diner who orders two drinks 3. convert the total costs you computed in part (1) above to costs per diner. in other words, what is the average cost per diner for serving each of the following parties: a. a party of four diners who order three drinks in total b. a party of two diner who do not order any drinks c. a lone diner who orders two drinks 4. why do the costs per diner for the three different parties differ from each other and from the overall average coast of $9.80 per diner?
Answers: 1
question
Business, 22.06.2019 03:50
Suppose that a worker in agland can produce either 10 units of organic grain or 2 units of incense per year, and a worker in zenland can produce either 5 units of organic grain or 15 units of incense per year. there are 20 workers in agland and 10 workers in zenland. currently the two countries do not trade. agland produces and consumes 100 units of grain and 20 units of incense per year. zenland produces and consumes 50 units of grain and no incense per year. if each country made the decision to specialize in producing the good in which it has a comparative advantage, then the combined yearly output of the two countries would increase by a. 30 units of grain and 100 units of incense. b. 30 units of grain and 150 units of incense. c. 50 units of grain and 90 units of incense. d. 50 units of grain and 130 units of ince
Answers: 1
question
Business, 22.06.2019 12:30
Suppose you win a small lottery and have the choice of two ways to be paid: you can accept the money in a lump sum or in a series of payments over time. if you pick the lump sum, you get $2,950 today. if you pick payments over time, you get three payments: $1,000 today, $1,000 1 year from today, and $1,000 2 years from today. 1) at an interest rate of 6% per year, the winner would be better off accepting the (lump sum / payments over time), since it has the greater present value. 2) at an interest rate of 9% per year, the winner would be better off accepting the (lump sum / payments over time), since it has the greater present value. 3) years after you win the lottery, a friend in another country calls to ask your advice. by wild coincidence, she has just won another lottery with the same payout schemes. she must make a quick decision about whether to collect her money under the lump sum or the payments over time. what is the best advice to give your friend? a) the lump sum is always better. b) the payments over time are always better. c) it will depend on the interest rate; advise her to get a calculator. d) none of these answers is good advice.
Answers: 2
You know the right answer?
When most firms were struggling in 2008, Wal-Mart increased its revenues from $348 billion in 2007...
Questions
question
English, 22.11.2019 02:31
question
Mathematics, 22.11.2019 02:31
Questions on the website: 13722359