¶ … company with which the author of this report is familiar. This report will be divided into several points of analysis including an executive summary, a general analysis of the corporate strategy of the selected firm, the formulation of a corporate strategy, the implementation of a corporate strategy and the conclusions and recommendations that the author of this report feels are appropriate given the company involved and its circumstances.
For the sake of privacy and trust, the author of this report will not mention the company in question by name. However, the author will say it is in the broader financial services sector and it does very well in the industry within which it operations. Even so, there are some things that the company has struggled with here and there including the management of employee workloads, overtime management, staffing management in general and the ways in which it does (and does not) contain costs. While the company is doing quite well the way they are but they could be even better.
Executive Summary
As noted in the introduction, the precise company will not be identified as there are some trust and privacy concerns involved. Even so, the author of this report shall be very specific about the company's corporate strategy and what could be done to improve and perfect that strategy. Indeed, there will also be an explanation of how to implement that strategy. The general corporate strategy of the firm in question is to keep costs low and value to the client as high as possible while doing so. Expenses are very carefully managed with the firm and this will be explained in more detail in the next section. There is a major focus on the value proposition between the company in question and their clients. The company caters to corporations and businesses rather than individuals. The businesses in question are of all sizes ranging from "mom and pop" establishments to large (if not very large) businesses. Many of the businesses this company serves are most certainly ones that some people have heard of. Most extremely large businesses handle the service in question on their own but the service in question is one that is heavily outsourced and the company in question is the biggest one as it relates to the service that they render. The company's rationale for its strategy is to deliver a high level of service to its employees and keeping a proper value proposition while at the same time keeping costs low and delivering shareholder value. The financial performance of the company has been extremely consistent and the company has never been in any sort of financial trouble. The "belt-tighten" when necessary but they never go overboard with their spending or expense levels. If anything, they spend a bit too little and this relates mostly to managing workloads and technology upgrades. There are indeed inefficiencies that can and should be dealt with and sometimes they are not. Additionally, there are problems with being too conservative on spending and decisions are sometimes made in an arbitrary fashion. The company's heart is in the right place but they need to be a little more precise and focused on what they do.
General Analysis of Corporate Strategy
The people that run the company in question are well aware that their general margins in terms of operating income and gross profit are not sky-high but they are not bad either. The industry in question is very much based on loyalty. Finding new business is the hardest part of the industry and thus it is a major priority to keep a client once they sign on. Indeed, the retention rates from year to year are usually about ninety percent. Even with the client focus, the other pillar of the way they do business is to keep costs as low as possible. For example, the company makes heavy use of home-based employees that work remotely. This is even true in cities and areas where they have a physical office. For example, the company had a location in a major metropolitan area. The company intentionally moved to a smaller location that was not large enough for the employee headcount they had at the prior location. They adjusted to this by having the excess employees work from home.
In many to most cases, unless a person is an executive or physically required on-site, the job is subject to be done by someone who works form home provided that they can be productive...
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