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Starbucks Case - Skil Corporation

Autor:   •  September 22, 2011  •  Case Study  •  1,304 Words (6 Pages)  •  2,137 Views

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Skil Corporation

October 12, 2009

Team Member

XXXXX (gatekeeper)

Email: XXXXXXX@hotmail.com

XXXXXXX

Email: tXXXXX@hotmail.com

XXXXXX

Email: XXXXXXX@hotmail.com

XXXXXXXX

Email: XXXXXX@hotmail.com

XXXXXXX

Email: XXXXXXX@msn.com

Title: Skil

Industry

Industry Structure: Concentrated

Product Differentiation: Generic Product

Technological Change: Slow

Product/Service Technology: Professional buyers require high product/service technology

Consumer buyers required less product / service technology

Performance Grid:

Location: Global

Product Life Cycle: Mature

Porter’s Five Forces

1. Entry Barriers

Most Important

 Economies of Scale

The economies of scale are existed in the Portable Tool Industry. The component of the saw is very important in the production because the cost of machinery, die-casting and molding depend on the volume per part. Molding and die-casting can reduce cost by approximately 20% when comparing it to purchased components. This is very significant for the industrial tool since molding, machinery and die-casting accounts for about 39% of manufacturing cost and consumer tools about 10%. Also, automation has helped some foreign manufacturers to have additional cost reduction. The Lamination Press for example was heavily invested by some foreign manufacturers. The price for the Lamination Press ranges from $750,000 to $1 million and there were an additional $250,000 for each set of tooling. The presence of economies of scale is great for the existing players but on the other hand it set a high barrier for incoming players since it forces these players to come in on a large scale of production or they can expect to have a cost disadvantage.

 Brand Identity

Brand identity

...

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