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ESMT Case Study

Corruption in Russia: IKEA's expansion to the East (B)

ESMT Case Study No. ESMT-716-0170-1
Urs Müller (2016)
Subject(s)
Ethics and social responsibility
Keyword(s)
Corporate social responsibility, business ethics, corruption in particular, governance and compliance, intercultural/cross-cultural management, cross-cultural ethics, challenges of internationalization/globalization
This four-part case series can be used to discuss business ethics, compliance/governance, integrity management, reacting to and preparing against corruption in the context of internationalization and allows to also briefly touching upon the issue of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). Case (A) describes a challenge IKEA was facing, while trying to enter Russia in 2000. The company was preparing to open its first flagship store on the outskirts of Moscow, only the first of several planned projects. After substantial investments in infrastructure and logistics, IKEA focused on marketing, but quickly faced a sudden complication. Its major ad campaign in the Moscow Metro with the slogan “[e]very 10th European was made in one of our beds” was labeled “tasteless”. IKEA had to stop the campaign because it “couldn’t prove” the claim. Soon Lennart Dahlgren, the first general manager of IKEA in Russia must have realized that the unsuccessful ad campaign was going to be the least of his problems: A few weeks before the planned opening, the local utility company decided not to provide their services for the store if IKEA did not pay a bribe. What should IKEA and Lennart Dahlgren do? Was there any alternative to playing the game the Russian way, and paying? The subsequent cases (B), (C), and (D) describe IKEA’s creative response to the challenges described in case (A), and then report about new challenges with alleged corruption within IKEA and in the legal environment, and finally raise the question whether IKEA can be considered to have a social responsibility to fight corruption on a societal level in order to build the platform for its own operation in Russia.
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ESMT Case Study

Corruption in Russia: IKEA's expansion to the East (C)

ESMT Case Study No. ESMT-716-0171-1
Urs Müller (2016)
Subject(s)
Ethics and social responsibility
Keyword(s)
Corporate social responsibility, business ethics, corruption in particular, governance and compliance, intercultural/cross-cultural management, cross-cultural ethics, challenges of internationalization/globalization
This four-part case series can be used to discuss business ethics, compliance/governance, integrity management, reacting to and preparing against corruption in the context of internationalization and allows to also briefly touching upon the issue of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). Case (A) describes a challenge IKEA was facing, while trying to enter Russia in 2000. The company was preparing to open its first flagship store on the outskirts of Moscow, only the first of several planned projects. After substantial investments in infrastructure and logistics, IKEA focused on marketing, but quickly faced a sudden complication. Its major ad campaign in the Moscow Metro with the slogan “[e]very 10th European was made in one of our beds” was labeled “tasteless”. IKEA had to stop the campaign because it “couldn’t prove” the claim. Soon Lennart Dahlgren, the first general manager of IKEA in Russia must have realized that the unsuccessful ad campaign was going to be the least of his problems: A few weeks before the planned opening, the local utility company decided not to provide their services for the store if IKEA did not pay a bribe. What should IKEA and Lennart Dahlgren do? Was there any alternative to playing the game the Russian way, and paying? The subsequent cases (B), (C), and (D) describe IKEA’s creative response to the challenges described in case (A), and then report about new challenges with alleged corruption within IKEA and in the legal environment, and finally raise the question whether IKEA can be considered to have a social responsibility to fight corruption on a societal level in order to build the platform for its own operation in Russia.
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ESMT Case Study

Corruption in Russia: IKEA's expansion to the East (D)

ESMT Case Study No. ESMT-716-0172-1
Urs Müller (2016)
Subject(s)
Ethics and social responsibility
Keyword(s)
Corporate social responsibility, business ethics, corruption in particular, governance and compliance, intercultural/cross-cultural management, cross-cultural ethics, challenges of internationalization/globalization
This four-part case series can be used to discuss business ethics, compliance/governance, integrity management, reacting to and preparing against corruption in the context of internationalization and allows to also briefly touching upon the issue of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). Case (A) describes a challenge IKEA was facing, while trying to enter Russia in 2000. The company was preparing to open its first flagship store on the outskirts of Moscow, only the first of several planned projects. After substantial investments in infrastructure and logistics, IKEA focused on marketing, but quickly faced a sudden complication. Its major ad campaign in the Moscow Metro with the slogan “[e]very 10th European was made in one of our beds” was labeled “tasteless”. IKEA had to stop the campaign because it “couldn’t prove” the claim. Soon Lennart Dahlgren, the first general manager of IKEA in Russia must have realized that the unsuccessful ad campaign was going to be the least of his problems: A few weeks before the planned opening, the local utility company decided not to provide their services for the store if IKEA did not pay a bribe. What should IKEA and Lennart Dahlgren do? Was there any alternative to playing the game the Russian way, and paying? The subsequent cases (B), (C), and (D) describe IKEA’s creative response to the challenges described in case (A), and then report about new challenges with alleged corruption within IKEA and in the legal environment, and finally raise the question whether IKEA can be considered to have a social responsibility to fight corruption on a societal level in order to build the platform for its own operation in Russia.
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Journal Article

Managing customer satisfaction better

The European Business Review May/June: 52–54
Johannes Habel (2016)
Subject(s)
Marketing
Keyword(s)
Market research, customer satisfaction, statistics
JEL Code(s)
M310
Journal Pages
52–54
Journal Article

Where do you begin with your (big) data initiative?

The European Business Review May/June: 19–25
Joe Peppard (2016)
Subject(s)
Technology, R&D management
Keyword(s)
Big data, knowledge creation, insight, information, IT, competitive advantage
Journal Pages
19–25
Working Paper

Institutional investors and corporate political activism

European Corporate Governance Institute (ECGI) - Finance Working Paper No. 470
Jörg Rocholl, Lei Zicheng, Rui A. Albuquerque, Chendi Zhang (2016)
Subject(s)
Economics, politics and business environment; Finance, accounting and corporate governance
Keyword(s)
Institutional Investors, Political Activism, Political Contributions, Political Connections, Citizens United
JEL Code(s)
G14, G30
The landmark decision by the U.S. Supreme Court on Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission asserts for the first time that corporations benefit from First Amendment protection regarding freedom of speech in the form of independent political expenditures, thus creating a new avenue for political activism. This paper studies how corporations adjusted their political activism in response to this ruling. The paper presents evidence consistent with the hypothesis that institutional investors, in particular public pension funds, have a preference for not using the new avenue for political activism, a preference not shared by other investors.
Pages
57
ESMT White Paper

Where did the Greek bailout money go?

ESMT White Paper No. WP-16-02
Jörg Rocholl, Axel Stahmer (2016)
Subject(s)
Economics, politics and business environment
Keyword(s)
Greek debt crisis, government debt crisis, European debt crisis, Greek bailout, Economic Adjustment Programme
JEL Code(s)
H50, H62, H81, H87
This paper provides a descriptive analysis of where the Greek bailout money went since 2010 and finds that, contrary to widely held beliefs, less than €10 billion or a fraction of less than 5% of the overall programme went to the Greek fiscal budget. In contrast, the vast majority of the money went to existing creditors in the form of debt repayments and interest payments. The resulting risk transfer from the private to the public sector and the subsequent risk transfer within the public sector from international organizations such as the ECB and the IMF to European rescue mechanisms such as the ESM still constitute the most important challenge for the goal to achieve a sustainable fiscal situation in Greece.
Pages
24
ISSN (Print)
1866–4016
Conference Proceeding

On the problems of realizing reliable and efficient ring oscillator PUFs on FPGAs

IEEE International Symposium on Hardware Oriented Security and Trust - HOST 2016
Alexander Wild, Georg T. Becker, Tim Güneysu (2016)
Subject(s)
Information technology and systems
Keyword(s)
Physical unclonable functions (PUFs), ring-oscillator, FPGA
Journal Article

United we stand or divided we stand? Strategic supplier alliances under order default risk

Management Science 62 (5): 1297–1315
Xiao Huang, Tamer Boyaci, Mehmet Gumus, Saibal Ray, Dan Zhang (2016)
Subject(s)
Management sciences, decision sciences and quantitative methods; Product and operations management
Keyword(s)
Cooperation, competition, supply risk, coalition stability, supplier alliances
We study the alliance formation strategy among suppliers in a framework with one downstream firm and n upstream suppliers. Each supplier faces an exogenous random shock that may result in an order default. Each of them also has access to a recourse fund that can mitigate this risk. The suppliers can share the fund resources within an alliance, but they need to equitably allocate the profits of the alliance among the partners. In this context, suppliers need to decide whether to join larger alliances that have better chances of order fulfillment or smaller ones that may grant them higher profit allocations. We first analytically characterize the exact coalition-proof Nash-stable coalition structures that would arise for symmetric complementary or substitutable suppliers. Our analysis reveals that it is the appeal of default risk mitigation, rather than competition reduction, that motivates cooperation. In general, a riskier and/or less fragmented supply base favors larger alliances, whereas substitutable suppliers and customer demands with lower pass-through rates result in smaller ones. We then characterize the stable coalition structures for an asymmetric supplier base. We establish that grand coalition is more stable when the supplier base is more homogeneous in terms of their risk levels, rather than divided among a few highly risky suppliers and other low-risk ones. Going one step further, our investigation of endogenous recourse fund levels for the suppliers demonstrates how financing costs affect suppliers’ investments in risk-reducing resources and, consequently, their coalition formation strategy. Last, we discuss model generalizations and show that, in general, our insights are quite robust.
© 2016 INFORMS
Volume
62
Journal Pages
1297–1315
Journal Article

CSR and the frontline context: How social programs improve customer service

GfK Marketing Intelligence Review 8 (1): 24–29
Daniel Korschun, CB Bhattacharya, Scott D. Swain (2016)
Subject(s)
Human resources management/organizational behavior
Keyword(s)
Corporate social responsibility, organizational identification, employee-customer identification, customer orientation, job performance
CSR activities such as charitable giving, environmental programs and ethical practices can motivate frontline employees. One of the key variables is organizational identification. CSR communicates values, and, if these values are consistent with a person’s own value system, it results in higher identification with the company. Employees who notice that consumers are fond of the company’s CSR activities will identify even more with the company. If CSR ranks high in their own personal value system and the value system of the consumer as well, they find common ground for conversations beyond immediate business talk. CSR can be an icebreaker in conversations with customers. Once service employees find out that customers share their passion for social or environmental causes, it creates a bond that is highly motivating. They become more confident that they know what the customers want. They are more motivated to serve those customers when they see that both of them care about the same sorts of things.
Volume
8
Journal Pages
24–29