COURSE CODE: BCO311 COURSE NAME:GLOBAL BUSINESS Task brief & rubrics: Topics 1 to 8
Task: Final Assignment with a weighting of 100%.
Support Files: DNA MANAGEMENT GUIDE, MARKET CONDITIONS REPORT, GDNAAnnualReport
CAPSIM GLOBAL DNA
simulation will consist:
Individual report simulation called “Global DNA Report”,
without using CAPSIM USER INTERFACE.
1. 1. Following the template in the Global DNA MANAGEMENT GUIDE , MARKET CONDITIONS REPORT and GDNAAnnualReport as a general basis (see files), you should simulate
without using CAPSIM USER INTERFACE
, the launch of the
GENETIC DIAGNOSTIC TEST,
taking into account:
a. International Markets: America, Europe, Asia
b. Department: R&D, MARKETING, PRODUCTION, FINANCE
c. MAKING DECISIONS for all of them
d. Deploying the STRATEGY
e. Making Financial statements (P&L, Cash Flow Analysis, Balance Sheet) according to your decisions. Use GDNAAnnualReport file as a guide in order to make your forecasting analysis (next 3 years).
2. In this task you should use 4Ps, segments, plants, source of competitive advantage, international markets. Consider their product line from a “consumer reports” standpoint. Which strategy were applied for this product? Identify the main characteristics. Was it consistent or not? Was it in line with chosen segment? What could have been done differently?
Support Files: DNA MANAGEMENT GUIDE, MARKET CONDITIONS REPORT, GDNAAnnualReport
Formalities:
· Individual
· Format: Pdf Document, Wordcount: 6/8 pages
· Cover, Table of Contents, References and Appendix are excluded of the total wordcount. EU Business School standard cover page,
· Font: Arial 12,5 pts. Text alignment: Justified.
· The in-text References and the Bibliography have to be in Harvard’s citation style.
Submission:Via Moodle (Turnitin). Deadline XXX
Weight: This task is a 100% of your total grade for this subject.
It assesses the following learning outcomes:
· Outcomes> International Business Perspective, Culture, Global Marketplaces, International Trade, Mode of Entry Strategies, Channel Distribution, Incoterms, Supply Chain, Global Human Resources Management, CSR, Global Environment, Evaluating International Strategies, Global Innovation, Trade Pacts, Global Mkt and Mkt Channels Management, Foreign Exchange Exposure and Manage Global DNA MANAGEMENT GUIDE and MARKET CONDITIONS REPORT Templates
Rubrics
Exceptional 90-100
Good 80-89
Fair 70-79
Marginal fail 60-69
Knowledge & Understanding (15%)
Student demonstrates excellent understanding of key concepts and uses vocabulary in an entirely appropriate manner.
Student demonstrates good understanding of the task and mentions some relevant concepts and demonstrates use of the relevant vocabulary.
Student understands the task and provides minimum theory and/or some use of vocabulary.
Student understands the task and attempts to answer the question but does not mention key concepts or uses minimum amount of relevant vocabulary.
Application (35%)
Student applies fully relevant knowledge from the topics delivered in class and manage some critical International Business Strategies using Global DNA Simulator Template answering 4Ps, segments, plants, source of competitive advantage, which strategy were applied for this product identifying the main characteristics, segments consistency, differentiation and what went right or wrong.
Student applies mostly relevant knowledge from the topics delivered in class and manage some critical International Business Strategies using Global DNA Simulator Template answering 4Ps, segments, plants, source of competitive advantage, which strategy were applied for this product identifying the main characteristics, segments consistency, differentiation and what went right or wrong.
Student applies some relevant knowledge from the topics delivered in class. Misunderstanding may be evident in some critical International Business Strategies using Global DNA Simulator Template answering 4Ps, segments, plants, source of competitive advantage, which strategy were applied for this product identifying the main characteristics, segments consistency, differentiation and what went right or wrong.
Student applies little relevant knowledge from the topics delivered in class. Misunderstands are evident in some critical International Business Strategies using Global DNA Simulator Template answering 4Ps, segments, plants, source of competitive advantage, which strategy were applied for this product identifying the main characteristics, segments consistency, differentiation and what went right or wrong.
Critical Thinking (40%)
Student make and excellent, fully relevant critically exploration of CSR, Global Business Mode of Entry Strategies in some countries and brands, drawing outstanding conclusions from relevant authors.
Student critically explore CSR, Global Business Mode of Entry Strategies in some countries and brands assesses in good ways, drawing conclusions from relevant authors and references.
Student provides some insights but stays on the surface of the topic. References may not be relevant.
Student makes little or none critical thinking insights, does not quote appropriate authors, and does not provide valid sources.
Communication (20%)
Student communicates their ideas extremely clearly and concisely, respecting word count, grammar and spellcheck
Student communicates their ideas clearly and concisely, respecting word count, grammar and spellcheck
Student communicates their ideas with some clarity and concision. It may be slightly over or under the wordcount limit. Some misspelling errors may be evident.
Student communicates their ideas in a somewhat unclear and unconcise way. Does not reach or does exceed wordcount excessively and misspelling errors are evident.
MARKET
CONDITIONS
REPORT
Unforgettable Business Learning
®
Perceptual Map
Each market segment has different
positioning preferences. This is illustrated
by the sets of dashed and solid circles
in the graphic below. Over time, these
preferences will shift (see Page 11 of the
Manager’s Guide for more information).
Your company manufactures genetic testing devices.
Your customers fall into two groups, which are called
market segments. A market segment is a group of
customers who have similar needs. The segments
are named for the customer’s primary requirements:
Budget and Performance.
In addition to operating in the Americas, your
company will now have the opportunity to
compete in two additional global markets:
Europe and Asia Pacific.
Customers within each market segment employ
different standards as they evaluate sensors.
They consider four buying criteria:
+ Price
+ Age
+ Positioning
+ Service Life
To the right is an illustration of the
perceptual map from the end of Round 0.
You’ll notice the fine cut, rough cut and
ideal spots for your product to be located.
1. POSITIONING
1
MARKET
CONDITIONS
REPORT
Jan 1st 2017 Jan 1st 2018 Jan 1st 2019
Drift Rates
Each year, the segments drift up and
to the right, resembling the customers’
preference for faster and more accurate
products. In each year of the simulation,
customers will demand that products
move by the following:
Segment Centers
The information in the table below reflects
the segment centers at the end of the round.
Therefore, the Round 0 positions can be seen
as the Round 1 starting positions, and so on.
Each month during the simulation year, the
segment drifts 1/12th of the distance from the
starting position to the ending position.
SPEED ACCURACY
SPEED ACCURACY SPEED ACCURACY
BUDGET
BUDGET
ROUND
PERFORMANCE
PERFORMANCE
+0.5
4.8
5.3
5.8
6.3
6.8
7.3
7.8
8.3
8.8
4.8
5.3
5.8
6.3
6.8
7.3
7.8
8.3
8.8
6.0
6.7
7.4
8.1
8.8
9.5
10.2
10.9
11.6
6.0
6.7
7.4
8.1
8.8
9.5
10.2
10.9
11.6
+0.7
+0.5
+0.7
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
2
POSITIONING
Segment Sizes by Region
At the beginning of the simulation, more units in
the Budget segment are sold than the Performance
segment. With the industry moving to a more global
market, projected demand across the three regions
at the end of Round 0 is growing. Below is the total
number of units demanded during Round 0.
IDEAL SPOTS
ACCURACYSPEED
BUDGET
PERFORMANCE
+0.0
+1.4
+0.0
+1.4
2. SEGMENT SIZES & GROWTH RATES
EUROPE ASIA PACIFICAMERICAS
BUDGET
PERFORMANCE
5,838 1,994 553
3,195 697 216
Growth Rates
Over the course of the simulation, each
segment in each region will grow at a different
rate. However, each segment’s growth will stay
constant across the simulation.
EUROPE ASIA PACIFICAMERICAS
BUDGET
PERFORMANCE
6% 18% 43%
13% 31% 49%
The information in the table above shows the
Ideal Spot “offsets,” or how far away the ideal
spot is from the segment center. Remember the
ideal spot is different from the segment center
in the Performance market because customers
constantly demand faster, more accurate devices.
POSITIONING
3
SEGMENT SIZES & GROWTH RATES
ROUND
ROUND
5838
6188
6560
6953
7370
7813
8281
8778
9305
3195
3610
4080
4610
5209
5887
6652
7517
8494
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
1994
2353
2776
3276
3866
4562
5383
6352
7495
697
913
1196
1567
2053
2689
3523
4615
6045
553
791
1131
1617
2312
3307
4729
6762
9670
216
322
480
715
1065
1586
2364
3522
5247
SEGMENT SIZES OVER TIME
EUROPE ASIA PACIFICAMERICAS
GROWTH RATE
GROWTH RATE
6%
13%
18%
31%
43%
49%
4
BUDGET SEGMENT
EUROPE ASIA PACIFICAMERICAS
PERFORMANCE SEGMENT
3. PRICING ANALYSIS
Pricing has a large impact on margins, demand and overall
company performance. Each year, customers demand
cheaper products – at a rate of 0.50 per year. Reducing
price comes at a cost – margins. Over time you will need
to formulate a strategy of how you will reduce your cost
structure, or combat the price pressure from your customers
and competitors. Below are tables of the local price ranges
your customers will have for all eight rounds.
ROUND
ROUND
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
¤45.00
¤44.50
¤44.00
¤43.50
¤43.00
¤42.50
¤42.00
¤41.50
¤41.00
¤25.00
¤24.50
¤24.00
¤23.50
¤23.00
¤22.50
¤22.00
¤21.50
¤21.00
LOW HIGH
EUROPE (¤)
¤35.00
¤34.50
¤34.00
¤33.50
¤33.00
¤32.50
¤32.00
¤31.50
¤31.00
¤15.00
¤14.50
¤14.00
¤13.50
¤13.00
¤12.50
¤12.00
¤11.50
¤11.00
LOW HIGH
EUROPE (¤)
S$45.00
S$44.50
S$44.00
S$43.50
S$43.00
S$42.50
S$42.00
S$41.50
S$41.00
S$25.00
S$24.50
S$24.00
S$23.50
S$23.00
S$22.50
S$22.00
S$21.50
S$21.00
LOW HIGH
ASIA PACIFIC (S$)
S$35.00
S$34.50
S$34.00
S$33.50
S$33.00
S$32.50
S$32.00
S$31.50
S$31.00
S$15.00
S$14.50
S$14.00
S$13.50
S$13.00
S$12.50
S$12.00
S$11.50
S$11.00
LOW HIGH
ASIA PACIFIC (S$)
$45.00
$44.50
$44.00
$43.50
$43.00
$42.50
$42.00
$41.50
$41.00
$25.00
$24.50
$24.00
$23.50
$23.00
$22.50
$22.00
$21.50
$21.00
LOW HIGH
AMERICAS ($)
$35.00
$34.50
$34.00
$33.50
$33.00
$32.50
$32.00
$31.50
$31.00
$15.00
$14.50
$14.00
$13.50
$13.00
$12.50
$12.00
$11.50
$11.00
LOW HIGH
AMERICAS ($)
PERFORMANCE PRICE BY REGION
BUDGET PRICE BY REGION
5
4. BUYING CRITERIA
Americas – Budget Segment
+ Price, $15-$35 — importance: 55%
+ Age, 3 years — importance: 19%
+ Ideal Position — importance: 17%
+ Service Life, 14,000-20,000 — importance: 9%
Europe – Budget Segment
+ Price, ¤15-¤35 — importance: 50%
+ Ideal Position — importance: 21%
+ Age, 3 years — importance: 15%
+ Service Life, 14,000-20,000 — importance: 14%
Europe – Performance Segment
+ Ideal Position — importance: 43%
+ Age, 0 years — importance: 33%
+ Service Life, 17,000-23,000 — importance 16%
+ Price, ¤25-¤45 — importance: 8%
Asia Pacific – Budget Segment
+ Price, S$15-S$35 — importance: 60%
+ Ideal Position — importance: 14%
+ Service Life 14,000-20,000 — importance: 14%
+ Age, 3 years — importance: 12%
Asia Pacific – Performance Segment
+ Ideal Position — importance: 41%
+ Age, 0 years — importance: 28%
+ Service Life, 17,000-23,000 — importance 20%
+ Price, S$25-S$45 — importance: 11%
Each of the geographical regions has varying
operating costs. Users must take into account
currency exchange rates, shipping costs and tariffs
of each region before making final decisions.
Below is information from the end of last year.
5. REGIONAL OPERATING COSTS
Americas to Europe: $1 = ¤.90
Americas to Asia Pacific: $1 = S$1.25
Shipping Costs
To Europe: $3.00 per unit
To Asia Pacific: $2.50 per unit
6
Americas – Performance Segment
+ Ideal Position — importance: 39%
+ Age, 0 years — importance: 32%
+ Service Life, 17,000-23,000 — importance: 19%
+ Price, $25-$45 — importance: 10%
BUDGET SEGMENT PERFORMANCE SEGMENT
Tariffs
Europe – 4.5% per unit
Asia Pacific – None
Tax Rates
Americas – 35%
Europe – 32%
Asia Pacific – 25%
Prime Interest Rate – 7.0%
$3.00 per unit
AMERICAS EUROPE ASIA PACIFIC
$2.50 per unit
6. CURRENCY EXCHANGE RATES
Over the years, currency exchange rates adjust in
relation to your home currency, which is the American
dollar ($). These rates vary, and will move from year
to year.
Below, you’ll see the projected rates over the next
three years. Projections beyond that are unavailable,
but be sure to check each region of the Marketing
Department in the simulation or the Marketing
Segment pages (pgs. 8-13) of the Globe for the
current year’s exchange rate.
YEAR 0 – 2017
YEAR 1 – 2018
YEAR 2 – 2019
YEAR 3 – 2020
Currency Exchange Rates
7
¤0.90
¤0.95
¤0.95
¤1.05
EUROPE (¤)
S$1.20
S$1.25
S$1.20
S$1.10
ASIA PACIFIC (S$)
$1.00
$1.00
$1.00
$1.00
AMERICAS ($)
G131833 Page 1
Dec. 31 2021 Annual Report Round 0
Cash Flow Statement
Cash Flows From Operating
Activities 2015 2021
Net Income (Loss) $2,864
Adjustment For Non Cash Items
Depreciation $2,400
Extraordinary Gains/Losses/Writeoff $0
Changes in current assets and liabilities
Accounts Payable $777
Inventory ($1,681)
Accounts Receivable $3,164
Net Cash From Operations $7,525
Cash Flows From Investing Activities
Plant Improvements (Net) $0
Cash Flows From Financing Activities
Dividends Paid $0
Sales of Common Stock $0
Purchase of Common Stock $0
Cash from Long Term Debt Issued $0
Early Retirement of Long Term Debt $0
Retirement of Current Debt $0
Cash From Current Debt Borrowing $0
Cash From Emergency Loan $0
Net Cash From Financing Activities $0
Effect of Exchange Rate $0
Net Change In Cash Position $7,525
Starting Cash Position $0
Closing Cash Position $8,525
Net Income (Loss)
A company’s total earnings (or profit).
Adjustment For Non Cash Items
Any items that had a change in value but
no cash transaction associated.
Changes in current assets and liabilities
Cash basis for any unpaid supplier or
customer accounts, plus inventory value.
Net Cash From Operations
The activities involved in selling the
products to customers.
Cash Flows From Investing Activities
Net investment in long term company
investments such as plant improvements.
Cash Flows From Financing Activities
Issuance and repurchase of company
stocks and bonds, dividends paid and
current debt/emergency loans.
Net Cash From Financing Activities
Impact of exchange rate fluctuations on
cash from overseas operations.
Starting Cash Position
The company closing cash position
January 1st the previous year.
Closing Cash Position
The company closing cash position
December 31st the previous year.
Cash Flow Summary Closing Cash Position
G131833 Page 2
Dec. 31 2021 Annual Report Round 0
Balance Sheet
Assets Liabilities
2020 2021
Cash $0 $8,525
Accounts Receivable $0 $3,836
Inventory $0 $1,681
Total Current Assets $0 $14,042
Plant and Equipment $0 $36,000
Acc. Depreciation $0 ($12,000)
Total Fixed Assets $0 $24,000
Total Assets $0 $38,042
2020 2021
Account Payable $0 $2,777
Current Debt $0 $0
Long Term Debt $0 $13,200
Total Liabilities $0 $15,977
Common Stock $0 $5,808
Retained Earnings $0 $16,256
Total Equity $0 $22,064
Total Liabilities
Owners Equity $0 $38,042
Assets Definitions Liabilities Definitions
Cash Your end-of-year cash position.
Accounts Receivable
Reflects the lag between delivery and
payment of your products.
Inventory
The current value of your inventory across
all products. A zero indicates your company
stocked out
Total Current Assets
Cash and other resources that are expected
to turn to cash or to be used up within one
year of the balance sheet date
Plant and Equipment The current value of your plant.
Accumulated
Depreciation
The total accumulated depreciation from
your plant
Total Fixed Assets
Plant and Equipment value minus the
amount it has depreciated.
Total Assets Total value of ownership that can be
converted to a cash basis
Account Payable
What the company currently owes
suppliers for materials and services.
Current Debt
The debt the company is obligated to
pay during the next year of operations. It
includes emergency loans used to keep
your company solvent.
Long Term Debt
The company’s long term debt is in the
form of bonds, and this represents the
total value of your bonds.
Total Liabilities Total obligations of the company
Common Stock
The amount of capital invested by
shareholders in the company.
Retained Earnings
The profits that the company chose to
keep instead of paying to shareholders
as dividends.
Total Equity
The company’s total assets minus total
liabilities
Total Liabilities
Owners Equity
The aggregate of all debts the company
is liable for.
G131833 Page 3
Dec. 31 2021 Annual Report Round 0
Income Statement:Americas
Eat NA NA NA Total Industry Avg. Common
Sales $46,669 $0 $0 $0 $46,669 $46,669 100%
Variable Costs
Direct Labor $12,894 $0 $0 $0 $12,894 $12,894 28%
Direct Material $19,216 $0 $0 $0 $19,216 $19,216 41%
Shipping Cost $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 0%
Inventory Carry $202 $0 $0 $0 $202 $202 0%
Total Variable Costs $32,312 $0 $0 $0 $32,312 $32,312 69%
Contribution Margin $14,357 $0 $0 $0 $14,357 $14,357 31%
Period Costs
Depreciation $2,400 $0 $0 $0 $2,400 $2,400 5%
SG&A
R&D $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 0%
Promotions $2,000 $0 $0 $0 $2,000 $2,000 4%
Sales $3,000 $0 $0 $0 $3,000 $3,000 6%
Admin $744 $0 $0 $0 $744 $744 2%
Total Period $8,144 $0 $0 $0 $8,144 $8,144 17%
Net Margin $6,213 $0 $0 $0 $6,213 $6,213 13%
Other $0 $0 0%
EBIT $6,213 $6,213 13%
Interest (Short
& Long) $1,716 $1,716 4%
Taxes & Tariffs $1,574 $1,574 3%
Profit Sharing $58 $58 0%
Net Profit $2,864 $2,864 6%
Sales Unit sales times list price.
Variable Costs
Variable costs are those costs that vary depending
on a company’s production volume.
Contribution Margin
Unit price minus variable cost per unit. How much
each unit ‘contributes’ to the fixed costs of
running the company.
Period Costs
Selling and administrative expenses associated
with the accounting period (in this case one year).
Net Margin The portion of revenue that remains after fixed and
variable costs are accounted for.
Other
Charges not included in other categories such as Fees,
Write Offs, and TQM.
EBIT Earnings Before Interest and Taxes.
Interest (Short &
Long) EBIT minus interest, taxes, and profit sharing.
Taxes & Tariffs Income tax based upon a 35% tx rate.
Profit Sharing Profits shared with employees under the labor contract.
Net Profit EBIT minus interest, taxes, and profit sharing.
G131833 Page 4
Dec. 31 2021 Annual Report Round 0
Income Statement:Europe
Eat NA NA NA Total Industry Avg. Common
Sales $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 100%
Variable Costs
Direct Labor $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Direct Material $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Shipping Cost $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Inventory Carry $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Total Variable Costs $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Contribution Margin $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Period Costs
Depreciation $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
SG&A –
R&D $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Promotions $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Sales $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Admin $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Total Period $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Net Margin $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Other $0 $0 –
EBIT $0 $0 –
Interest (Short
& Long) $0 $0 –
Taxes & Tariffs $0 $0 –
Profit Sharing $0 $0 –
Net Profit $0 $0 –
G131833 Page 5
Dec. 31 2021 Annual Report Round 0
Income Statement:Asia Pacific
Eat NA NA NA Total Industry Avg. Common
Sales $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 100%
Variable Costs
Direct Labor $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Direct Material $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Shipping Cost $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Inventory Carry $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Total Variable Costs $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Contribution Margin $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Period Costs
Depreciation $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
SG&A –
R&D $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Promotions $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Sales $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Admin $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Total Period $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Net Margin $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 –
Other $0 $0 –
EBIT $0 $0 –
Interest (Short
& Long) $0 $0 –
Taxes & Tariffs $0 $0 –
Profit Sharing $0 $0 –
Net Profit $0 $0 –
Cash Flow Statement
Balance Sheet
Annual Report: Region – 1
Annual Report: Region – 2
Annual Report: Region – 3
1
MANAGER’S GUIDE
®
2
This booklet has been designed as both a quick start guide and
a reference manual. As we introduce you to each element in the
simulation, we’ll provide a short introduction to the interface,
followed by a deeper explanation of the tools you’ll use to run
your company.
This guide does not have to be read like a novel. It is important
to start with the Introduction to get an overview of the simulation,
but after that feel free to jump in and out of the material to find
the information you need, as you need it.
HOW TO USE THIS GUIDE
3
ORIENTATION ………………………… 4
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT ……. 8
USER INTERFACE ………………….. 13
DEPARTMENTS ……………………… 20
+ R&D…………………………………… 21
+ MARKETING …………………….. 29
+ PRODUCTION ………………….. 37
+ FINANCE ………………………….. 43
MAKING DECISIONS ……………… 49
STRATEGY ……………………………… 63
GLOSSARY …………………………….. 71
TABLE OF CONTENTS
EU
Sticky Note
NO
4
ORIENTATION
4
5
A business simulation creates an environment in which
you can apply business concepts, strategy, and tactics,
as you make a series of decisions that will directly
impact the financial well being of your simulated
company. It is your chance to run a whole company and
build your business acumen.
Capsim’s GlobalDNA is a multifaceted simulation that
will challenge you to think outside the ‘silos’ of individual
disciplines such as marketing, accounting, operations
and so on, and appreciate how each element of the
company’s operations interacts with one another.
The success of your company is dependent on your
ability to think strategically, learn from mistakes and
missteps (and if you don’t make any, you’re not trying
hard enough!), and enjoy the learning experience
knowing that nobody’s retirement portfolio will be
destroyed if your company fails!
The simulation offers two different modes: Practice
Rounds and Competition Rounds. Practice Rounds allow
you to become acquainted with the simulation interface,
saving and reports, and organize workflow with your
teammates. Once the Practice Rounds are completed,
the simulation is reset, and the real competition begins.
Companies compete for up to eight rounds, with each
round simulating one year in the life of your company.
WHAT IS A BUSINESS SIMULATION?
6
Your organization designs, develops, and sells genetic
testing devices to the medical industry. The company was
originally part of a much larger organization (MediCorp,
Inc.) with a virtual monopoly in the market. However, the
97% market share MediCorp enjoyed eventually drew the
attention of the Monopolies Commission.
The American Times summed up the Commission’s
findings and actions:
New Markets
MediCorp had adhered to a strict ‘no export’ strategy
based on the fragility of genetic testing devices and the
cost of replacing inaccurate or broken units. However,
today’s more robust technology means this is no longer
the case, and industry reports suggest that demand is
growing overseas. These markets have been touted,
by some commentators, as the future of the genetic
testing market.
COMPANY BACKGROUND
“Increasing pressure from hospitals, clinics and non-
profit organizations slowly began to turn the focus
of the Monopolies Commission towards MediCorp,
Inc. Although there was no suggestion of foul
play, the American Medical Board was concerned
that genetic research was being inadvertently
stifled. The Commission moved quickly to split
the conglomerate into six equal entities, who have
gone on to hire from a pool of talented young
executives and form a new Board of Directors for
each company.”
“Increasing pressure from hospitals, clinics
and non-profit organizations slowly began to
turn the focus of the Monopolies Commission
towards MediCorp, Inc. Although there was no
suggestion of foul play, the American Medical
Board was concerned that genetic research
findings were being inadvertently stifled.
The Commission moved quickly to split the
conglomerate into six equal entities, who have
gone on to hire from a pool of talented young
executives and form a new Board of Directors for
each company.”
The
Commission
moved quickly
MediCorp Inc. Splits into 6
7
Portable genetic diagnostic tests (genetic tests) are
used to quickly test for a range of medical conditions.
Diagnostic testing devices have a long history, going
back to the first medical thermometers. They evolved
to include devices that mechanically checked for vital
statistics, like blood pressure, or biochemical tests of
blood type or sugars. As time passed the “lab on a chip”
concept combined several diagnostic devices into one.
Your industry is on the cutting edge. You specialize
in portable genetic diagnostic tests. Your devices can
determine whether a particular gene, or combination
of genes, is present in the patient, and can even tell a
physician whether the gene is switched on or off.
They are useful in diagnosing diseases like cystic fibrosis,
Crohn’s disease, and certain types of cancer, as well
as determining risk profiles that help people avoid the
development of a disease towards which they might
be predisposed.
Your company manufactures these portable health test
kits. The devices are largely sold to hospitals, school
districts, and private paramedic service companies.
Your company competes directly with the other
companies in a zero sum market, which means
every sale you make is one your competitors lose.
Conversely, every sale your competitors make means
one less customer for you.
Your goal in the simulation is to outperform the
competition. A successful company will use the tools
available to analyze the market and implement a
dominant strategy. Additionally, your instructor may
set specific success measures such as: Share Price,
Return on Sales (ROS), and/or Net Profit.
WHAT IS A GENETIC
DIAGNOSTIC TEST?
WHAT ARE YOUR
COMPANY OBJECTIVES?
GENETIC DIAGNOSTIC TEST
ANDREWS
BALDWIN
CHESTER
DIGBY
ERIE
FERRIS
You will lead one of the following companies. You may
compete against up to 5 other companies led by your
peers, computers or both.
8
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
8
9
Within the simulation, there are three geographical zones:
Americas, Europe, and Asia Pacific. For the period of the
simulation, the following assumptions about the cultural
and economic landscape in each zone apply:
REGIONAL OUTLINES
Asia Pacific
This region includes emerging economies, constituting relatively
low income communities, increasing economic growth, and
significant demand for improved health care. The region
has a zero-tariff policy that makes it an attractive market
moving forward.
Europe
In GlobalDNA, Europe represents a highly developed,
technologically advanced and relatively high-income economic
region. It is experiencing steady economic growth that your
company hopes to capitalize on.
Americas
This is where your company is headquartered and managed.
In GlobalDNA, this region represents a mature economy with a
stable political environment. As the genetic diagnostic testing
industry is well established, the Americas are considered a
saturated market moving forward.
Currency – S$
Currency – €
Currency – $
10
WHAT IS A MARKET SEGMENT?
Do you know someone who must have the latest
gadget? Maybe someone who always buys a specific
brand, regardless of the price? Are you, on the other
hand, always looking for a bargain and don’t really
mind if it doesn’t have all the features of a more
expensive model?
Whatever your preferences, there are many other
buyers who share them. Buyers sharing similar
buying preferences are placed into clusters called
market segments, which you can see drawn below.
Companies will strategically place their products in
particular segments so they can better meet their
customers’ buying criteria.
MARKET SEGMENTS IN GlobalDNA
The genetic diagnostic test market has two clear
segments: Budget and Performance.
Budget Segment – Buyers are looking for a product that
is inexpensive but still fulfills their primary needs.
Performance Segment – Buyers in this segment are
looking for the most up-to-date, technologically
advanced products and don’t mind paying a premium
to get what they need.
There are, however, other criteria on which customers
also base their purchase decision. To see detailed buying
criteria for each segment, you will need to look at the
Industry Report, called The Globe, published at the end
of each simulation round.
MARKET SEGMENTS
MARKET SEGMENTS ARE
REPRESENTED AS CIRCLES
PERFORMANCE
BUDGET
11
Product positioning is such an important concept that
marketers developed a tool called a Perceptual Map to
track the position of their products. To the right, you can
see the Perceptual Map used at the start of GlobalDNA.
The GlobalDNA Perceptual Map measures Accuracy on
the vertical axis and Speed on the horizontal axis.
Each axis extends from 0 to 20 units.
Each market segment—Budget and Performance
discussed on the last page—is represented on the map
as a circle. The Budget segment in the lower left focuses
on price, first and foremost, and thus is satisfied with
products that are slower and less accurate.
Comparatively, the Performance segment to the upper
right demands faster, more accurate products, and
Performance customers are willing to pay a higher price
for them.
PERCEPTUAL MAP
For a more detailed explanation of perceptual maps, see the
R&D section starting on page 21.
1212
The market for genetic diagnostic test equipment is
expanding, but in each geographical region there are
different growth rates for each market segment.
These growth rates are specific to the industry, however,
and may not reflect the regional economy as a whole.
GROWTH RATES
For specific growth rates, see the Industry Tables
section on page 60.
Budget:Performance Ratios
3:12:1
Americas
Approximately 2:1
Budget:Performance,
for the foreseeable future.
Europe
Approximately 3:1
Budget:Performance
but trending toward Performance
in the next five to ten years.
Asia Pacific
Approximately 3:1
Budget:Performance
with further expansion of the
Budget market anticipated.
3:1
13
USER INTERFACE
13
14
The company homepage is the starting point for your
GlobalDNA experience each time you log in.
COMPANY HOMEPAGE
ARTICLE SLIDER
NEWSSTAND
DEPARTMENT QUICK LINKS
KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS
TOOLS
EXECUTIVE DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM6
MANAGER’S GUIDE7
15
ARTICLE SLIDER
Front and center, the photo slider of relevant
articles offers you additional resources to learn more
about business and the simulation. The rotating
stories offer insight into the simulation’s key points,
and will help you apply your business knowledge
to GlobalDNA. As you progress through the
rounds, these articles will change to reflect your
company’s development.
DEPARTMENT QUICK LINKS
To the right of the slider you will see the department
quick links, where you enter the simulation and
make decisions. Clicking a department will give
you the option of using your personal draft or
loading the saved file that contains the latest official
decisions from your team.
TOOLS
Below the department links are vital tools you’ll
need to make informed decisions. The financial
paper ‘The Globe’ provides a detailed look inside
the entire industry. Your company’s Annual Reports
give you a look into the key financial reports from
the previous year. Finally, the Market Conditions
Report outlines the shape of the industry for the
years to come.
COMPANY HOMEPAGE
NEWSSTAND
Below the news article slider is the Newsstand,
where you can access and search for articles to
help with your decisions.
KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS
Next to the Newsstand is the Key Performance
Indicators (KPIs) summary. Think of this as a
quick snapshot into the performance of each
company in the industry.
EXECUTIVE DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM
On the bottom left of the Company Homepage is
the link to the Executive Development Program –
your onboarding center.
MANAGER’S GUIDE
This manual! You’ll be able to access this
document via the bottom right of the Company
Homepage at any time.
6
7
16
Each rotation is divided into the following sections:
Introduction
A video overview of the module’s goals
Case Study
Background on Decadon’s departmental issues
What would you do?
A summary of the issues and tasks to focus on
Decisions
The department interface, identical to the simulation
20/20
Review and grading of your decisions
Quiz
Five questions to test your knowledge
Wrap up
Key takeaways from each department
Your progress can be monitored from the EDP
dashboard, and at any time you can quickly jump
to your last saved section by clicking the link in the
relevant module.
Good luck!
The Executive Development Program (EDP) is a rotational
training program designed to help prepare you for the
GlobalDNA simulation experience. The EDP takes you
through each of the four functional departments (R&D,
Marketing, Production, Finance) and gives you a series of
tasks to complete in an interactive environment replicated
in the simulation.
The workflow of the EDP is based around saving a
fictional company, Decadon Electronics. Various errors
in each department are highlighted, and you are given
the chance to solve the issues while navigating the
department interfaces. Support is offered in the form of
help videos, task hints and walk-through tips.
EXECUTIVE DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM
EDP
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
17
Save
Click to save your decisions. You can choose to save by
department or your entire decision file. The last saved
decision file will be used when your instructor processes
the round.
If you’re working with a team, any time a team member
saves a file, you have the opportunity to download their
decisions. The pullout box on the right side of your screen
will alert you if there are updated decisions to download.
Please note, loading these decisions will overwrite your
current saved file in the selected department(s).
Exit
Click here to return to your course page or log out of
Capsim entirely.
SIMULATION INFORMATION
Company name
Located in the top left of the interface, your company
name serves as a link to the company homepage.
Simulation Info
Key information regarding the simulation, round and
industry. This information is useful when contacting your
instructor or Capsim for support.
DEPARTMENT LINKS
The department links are quick links to each department
page. All departments are easily accessible from all pages.
SIMULATION TOOLS
Reports
Click to see the The Globe financial paper. This will help
guide your decision making process for the coming year.
The GlobalDNA navigation bar includes icons that
represent departments, resources and actions on each
page of the simulation.
NAVIGATION
SIMULATION TOOLSSIMULATION INFO DEPARTMENT LINKS
R&D
For more information about saving or collaborating as a
team, see page 79-80 – or visit capsim.com/v/GDNAsave
for a video demonstration.
18
ANDREWS
BALDWIN
CHESTER
DIGBY
ERIE
FERRIS
RECALCULATE
Each department page has a ‘Recalculate’
button that will update decisions with
any changes you have made. Each time
you change or update a decision, click
‘Recalculate’ to see the changes take effect.
REGIONAL DECISIONS
You will need to make decisions for each
region, even if that decision is to do nothing.
To be successful, each department must
consider the international environment when
balancing resources between markets.
Clicking on the region names (Americas,
Europe, Asia Pacific) will allow you to make
decisions for each region.
HOW TO ENTER YOUR DECISIONS
Your management decisions are executed by entering them
into the relevant cells of each department’s web page.
DECISION BOXES
If the box is outlined in gray, data can be
entered. If no data is entered, the previous
round’s value will remain.
REGIONAL DECISIONSDECISION BOXES RECALCULATE
19
The R&D, Marketing and Production pages contain a
number of tools below the top decision area to help you
make informed decisions within the departments and
across the company as a whole.
COMPANY CHARTS
The Company Charts contain information about your
company that updates throughout the simulation.
MARKET CHARTS
The Market Charts contain information regarding the
business environment, divided into three separate drop
downs – Customers, Competitors and Forecasting Tools.
TOOLS
COMPANY CHARTS MARKET CHARTS
20
DEPARTMENTS
This section covers the basics of each of the four
department pages – Research and Development,
Marketing, Production and Finance.
Each department section is structured as follows:
1. An introduction to the department’s purpose
and functions
2. A visual overview of the interface highlighting
the decisions to be made on each page
3. Detailed information on the key components,
rules and potential tactics
4. References to additional glossary tables
and/or definitions
Each department section provides the information
you will need to make tactical decisions for the
department.
RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT MARKETING
PRODUCTION FINANCE
20
21
The role of R&D is to design and modify the products
in your company’s portfolio. R&D must work closely
with the Marketing department. Marketing provides
information on what your customers really want so
that R&D can identify the best product specifications
to meet those needs, while coordinating project
timelines and managing development costs.
The department page is where the following
decisions are made:
• Creating new products to meet customer demands
• Managing existing products to keep them relevant
in the marketplace
• Retiring products from the market that no longer
fit your strategic direction
RESEARCH
& DEVELOPMENT
1
21
22
PRODUCT DECISIONS PERCEPTUAL MAPCREATE NEW PRODUCT
R&D CHARTSR&D EXPENDITURES RETIRE PRODUCT 6
23
R&D DEPARTMENT
CREATE NEW PRODUCT
Click the ‘+ New Product’ tab to open the new
product development decisions. You can select
the name, design, specifications and Region Kits
to best position your product. A Region Kit is an
upgrade that customizes the product to meet
local requirements.
PRODUCT DECISIONS
You can make up to two updates to your existing
products. As you make decisions, you will see an
updated release date. Upon completion of the
project, you will produce and sell all units of the
product at the new specifications. Update 2 begins
immediately after Update 1 ends. Aligning your
decisions with the customer buying criteria while
balancing development time and costs is essential
to your success in R&D.
PERCEPTUAL MAP
The Perceptual Map displays your products’
Accuracy and Speed coordinates and where your
product falls compared to where customers are
located. On the Perceptual Map, there are two
circles. Each circle is a market segment, which
represents a group of customers with similar
preferences for Speed and Accuracy.
R&D EXPENDITURES
View how much you are investing in creating new
products and modifying existing offerings.
RETIRE PRODUCT
Sometimes a product becomes obsolete and needs
to be retired. Click the ‘Retire Product’ button to
eliminate the product from your portfolio and sell off
the remaining units.
R&D CHARTS
Additional information regarding the company and
business environment,including your investments,
material costs and perceived age of products in
the market.
6
24
R&D DECISIONS
PRODUCTS
Under ‘Specs’ in the Products panel you see the
specifications of the current product. Designing a new
product or modifying an existing product creates a
project. For each project, you need to determine the
product’s specifications for:
Speed – the time it takes the device to analyze a sample
and display results
Accuracy – the likelihood of the testing device to
provide a correct result. Devices with a higher Accuracy
rating are less likely to give a false positive or false
negative result.
Service Life – expressed in hours, as the average time
before the device is likely to fail. Increasing Service Life
increases material cost per unit. Decreasing Service Life
decreases material cost per unit.
Region Kits – a feature that tailors products to the
specific region they will be sold in. Region Kits boost
demand in an area by 10% compared to the competition,
but add 3 months of development time to add/remove
and 15% in material cost per unit.
Age – a new product starts with an age of zero.
However, modified products are considered to be new
and improved, which cuts the perceived age of the
product in half. Only decisions changed for Speed or
Accuracy cut the age in half. Changes to Service Life
and Region Kits have no impact on the perceived age.
See projects on page 27 for more details
about changing specifications.
25
SEGMENT MOVEMENT
Customers in each market segment — Budget &
Performance — continuously expect faster and more
accurate products. We map those increasing demands
on the Perceptual Map. The circles defining the product
segments will move a little each month, drifting towards
the top right-hand corner of the map as customers look
for faster and more accurate devices.
Each company must innovate and update products to
keep up with segment movement and remain competitive.
Within each segment there is an ‘ideal spot’. These are
the coordinates for the customers’ desired Speed and
Accuracy of the product at that point in time. The ideal
spot drifts an equal distance each month, but is different
for each segment. The Budget segment moves slower,
and customers do not expect frequent changes to their
products. The Performance segment, however, moves at
a faster pace, and customers expect frequent changes to
their products.
R&D DETAIL
DRIFT RATES
In the simulation, the rate that the segments move is
called ‘drift rate’, and it is different for each market
segment. Drift rates reflect what we experience in
real life — the next version should be faster and more
accurate. See the Industry Statistics section on page 59
for the actual drift rate in each segment.
26
IDEAL SPOT
As you know, the ideal spot is that point in the segment
where, all other things being equal, demand is highest.
In the image below, it’s represented as the black dot
within the circle. The perceptual map helps you to
calculate the Ideal Spot for each round of the simulation,
using the drift rate information you will find in the
Industry Statistics section on pages 59-60.
The circles above reflect positioning within
each segment. The darker the color, the better
positioned the product is within its circle. The inner
fine cut (green) has a radius of 2.5 units on the
scale, while the outer rough cut (blue) has a radius
of 4.0 units.
SERVICE LIFE COSTS
The Service Life rating for existing products can be
adjusted up or down. Each 1,000 hours of Service Life
adds $0.30 to the material cost. Customers prefer
products towards the top of the range. For more
detailed information on Service Life and the Rough and
Fine Cuts, please see page 81 in the Glossary.
CUSTOMER BUYING CRITERIA
In the Customers tab, the Buying Criteria for each
of the market segments is displayed. The Customer
Buying Criteria are the different product features that
customers consider when buying a product.
Criteria include the product price, positioning (including
Speed and Accuracy), its perceived Age and Service
Life of the product.
Just as in real life, different segments place different
levels of importance on each factor. For example, an
American customer seeking a performance product
places positioning above all other things, however an
American customer seeking a budget product considers
the price and age of the product above positioning.
For a detailed look into the Customer Buying Criteria,
see the Customer data tabs on the R&D and Marketing
pages, or the segment pages in The Globe.
R&D DETAIL
BETTER
BUDGET
POORER
PERFORMANCE
27
There are three types of R&D projects:
1. Inventing a new product
Enter the Accuracy, Speed and Service Life figures that
are appropriate to the segment you wish to enter.
2. Modify an existing product and reduce the
perceived age
You can reduce the perceived age of a product by
changing a product’s Accuracy or Speed coordinates.
Any additional changes to the product’s Service Life or
Region Kits will factor into the development time.
3. Modify an existing product and don’t reduce the
perceived age
Not all modifications reduce the perceived age.
When only changing the Service Life figure and/or
adding or removing Region Kits, the perceived age
of your product will not be cut in half.
PROJECTS
Use the Customer Buying Criteria boxes in the Market
Segment Analyses in The Globe to help determine the
best position and service life level for your products.
When a repositioning project completes, the product’s
age is cut in half. Thus, R&D drives three of the four
buying criteria — positioning, service life, and age —
leaving only price, which is determined by Marketing.
Considerations before starting a project:
+ Where do I want my product positioned on the
Perceptual Map when the project ends?
+ What length of Service Life should my product have?
Is it within the required range of the segment?
+ Do I want to add any region kits to tailor my product
to a specific area?
+ Do I want to make multiple product updates within
this calendar year?
Your product will continue to sell with the old
specifications up until the completion of the
repositioning project, at which point it will begin
to sell with the new specifications.
28
Region Kits are region-specific product additions
that increase a product’s attractiveness to customers.
Conceptually, our genetic diagnostic test performs
several genetic tests at once. For example, given a
biopsy, it can test for several varieties of cancer.
Since cancer incidence varies by region, the genetic test
can vary by region. However, it is possible to tailor your
product to test for additional region specific diseases.
For example, a cholera test may be considered for
Asian customers, but would not be relevant to
European customers.
In GlobalDNA, adding a Region Kit boosts demand by
10% over your competitors (i.e. adding an Americas
region kit will add 10% demand in the Americas). If your
competitors choose to add a Region Kit, as well, then
your demand boost will reduce. In the case that all six
companies are offering Region Kits to a specific region,
there will be no advantage in customer demand for
any team.
Adding a Region Kit to a product adds three months
to the R&D project timeline, plus a 15% material cost
increase in the region where the product is sold. If you
REGION KITS
are managing the Andrews Company, for example, and
you decide to put a European Region Kit on your Able
product, you will see a 15% increase in material cost for
all products that are shipped to Europe. However, no
products in the Americas or sent to Asia will incur any
additional material costs. You can have up to three
Region Kits on each product.
In the simulation, you don’t have to
determine how to specifically tailor
your product. You are only required to
determine if you will offer a region-specific
product to certain areas.
This product has a Region Kit for Europe
and Asia Pacific, but not the Americas.
29
The Marketing department is responsible for
forecasting sales, promoting both the products and
brand, as well as pricing and selling your products.
We know that customers have preferences for
Accuracy, Speed, Age and Service Life specifications,
all of which are determined in the R&D department,
but marketing has control over the other key factor in
the customer buying criteria: pricing.
Marketing is also responsible for forecasting sales
of each product for the coming year. This is critical
because your Production Department uses these
forecasts to determine how much of each product
line to manufacture, and your Finance Department
uses these forecasts to generate your proforma
financial statements.
MARKETING
2
29
30
MARKETING CHARTS
PRODUCT DECISIONSREGIONAL OPTIONS
REGION TABS
REGION MAP
ANDREWS
BALDWIN
CHESTER
DIGBY
ERIE
FERRIS
31
MARKETING DEPARTMENT
REGIONAL OPTIONS
The left side of the Marketing page shows key
regional information, including market size, total
units, exchange rate and more. The region’s
marketing and sales decisions are also made here,
which boost customer awareness and accessibility
across all products in the region.
REGION MAP
The region map displays summary information
regarding the business environment for the
selected region. If a company operated in a region
in the prior year, then the company logo will be
illuminated. Clicking on the logo will provide you
with relevant market data.
PRODUCT DECISIONS
This is where product level forecasts and marketing
investments are made. As new products are
invented, you can click the product tabs. Click the
product tabs to move to the next product decisions,
while viewing a summary of all Marketing decisions
in the table below the product area.
REGION TABS
The importance that customers place on each
aspect of the product is different in each region,
reflecting the subtle influence of culture.
Decisions are made on a regional basis and
clicking on a new region will display the products,
competitors and information for that region.
MARKETING CHARTS
This section contains additional information regarding
the company and the business environment.
32
MARKETING DECISIONS
PRICE
In the Products panel, you set the price per unit in dollars,
and it is converted to local currency, where applicable.
The price range listed in the customer buying criteria is local
currency, so be aware of the impact of currency fluctuations.
AWARENESS & ACCESSIBILITY
An essential part of Marketing is letting the customer know
that your product exists and where customers can buy it.
Awareness and Accessibility measure these activities:
Awareness is the percentage of the market that is aware of
your product.
Accessibility is the percentage of the market that has access
to your product.
In the Products panel you can make overall investments
in Promotion, which impacts Awareness, and in Sales,
which impacts Accessibility. Additionally, region-specific
investments can be made in the marketing region panel on
the left.
Product Promotion makes up 70% of your total Awareness,
while Regional Promotion makes up the remaining 30%.
The same ratio applies for Product Sales and Regional Sales
on your overall Accessibility. Each year, your Awareness and
Accessibility will reduce by 1/3 from the prior year.
PROMO BUDGETS
The Promo Budgets are the amounts you will spend
overall to advertise and promote the product (entered
in Product panel), and to tailor the message of your
brand to the different regions (entered in Region panel).
Promotion Budgets impact Awareness by putting your
brand in front of customers more often.
Promotion Budget:
Increases in Regional and Product Promotion budgets have diminishing
returns. Say for instance that you have a Product Promo budget (70%
contribution) of $2,000,000 and a Regional Promo budget (30%
contribution) of $300,000. In this case, you’ve spent $2,300,000, but
the actual equivalent is $1,500,000 ([$2,000,000 * .7 = $1,400,000]
+ [$300,000 * .3 = $100,000]). As the graph shows, spending an
equivalent of $1,500,000 returns 36% Awareness, but at an equivalent
value of $3,000,000 returns only 50% Awareness. Beyond an equivalent
value of $3,000,000 per product, you will see no additional return.
33
Product Promo and Sales budgets contribute 70%
to Awareness and Accessibility, respectively, while
Regional Promo and Sales budgets contribute 30%.
MARKETING DECISIONS
SALES BUDGETS
The Sales Budgets are how much you spend on distribution
systems and your sales force by product and by region.
Sales Budgets impact Accessibility, which is a measure
of how difficult it is for customers to gain access to
your product’s distribution and support systems. At an
Accessibility of 100% customers have easy access. At 1%
customers have great difficulty.
In the case of your Sales budgets, products in the same
segment will have the same Accessibility. This is because
your field specialists selling your products focus on specific
segments. For instance, if you have two products selling
to the European Budget segment, your contributions to
the Sales Budget for each product will sum to the same
Accessibility number.
Sales Budget:
Regional and Product Sales budgets follow the same rules as
the Promo budgets when only one product exists in a regional
segment. For companies with only one product in a segment,
there is no return on accessibility beyond a $3,000,000
budget equivalent. As the graph shows, companies with
multiple products in a segment return 35% accessibility when
spending the equivalent to $4,000,000.
34
FORECASTS
The other critical aspect of marketing management
is creating a sales forecast to predict how many
units you believe you can sell in the coming year.
Forecasting is an important, but inexact, science.
To help you test various scenarios, you will enter a
Worst Case Forecast and a Best Case Forecast for
each product.
Your Worst Case (conservative) forecast is used by
the Finance department to predict profits, variable
costs and contribution margin (a full explanation of
these terms is found on Page 35).
It is important to remember that this is just a forecast
and your actual number sold will almost certainly
be different.
Your Best Case (aggressive) forecast is used by
Production to determine how many units to produce.
The forecast can be adjusted on either the Marketing
or Production page and is used to reduce the
chances of stocking out or having excess inventory.
Because your forecasts are used by other departments,
they will have profound effects on your company if
inaccurate – such as having too much or too little
inventory, or not achieving the sales necessary to
fund investments.
BUYING CRITERIA AND THE CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
SCORE (CSS)
In the top right corner of the Products box you will see the
Customer Satisfaction Score.
The customer survey starts by evaluating each product
against the buying criteria. Next, these assessments are
weighted by the criteria’s level of importance. For example,
the Europe Performance segment assigns a higher
importance to positioning (43%) than the Europe Budget
segment (21%). A well-positioned product earns a
higher score in the Customer Satisfaction Survey in the
Performance than in the Budget segment.
From there, the Customer Satisfaction Score takes into
account your product’s Awareness and Accessibility, and
finally, your company’s Accounts Receivable (A/R) policy.
It’s important to know that in each region, Price listed in
the Buying Criteria reflects Local Price. Local Price is your
translated sales price after currency exchange rates.
MARKETING DETAILS
35
PRICE & CURRENCY FLUCTUATIONS
What is the right price for your product? Well, it depends.
Customers in each market have a different view of price
as you can see in the customer buying criteria. To the
budget buyer, price is the most important thing. For a
buyer looking for top quality, however, it is less important.
Even if your products are very reasonably priced, if all
other things are equal, you will lose market share to a
competitor with lower prices.
So, be sure to pay attention to what your customers want
and what the competition is delivering in order to price
your products accurately.
In the Europe and Asia Pacific regions, the price you
enter will translate into Local Price based on the current
exchange rate to US dollars. You can find the exchange
rate at the beginning of the year in the top left of the
Marketing interface under the Regional tab or in the
segment pages (pg. 8-13) of The Globe.
FORECASTS TABLE
This section displays your sales forecast based on
your Worst Case estimates. The more accurate your
forecasts, the more accurate the financial projections
for the upcoming year.
The table and chart are dynamic, so as you click a
line item in the table, the data displays in the chart to
the right.
BEST CASE FORECAST
Best Case sales forecast per region. The calculation
assumes that enough units will be built to meet your
Best Case forecast.
WORST CASE FORECAST
Worst Case sales forecast per region. The calculation
assumes that enough units will be sold to meet your
Worst Case forecast.
GROSS REVENUES
Total gross revenues per region. Calculated as a sum
of all product gross revenues in the region (Worst Case
forecast x Price).
MARKETING DETAILS
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VARIABLE COSTS
The sum of material, labor, shipping and inventory carry
costs. The variable cost forecast for each product —
(Material Cost plus Labor Cost plus Inventory Carry Costs)
multiplied by Unit Sales.
Material Cost and Labor Cost are found on the Production
page, and assumes there is no remaining inventory to carry.
Click here . . . to view it here
FORECAST CONTRIBUTION MARGIN
Gross Revenue Forecast less variable costs.
NET MARGIN
Contribution Margin less associated promotion and
sales budgets.
MARKETING DETAILS
Gross Revenue 3
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Your Production Department is responsible for
manufacturing enough products to meet customer
demand, as per your marketing forecasts for each
region. In addition, Production determines the level
of capacity and automation on your production lines
and has to manage the cost of upgrading the plant.
Your company has only one plant, which is located at
your headquarters in the Americas region.
From the Americas you can ship products to Europe
or Asia, but only if you have enough capacity to
make enough products to fill demand. If you do not
have enough production capacity, you can either
add to your plant by purchasing more capacity, or
you can outsource to an external manufacturing
plant to build the remaining units.
PRODUCTION
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38
PRODUCTION SUMMARY PRODUCT DECISIONS
PLANT INFO REGION TABS
REGION MAP
PRODUCTION CHARTS
ANDREWS
BALDWIN
CHESTER
DIGBY
ERIE
FERRIS
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PRODUCTION DEPARTMENT
PRODUCTION SUMMARY
The Production Summary box contains information
regarding overall production and outsourced
capacity remaining, whether demand has been
fulfilled and your Accounts Payable (A/P) policy.
Adjusting your A/P policy impacts the delivery of
raw materials used to build units of your product.
REGION MAP
The region map displays the companies that are
shipping products to that region.
If a company operated in a region in the prior year,
then the company logo will be illuminated. Clicking
on the logo will provide you with relevant market
information.
PRODUCT DECISIONS
The product decisions box is where product
level decisions are executed for that region. The
demand forecast is for the active product, so any
excess production or outsourced units are added
to the product’s inventory.
PLANT INFORMATION
Plant information displays your manufacturing plant’s
total capacity and automation level. You can purchase
additional capacity and raise your plant’s automation
level to produce more units at a higher efficiency, but
this comes at a cost. Each year, you have a maximum
allotted investment that you cannot exceed.
REGION TABS
Production runs are determined by region, so
production decisions need to be made in each region.
Remember to balance the cost of production and
outsourcing against shipping and tariffs.
PRODUCTION CHARTS
This section contains additional information regarding
the company and the business environment.
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PRODUCTION DECISIONS
PLANT – CAPACITY & AUTOMATION
Capacity determines how many units the plant is
capable of producing.
Automation refers to the level of production processes
for the machinery that can be done without manual
human labor – the higher the automation rating, the
fewer workers are needed to operate the plant.
The plant’s capacity can be distributed across products
or allocated to just a couple of products with the rest
being outsourced.
You can increase or decrease your plant’s capacity and
automation by entering your desired automation level in
the blue cells. In the simulation, your plant starts with an
automation level of 3.
• To increase the amount in Round 1, enter a number
greater than 3.
• To decrease the amount in Round 1, enter a number
less than 3.
PRODUCTION RUN
In the Production page, to the right of your screen,
production schedules for products and regions are set
and adjusted. The Forecast Demand is the Best Case
sales forecast you entered on the Marketing screen.
In the gray cells below Forecast Demand, you enter the
number of units you want to produce in-house this year
(Production) and the number of units (if any) you choose
to have made at an external plant this year (Outsourced),
for each of your products.
The Cost Breakdown chart provides a complete picture of
labor, material, shipping and tariff costs.
Below that is a Summary of Products by Region, showing
demand and whether you intend to meet it with in-house
or outsourced production.
OUTSOURCING
Your Outsourcing Plant is located just off the coast of the
Americas region. Outsourced capacity matches your own
plant capacity. For example, if you have 2,500 units of
Capacity in your Plant, you will also have 2,500 units of
Capacity available to you through Outsourcing. Outsourced
capacity uses an automation level of 2.0 that cannot be
changed over the course of the entire simulation.
If you intend to sell your products in Europe or
Asia Pacific, you MUST switch to the Europe and
Asia Pacific tabs and enter your Production and/or
Outsourced values in the blue decision cells.
Products shipped to Europe or Asia Pacific that
do not sell are stored as inventory in that region,
regardless of the amount of inventory on hand.
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BUY/SELL CAPACITY
On the left, under the Plant section, you can see your
current plant capacity. The Production Department
must determine if there is enough capacity to meet the
forecast demand, and if not, how it will be met. Enter a
larger number than you currently have in the gray cell to
add capacity. Additional capacity is available to use from
the date of purchase.
Enter a smaller number in the gray cell to sell off existing
capacity. Capacity is sold on January 1 for 65% of the
purchase price. When the capacity is sold, the sale
completes immediately and the funds are immediately
available for use.
The cost of additional capacity depends on the current
automation level on your line.
AUTOMATION
In the Automation cell, you can increase the level
of automation required for the following round.
For example, to raise the automation 1.0 unit from
the starting level of 3.0, simply enter 4.0 in the blue
automation cell.
An automation rating of 1.0 equals very little automation
and significant labor costs. A rating of 10.0 equals
heavy automation with few workers and low labor
costs. However, automation is expensive. For every
point of change (up or down) companies are charged
PRODUCTION DETAILS
$4 per unit of capacity; changing an assembly line with 1
million units of capacity from an automation of 5.0 to an
automation of 6.0, therefore, would cost $4 million.
Labor and Material Costs make up a large portion of
your product’s variable costs. As previously stated,
Material Costs come directly from your product’s Speed
and Accuracy coordinates and Service Life hours.
Labor costs are based on the automation level of your
Production or Outsourcing plant.
While automation optimizes your plant’s performance
and lowers labor costs, it also adversely affects your
ability to create and modify products in the R&D
department. For each level of automation you add, it
becomes increasingly difficult to reposition your
products. For more detailed information on Automation,
please see page 72 of the Glossary.
INVESTMENT
The Total Invest line represents the cost, in thousands
of dollars, of capacity and automation added to your
plant. The Max Invest line represents the maximum
amount your company can invest in production this
year, depending on your capital budget limit. The capital
budget limit is determined by the maximum amount
that can be raised through stock and bond issues plus
excess working capital, minus the total amount of
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order, which gives you the Fulfillment after Adjustment figure.
In Production and Finance, you can adjust your Accounts
Payable (A/P) policy, which is the lag between when you
receive materials from your suppliers and your payment
date. The default is 30 days, which will give you 99% of your
ordered amount. You can adjust this between 0 and 150 days.
The longer you make your suppliers wait for payment, the
fewer materials you receive, which results in fewer units being
produced. Additional details can be found on the Production
interface in the Customers tab.
Adding your existing inventory to your Fulfillment after
Adjustment gives you the total units produced for the
current year.
Note: You will produce units of new products prior to their
release to the world. Before the product’s release, the
hardware, casing, and circuit boards are developed. At the
time of release, the firmware of the genetic testing device is
updated, and your products are ready to sell. For each new
offering, you can produce units throughout the year that will
then be available for sale upon the product’s release.
PRODUCTION DETAILS
stock dividends to be paid in the current year. See
the Glossary on page 77 for details on how Excess
Working Capital is calculated.
LABOR COST & WAGES
During the Monopolies Commission’s investigation,
Medicorp initiated a campaign to only hire union
workers in all its production facilities, internal and
outsourced. Upon the dissolution of Medicorp, the
six resulting companies continued to maintain this
promissory agreement. As a result, all workers start
Round 0 at a rate of $20/hour with yearly raises of 5%.
SHIPPING PER UNIT
Your plant and your outsourced capacity are all
located in or near the Americas region. Therefore, no
shipping cost per unit is charged on product delivered
to the Americas. There is, however, a shipping cost of
$3.00 per unit to Europe, and $2.50 per unit to Asia.
TARIFF PER UNIT
Over the course of the simulation, only the European
region will have a tariff per unit. This tax comes to
4.5% of each unit’s sale price.
FULFILLMENT AFTER ADJUSTMENT
Your Production order is adjusted by your Accounts
Payable (A/P) policy, and added to your Outsourcing
Capacity is the number of units you can produce
before outsourcing.
Automation is the level of automated processes on
your production line that replace manual labor.
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4
Your Finance Department is primarily concerned
with five issues:
1. Acquiring the capital you need to expand your
company’s assets
2. Establishing a dividend policy to maximize the
return to shareholders
3. Setting an Accounts Payable (A/P) policy and
Accounts Receivable (A/R) policy
4. Driving the financial structure of the firm and its
relationship between debt and equity
5. Selecting and monitoring performance measures
that support your strategy
Finance decisions should generally be made
after all other departments have entered their
decisions. After the management team has decided
what resources it needs in Marketing, R&D and
Production, the Finance Department determines
where and how to find the funds.
FINANCE
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44
KEY FINANCIAL PROJECTIONS
KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS
(KPIs)
FINANCE DECISIONS
PROFORMA FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
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FINANCE DEPARTMENT
KEY FINANCIAL PROJECTIONS
These financial projections are based on the
forecasts, pricing and investment decisions
made in the department decision pages.
These projections provide a snapshot of the
company’s operational decisions and income
breakdown, based on your Worst Case Forecasts.
PROFORMA FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
The proforma financial statements, like the key
financial projections, are projections based on
sales forecasts, pricing and costs entered in the
department decisions.
KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS (KPIs)
A summary of the previous year’s KPIs for all
companies. The main chart is supplemented by
secondary charts below for additional context.
Debt/Equity – shows the debt to equity position
for your company and your competitors. It also
contains the stock price history, bond price history
(showing all outstanding bonds) and current
debt history (including amount due this year and
interest rate.)
Ratios – measures your progress compared to your
competitors on ROS, ROA and ROE; leverage; days
of working capital and asset turnover.
Profits – tracks profits, margins and cash flow
compared to your competitors.
Market Share – the total market share by sales of
each company overall, plus regional market shares.
FINANCE DECISIONS
This is where the decisions are made regarding
how to pay for the costs of developing, producing
and selling the company’s products. It is also
where cash is managed, dividends are paid and the
A/P and A/R policies are determined.
The proformas do not reflect your exact
financial situation in the next round! They
calculate the numbers based on your forecasts.
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ACCOUNTS POLICY
Here is where you decide on your company’s Accounts
Payable (A/P) policy – how long you will take to pay
your suppliers – and Accounts Receivable (A/R) policy –
how long you extend credit before your customers must
pay you.
COMMON STOCK
As a publicly traded company you can issue stock (to
raise more funds), retire stock (to improve your stock
price) and determine a dividend policy. You can choose
if the company’s earnings are retained to reinvest for
future growth or distributed to shareholders in the form
of dividends.
LONG-TERM DEBT
Long-term debt in the form of bonds is traditionally
used to finance long-term assets – to purchase a new
production line, for example.
CURRENT DEBT
Current or short-term debt is traditionally borrowed for
short-term purposes that will allow you to pay it back
within the year – for additional working capital to build
more inventory, for example. You are shown the interest
rate on your current debt.
FINANCE DECISIONS
ISSUING DIVIDENDS TO SHAREHOLDERS
The owners of a company invest in that company so
they can realize a return on their money. Rather than
put money into a bank, they put it into a company
with the expectation that their money will work harder
(receive a higher return) if the company succeeds.
It is riskier than money in the bank, but the potential
rewards are greater.
Money is returned to investors through dividends.
Paying dividends can impact the stock price. A healthy
stock price increases your ability to raise capital for
investments, which in turn can return further profits.
While issuing dividends can keep shareholders happy in
the short-term, there will be impacts on your working
capital and ability to invest in your long-term strategy if
too much is given back.
PROFORMAS
Your company’s proforma financial statements can be
accessed at the bottom of the Finance page. The
proformas are the cash flow statement, income
statement and balance sheet for your company that are
updated each time you make a decision. They calculate
costs, profits and the financial ratios that measure your
success, based on your forecasts.
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They do not reflect actual results.
Why not? Because your forecasts will be at least a little
wrong, as you have no way of knowing exactly what your
competitors are going to do this year. The proformas,
therefore, are guideposts only – demonstrating how your
financial position is likely to be affected by the decisions
that you are taking, if your revenue forecasts are more or
less accurate.
The only financial statements that are completely
accurate are the statements produced at the end of each
round and available (via the Reports icon) as you begin
the next round.
For more on each of the proformas, please see the
Making Decisions section starting on page 49.
EMERGENCY LOANS
If your company runs completely out of cash during the
year — because you did not meet your sales forecast, for
example — a lender of last resort named Big Al bails you
out. Big Al provides an emergency cash injection,
but because it is a quick fix, it comes with very high
interest rates.
The upside is that you will never become bankrupt and
be locked out of the simulation. The downside is that a
Big Al loan will drain your resources for some time to
come. Big Al provides an emergency cash injection, but
because it is a quick fix, you are charged interest rates at
7.5% higher than your current rate. For more information,
see the Glossary on page 76.
Projected emergency loans are automatically adopted
into the profomas as Borrowed Current Bank Debt
under Cash Flows from Financing and Next Cash from
Financial Actions under Key Financial Projections.
Note that the Projected Closing Cash Position for [Next
Year] under Key Financial Projections is always greater
than, or equal to, zero. However, Projected Closing
Cash Position for [Next Year] under Decisions can be
negative. This difference is the value of the projected
emergency loan.
FINANCE DETAILS
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CREDIT POLICY
The credit policy is how much leeway you give people
who owe you money and how much leeway you give
yourself to pay others you owe.
Although it may be tempting to make others pay cash
on delivery and give yourself a 90 day “bill me later”
policy, these decisions have an impact on how people do
business with you. Like most decisions in business, a bit
of give and take goes a long way.
ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE
A company’s Accounts Receivable (A/R) policy sets
the amount of time customers have to pay for their
purchases. It can significantly impact the customers’
willingness to buy your products.
If you shorten the A/R lag from 30 to 15 days, for
example, you are tightening the terms of the loan you
made to customers when you said “pay me later.”
Because changes in your credit terms affect your
customers’ buying decision, it affects your Customer
Satisfaction Score. For more information, see Glossary
on pages 75-76 for more information on setting your
A/R policy.
FINANCE DETAILS
ACCOUNTS PAYABLE
The Accounts Payable (A/P) lag has implications for
production. Suppliers become concerned as the lag
grows and they start to withhold material for production.
Withholding material creates shortages on the assembly
line. As a result, workers stand idle and per-unit labor
costs rise. For more information, see the Glossary on
pages 75-76 for more information on setting your
A/P policy.
$
49
MAKING DECISIONS
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INDUSTRY WIDE REPORT: THE GLOBE
The Globe is the industry journal, which displays all the
industry information from the previous round (year) to
help you make decisions for the current round. You can
access it via the Reports icon. The Globe is THE source
for industry conditions, competitor analysis and market
trends. It is not an overstatement to say that your
company will not succeed unless you refer to The Globe
constantly in your decision-making.
The Globe is produced on December 31st each year
so the information is historical. The Globe available as
you begin Round 1 displays the results for Round 0
(the starting conditions for the simulation). The Globe
available in Round 2, displays the results for Round 1,
and so on throughout the simulation.
FRONT PAGE
Use the first page of The Globe to see a snapshot of last
year’s results. Be sure to compare your company’s sales,
profits and cumulative profits with your competitors’.
Be sure to also note the market share reports by region.
TOOLS
STOCK & BOND SUMMARIES
The Stock and Bond Summary (page 2 of The Globe)
reports stock prices and bond ratings for all companies.
FINANCIAL SUMMARY
The Financial Summary (page 3 of The Globe) surveys
each company’s cash flow statement, balance sheet
and income statement. This will give you a clear picture
of your competitors’ financial health. In-depth financial
reports for your own company are also available via the
Reports icon, with information not provided to
your competitors.
REGIONAL INCOME STATEMENT
The Regional Income Statement (page 4 of The Globe)
summarizes all companies’ performance, in the form of
an income statement, across each of the three regions.
This will provide you with a quick snapshot of which
companies are succeeding or failing in each of the
global markets.
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TOOLS
PRODUCTION ANALYSIS
The Production Analysis (pages 5-7 of The Globe) reports
detailed information about each company’s plant and
each product in the market, including sales and inventory
levels, price, and variable costs.
Pages 6 and 7 of The Globe break the products down into
their respective primary segments. Page 6 shows Budget
products, and Page 7 shows Performance products.
SEGMENT ANALYSIS
The Segment Analysis (pages 8-13 of The Globe) reviews
each market segment per region in detail.
The Statistics box at the top reports Total Industry Unit
Demand, Actual Industry Unit Sales, Segment Percent of
Total Industry and Region, and Next Year’s Growth Rate –
important information for sales forecasting and
production planning. The Customer Buying Criteria
box ranks the importance of each characteristic to the
customers in each segment – important information for
product development.
Ideal Position: The preferred product location, also
called the ideal spot, as of December 31 of the previous
year. Remember: ideal spots drift with the segments,
moving a little each month.
Price: Shown in local currency (i.e. Euros in Europe).
Every year on January 1, price ranges drop by $0.50.
Remember: the price range in The Globe is the price
range from last year.
Age: Age preferences stay the same year after year.
Service Life: Service Life expectations stay the same
year after year.
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TOOLS
MARKET SHARE REPORT
The Market Share Report (page 14 of The Globe) details
sales volume in all segments, reporting each product’s
actual and potential sales.
PERCEPTUAL MAP
The Perceptual Map (page 15 of The Globe) displays the
segments and each product in the industry, showing
their position at December 31st of the previous year.
PROFORMAS
The proformas include your company’s Balance Sheet,
Cash Flow Statement and Income Statement. They are
intended to predict your company’s financial results
based on the decisions you have entered. However, as
has been previously mentioned, they will not be 100%
accurate, because you do not know exactly what your
competitors will do.
BALANCE SHEET
The balance sheet lists the dollar value of what the
company owns (assets), what it owes to creditors
(liabilities) and the amount contributed by investors
(equity). Assets always equal liabilities plus equity.
Assets = Liabilities + Equity
Assets are divided into two categories, current and
fixed. Current assets are those that can be quickly
converted to cash, generally in less than a year.
Fixed assets are those that cannot be easily converted
such as plant and equipment (see Capacity and
Automation page 41).
Liabilities include accounts payable, current debt
and long-term debt. In the simulation, current debt is
comprised of one-year bank notes; long-term debt is
comprised of 10-year bond issues.
Proformas will show you how
one decision impacts the others.
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TOOLS
Equity is divided into common stock and retained
earnings. Common stock represents the money received
from the sale of shares; retained earnings is the profit
that was not distributed back to shareholders as
dividends, but reinvested in the company.
INCOME STATEMENT
Your company can use the income statement to
diagnose problems on a product-by-product basis.
Revenue (or sales) for each product is reported in
dollars (not the number of products). Subtracting
Variable Costs (labor, material inventory carry and
shipping costs) from sales determines the contribution
margin. Inventory carrying costs are the storage and
administration costs required to manage products left
in the warehouse. If your company has $0 inventory
carrying costs, you stocked out of the product and
most likely missed sales opportunities. If your company
has excessive inventory, your carrying costs will be
high. Sound sales forecasts, matched to reasonable
production schedules, result in modest inventory
carrying costs. Finally, shipping costs are calculated
if you sent units to Europe or Asia. Please see the
Regional Operating Costs on page 62 for more details
on shipping costs across regions.
Period Costs are depreciation added to sales, general
and administrative (SG&A) costs, which include
R&D, promotion, sales and administration expenses.
Period costs are subtracted from the contribution
margin to determine the net margin. The net margin
for all products is totaled then subtracted from other
expenses, which in the simulation include fees and
write-offs. This determines earnings before interest and
taxes, or EBIT. Finally, interest, taxes, tariffs and profit
sharing costs are subtracted to determine net profit.
CASH FLOW STATEMENT
The cash flow statement indicates the movement of
cash through the organization, including operating,
investing and financing activities. The annual report’s
cash flow statement shows the change in the amount
of cash from the previous year. The proforma cash flow
statement indicates the expected change at the end of
the upcoming year.
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FORECASTING
Forecasting requires a little math and a little logic.
For example, does your forecast predict your product
will acquire half a segment’s sales when there are four
or five products in the segment? Unless your product’s
positioning, age and Service Life are significantly
superior to all competitive products and your price is
at the low end of the range, it is not likely that you will
acquire half the sales. Does your forecast predict you
will take only one tenth of the sales when there are four
or five products in the segment? Unless your product’s
positioning, age and Service Life are significantly
inferior, and your price is at the high end of the range or
above, chances are you can sell more.
Forecasts are used by the proformas to calculate
financial projections. If you enter a forecast that is
unrealistically high, the proformas will take that forecast
and project unrealistic revenue. You must enter values
into the Worst Forecast cells on the Marketing page to
project financial results.
BASIC FORECASTING METHOD
Last year’s sales can be a good starting point for this
year’s forecasts. For example, if the American Budget
segment growth rate for the upcoming year is 9.2%, you
can say, “All things being equal, we can expect to sell
9.2% more units this year than last year in the American
Budget segment.”
To calculate your forecast based on that assumption,
perform the following calculation (for this example,
assume you sold 1.1m units last year without running out
of inventory):
Last years Units Sold x (100% + Growth Rate) = Next
year’s Forecast
1,100,000 x 1.092 = 1,201,200
If your product stocked out, calculate what it could
have sold by multiplying the segment demand by your
potential sales percentage reported on page 14 of The
Globe – the Market Share Report. Then, perform the
same calculation based on that number.
Is this number valid? It is highly unlikely that the market
in the upcoming year will be identical to the previous
year. Prices will adjust and repositioning projects will
complete – in turn, the playing field will change.
Still, this number can provide you with a good start as
you assess your product offer and speculate what your
competitors will offer.
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FORECASTING
Keep in mind the possibility that your products sold
because competitors who otherwise would have
made sales under-produced and stocked out. Page 14
of The Globe displays actual and potential sales as a
percentage for each product. If your actual sales far
exceeded your potential because your competitors
under-produced, you cannot count on them making the
same mistake again.
QUALITATIVE ASSESSMENT
Compare your product to others competing within the
segment and decide whether it is better or worse than
the competition. Start with the Perceptual Map (page
15 of The Globe). It shows where products are currently
placed. The Revision Dates at the bottom of the page
reveal the timing of any future repositioning projects.
Continue the comparison using The Globe Segment
Analysis pages. These report each product’s:
Age
• does the product satisfy customer age demands?
Service Life
• is Service life near the top of the range?
Price
• will price trends continue or will new automation
facilitate a price reduction? (Remember, price ranges
drop $0.50 per year.)
Awareness and Accessibility
• are these percentages leading, keeping pace with or
falling behind other products?
All these elements contribute to the monthly Customer
Satisfaction Score.
DECEMBER CUSTOMER SATISFACTION SCORE (CSS)
Will your product be better or worse than average?
The clearest indicator is the December Customer
Satisfaction Score in the lower part of each Segment
Analysis page. The CSS drives demand each month.
For example, if there are four products in December
scoring 32, 28, 22 and 14 (for a total of 96), then the top
product’s December demand would be 32/96 or 33%.
Top Product in Segment’s Score / Sum of All Scores =
32 / (32 +28 +22 + 14) = 32 / 96 = 33%
What monthly CSS will your product have during the
year? The score will change from month to month
because the segments drift, your product ages and it
might be revised. Each monthly score is driven by how
well your product satisfies the segment buying criteria,
plus its awareness and accessibility levels.
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DECISION MAKING PROCESS CROSS-FUNCTIONAL PLANNING
You will engage in the simulation either as an
individual or as a member of a team. This section
will cover the elements of decision making that are
necessary whichever mode of simulation you are in,
followed by some of the critical issues for team-based
decision making.
Whether you are operating as a team or as an individual,
careful coordination between the different departments
of your business is critical to your success. Here is a guide
to some of the key interactions between departments:
R&D AND MARKETING
R&D works with Marketing to make sure products meet
customer expectations.
R&D AND PRODUCTION
R&D works with Production to ensure assembly lines have
enough capacity to deal with new products. R&D must
notify Production if they discontinue a product.
MARKETING AND PRODUCTION
Marketing works with Production to make sure
manufacturing quantities are in line with forecasts.
Marketing’s market growth projections also help
Production determine appropriate levels of capacity.
If Marketing decides to sell a product in additional global
markets, it tells Production to plan for more capacity.
MARKETING AND FINANCE
Marketing works with Finance to project revenues for
each product and to set the Accounts Receivable policy,
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CROSS-FUNCTIONAL PLANNING CHOOSING A TEAM STRUCTURE
which is the amount of time customers can take to pay
for their purchases.
FINANCE AND PRODUCTION
Production tells Finance if it needs money for additional
equipment. If Finance cannot raise enough money, it can
tell Production to scale back its requests or perhaps sell
idle capacity.
FINANCE AND ALL DEPARTMENTS
The Finance Department acts as a watchdog over
company expenditures. Finance should review R&D,
Marketing and Production decisions. Finance should
ensure that R&D updates align with the overall strategy.
Finance should crosscheck Marketing’s forecasts and
pricing. Are forecasts too high or too low? Will customers
be willing to pay the prices Marketing has set?
Is Production manufacturing too many or too few units?
Does Production need additional capacity, or should
the company outsource more units? Has Production
considered lowering labor costs by purchasing automation?
Teamwork presents both challenges and advantages
when you are running a simulated business — just
as it does in the real world. There is no one ‘correct’
team structure — other than the one that works! Some
common team structures are:
DEPARTMENT MANAGERS
Each team member has responsibility for the decisions
in one department (Marketing, for example)
communicating and collaborating strategy through
a series of cross-departmental meetings to align
decisions with company strategy.
PRODUCT MANAGERS
Each team member is responsible for one product,
either across regions or per region. They are
responsible for establishing development, performing
upgrades, forecasting sales and setting production.
Communication is focused on areas of long-term
strategy, competitor analysis and shared resources.
REGIONAL MANAGERS
Each team member is responsible for a region’s
decisions across all departments, communicating with
a focus on long-term strategy, competitor analysis and
shared resources.
58
INDUSTRY STATISTICS
PERCEPTUAL MAP
We know that customers in each market segment have
different requirements for the Accuracy and Speed of the
products they buy. These can be tracked, as they change
over time, on a perceptual map.
This is the perceptual map from the end of Round 0.
You’ll notice outlines for the fine cut (solid line) and rough
cut (dotted line) and points representing the ideal spot
for your products at the beginning of the simulation.
59
INDUSTRY STATISTICS
SEGMENT CENTERS
To map the segment circles on the perceptual map,
you need to know the center point for the segment.
The segment circles have a radius of 2.5 units.
The center point for each circle in each round of the
simulation is listed opposite.
The information in the table to the right reflects the
segment centers at the end of the round. Therefore, the
Round 0 positions are the Round 1 starting positions,
and so on. Each month, from January to December, the
segments drift 1/12th of the distance from the starting
position to the ending position for that round, so they
are never static. This means that a product positioned
on the ideal spot in January will be increasingly further
away as the year goes on, impacting it’s attractiveness
to customers.
DRIFT RATES
Each year the segments drift up and to the right,
mimicking the way customers’ preferences evolve to
demand faster and more accurate genetic diagnostic
test devices. In each year of the simulation, the rate
of change in customers expectations can be plotted
according to the chart on the right:
SPEED ACCURACY SPEED ACCURACY
BUDGET
ROUND
PERFORMANCE
4.8
5.3
5.8
6.3
6.8
7.3
7.8
8.3
8.8
4.8
5.3
5.8
6.3
6.8
7.3
7.8
8.3
8.8
6.0
6.7
7.4
8.1
8.8
9.5
10.2
10.9
11.6
6.0
6.7
7.4
8.1
8.8
9.5
10.2
10.9
11.6
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
SPEED ACCURACY
BUDGET
PERFORMANCE
+0.5
+0.7
+0.5
+0.7
60
INDUSTRY STATISTICS
IDEAL SPOTS
We also know that within each market segment,
there is an ‘ideal spot’ which represents the highest
concentration of buyers. The information in the
table below shows the Ideal Spot “offsets,” or how
far away the ideal spot is from the segment center.
Remember the ideal spot is different from the
segment center in the Performance market because
customers constantly demand faster, more accurate
devices. From a customer’s perspective, if they buy
a product at the ideal spot, it will still be a cutting
edge product when it wears out.
SEGMENT SIZES BY REGION
At the beginning of the simulation, more units in
the Budget segment are sold than the Performance
segment. With the industry becoming global, demand
across the three regions is projected to grow. Below is the
total number of units demanded the year before you
took over your company (Round 0 of the simulation).
GROWTH RATES
Over the course of the simulation, each segment in each
region will grow at a different rate. In this simulation,
these growth rates will be the same from round to
round. For Round 1, the first year you will manage your
company, growth rates are as follows:
BUDGET
PERFORMANCE
AMERICAS
6%
13%
EUROPE
18%
31%
ASIA PACIFIC
43%
49%
BUDGET
PERFORMANCE
AMERICAS
5,838
3,195
EUROPE
1,994
697
ASIA PACIFIC
553
216
BUDGET
PERFORMANCE
SPEED
+0.0
+1.4
ACCURACY
+0.0
+1.4
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Customers in the Americas, Europe and Asia Pacific
value the four buying criteria differently in each
segment. Budget customers are seeking proven
products, are indifferent to technological sophistication
and are price motivated. Performance customers
are seeking cutting-edge technology that delivers
improvements in Accuracy and Speed through new
designs. Below are the individual buying criteria for
each regional segment.
BUYING CRITERIA
Americas – Budget Segment
+ Price, $15-$35 — importance: 55%
+ Age, 3 years — importance: 19%
+ Ideal Position — importance: 17%
+ Service Life, 14,000-20,000 — importance: 9%
Europe – Budget Segment
+ Price, ¤15-¤35 — importance: 50%
+ Ideal Position — importance: 21%
+ Age, 3 years — importance: 15%
+ Service Life, 14,000-20,000 — importance: 14%
Europe – Performance Segment
+ Ideal Position — importance: 43%
+ Age, 0 years — importance: 33%
+ Service Life, 17,000-23,000 — importance 16%
+ Price, ¤25-¤45 — importance: 8%
Asia Pacific – Budget Segment
+ Price, S$15-S$35 — importance: 60%
+ Ideal Position — importance: 14%
+ Service Life 14,000-20,000 — importance: 14%
+ Age, 3 years — importance: 12%
Asia Pacific – Performance Segment
+ Ideal Position — importance: 41%
+ Age, 0 years — importance: 28%
+ Service Life, 17,000-23,000 — importance 20%
+ Price, S$25-S$45 — importance: 11%
Americas – Performance Segment
+ Ideal Position — importance: 39%
+ Age, 0 years — importance: 32%
+ Service Life, 17,000-23,000 — importance: 19%
+ Price, $25-$45 — importance: 10%
BUDGET SEGMENT PERFORMANCE SEGMENT
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REGIONAL OPERATING COSTS
Each of the geographical regions has different operating
costs. You will need to consider currency exchange rates,
shipping costs, tariffs and tax rates for each region before
making your final decisions each round. Below is
information from the end of last year (Round 0 of the
simulation). The updated information for each round of
the simulation can be found in The Globe segment pages
and on the Marketing tab in the simulation.
Shipping Costs
To Europe: $3.00 per unit
To Asia Pacific: $2.50 per unit
Currency Exchange Rates
Americas to Europe – $1 = ¤.90
Americas to Asia Pacific – $1 = S$1.25
Tariffs
Europe – 4.5% per unit
Asia Pacific – None
Tax Rates
Americas – 35%
Europe – 32%
Asia Pacific – 25%
Prime Interest Rate – 7.0%
$3.00 per unit
AMERICAS EUROPE ASIA PACIFIC
$2.50 per unit
63
STRATEGY
63
64
LOCAL BROAD COST LEADER
To adopt a Local Broad Cost Leader strategy, the company will
maintain a presence in both segments of the market across
only one or two regions. Competitive advantage is gained by
keeping R&D, production, shipping and raw materials costs to
a minimum, enabling the company to compete on the basis of
price. Prices are below average. The Plant Automation level is
increased to improve margins, and Outsourcing is used sparingly
– only to meet excess demand. Any international selling must be
done with an eye on margins, first and foremost.
Vision Statement
Low priced products for the local region: our brands offer solid
value. Our primary stakeholders are bondholders, customers,
stockholders and management.
DETERMINE YOUR STRATEGY
3 QUESTIONS:
1. Will your company be Local or Global?
2. Will your company be Niche or Broad?
3. Will your company be a Cost Leader or a Differentiator?
STRATEGY
65
LOCAL BROAD DIFFERENTIATOR
To adopt a Local Broad Differentiator strategy, the company
will maintain a presence in both segments of the market across
only one or two regions. Competitive advantage is gained by
distinguishing products with excellent design, high awareness, and
easy accessibility. R&D competency is developed to keep designs
fresh and exciting. Products keep pace with the market, offering
improved accuracy and speed – and sometimes tailored region kits.
Prices are above average. Capacity is expanded as higher demand
is generated, and Outsourcing is used to meet additional demand.
Vision Statement
Premium products for the local region: our brands withstand the
test of time. Our primary stakeholders are customers, stockholders,
management, and employees.
STRATEGY
LOCAL NICHE COST LEADER
To adopt a Local Niche Cost Leader Strategy, the company will
concentrate primarily on the Budget segment across only one or
two regions. Competitive advantage is gained by keeping R&D,
production, and raw materials costs to a minimum, enabling the
company to compete on the basis of price. Prices are below average.
Automation levels are increased to improve margins and to offset
Outsourcing costs. The company will only use Outsourcing when it
can’t meet demand with internal plant capacity levels.
Vision Statement
Reliable products for low technology customers in the local region:
our brands offer value. Our primary stakeholders are bondholders,
stockholders, customers, and management.
66
LOCAL NICHE DIFFERENTIATOR
To adopt a Local Niche Differentiation strategy, the
company will focus on the Performance Segment across
only one or two regions. Competitive advantage is gained
by distinguishing products with an excellent design, high
awareness, easy accessibility, and new products – any of
which may be tailored to the local market’s needs. R&D
competency is developed to keep designs fresh and
exciting. Products will keep pace with the market, offering
improved accuracy and speed. Tailoring products with the
local region kit is considered. Prices are above average.
Capacity is expanded as higher demand is generated, and
Outsourcing is used to meet additional demand.
Vision Statement
Premium, tailored products for technology-oriented
customers in the local region: our brands define the
cutting edge. Our primary stakeholders are customers,
stockholders, management, and employees.
STRATEGY
67
GLOBAL BROAD COST LEADER
To adopt a Global Broad Cost Leader strategy, the company
will maintain a presence in both segments of the market
across all regions. Competitive advantage is gained by
keeping R&D costs, production costs, and raw materials
costs to a minimum, enabling the company to compete on
the basis of price. Prices are below average. Regional and
product branding and sales efforts are below average. The
Plant Automation level is increased to improve margins, and
Outsourcing is used sparingly – only to meet excess demand.
Vision Statement
Low priced products for the industry across the globe:
our brands offer solid value. Our primary stakeholders are
bondholders, customers, stockholders and management.
STRATEGY
68
GLOBAL BROAD DIFFERENTIATOR
To adopt a Global Broad Differentiator strategy, the
company will maintain a presence in both segments of
the market across all regions. Competitive advantage is
gained by distinguishing products with an excellent design,
high awareness, and easy accessibility. R&D competency
is developed to keep designs fresh and exciting. Products
keep pace with the market, offering improved accuracy and
speed – and sometimes tailored region kits. Prices are above
average. Regional and product branding and sales efforts are
given a larger budget to work with. Capacity is expanded
as higher demand is generated, and Outsourcing is used to
meet any additional demand.
Vision Statement
Premium products for the industry across the globe: our
brands withstand the test of time. Our primary stakeholders
are customers, stockholders, management, and employees.
STRATEGY
69
GLOBAL NICHE COST LEADER
To adopt a Global Niche Cost Leader strategy, the company
will concentrate primarily on the Budget segment across
all regions. Competitive advantage is gained by keeping
R&D costs, production costs, and raw materials costs to a
minimum, enabling the company to compete on the basis
of price. Prices are below average. Regional and product
branding and sales efforts are below average. Automation
levels are increased to improve margins, and Outsourcing is
only used to meet demand.
Vision Statement
Reliable products for low technology customers across the
globe: our brands offer value. Our primary stakeholders are
bondholders, stockholders, customers, and management.
STRATEGY
70
GLOBAL NICHE DIFFERENTIATOR
To adopt a Global Niche Differentiator strategy, the
company will focus on the Performance Segment across all
regions. Competitive advantage is gained by distinguishing
products with excellent design, high awareness, easy
accessibility, and new products – any of which may be
tailored to the individual local market’s needs. R&D
competency is developed to keep designs fresh and
exciting. Products will keep pace with the market, offering
improved accuracy and speed. Tailoring products with
specific region kits is considered. Prices are above average.
Regional and product branding and sales efforts are given
a larger budget to work with. Capacity is expanded as
higher demand is generated, and Outsourcing is used to
meet any additional demand.
Vision Statement
Premium, tailored products for technology-oriented
customers across the globe: our brands define the
cutting edge. Our primary stakeholders are customers,
stockholders, management, and employees.
STRATEGY
71
GLOSSARY
71
72
GLOSSARY
AGE SCORE
There is no rough cut for age: a product will never be
too young or too old to be considered for purchase.
Customers demanding cutting-edge technology prefer
newer products. The ideal age in the Performance
segment is generally one and a half years or less.
Customers in the Budget segment prefer proven
technology, which means older designs.
AUTOMATION
As automation levels increase, the number of labor
hours required to produce each unit falls. The lowest
automation rating is 1.0; the highest rating is 10.0.
At an automation level of 1.0, labor costs are highest.
Each additional point of automation decreases labor
costs approximately 10%. At a rating of 10.0, labor costs
fall by about 90%.
Automation costs $4.00 per point of automation.
Raising automation from 1.0 to 10.0 costs $36.00 per
unit of capacity. Conversely, lowering automation from
10.0 to 1.0 also costs $36.00 per unit of capacity.
As you raise automation, it becomes increasingly
difficult for R&D to reposition products short distances
on the Perceptual Map. For example, a project that
moves a product 1.0 on the map takes significantly
longer at an automation level of 8.0 than at 5.0. When
you’re making a large move on the perceptual map, it
will be less affected by a higher automation level. You
can move a product a long distance at any automation
level, but the project will take between 2.5 and 3.0 years
to complete.
Time Required to Move a genetic testing device on the
Perceptual Map 1.0 Unit at Automation Levels 1 through 10
73
GLOSSARY
BASE SCORES
To estimate the Customer Satisfaction Score, begin
with the buying criteria available in The Globe Segment
Analysis reports. For example, the buying criteria for the
Asia Pacific Performance segment are:
• Ideal Position – importance: 41%
• Age, 0 years – importance: 28%
• Service Life, 17,000-23,000 – importance 20%
• Price, S$25- $45 – importance: 11%
A perfect score of 100 requires that the product has
an age of 0 years, a price of $25, a position at the ideal
spot and a Service Life of 23,000 hours.
The segment weighs the criteria at: Positioning 41%,
Age 28%, Service Life 20% and Price 11%. You can
convert these percentages into points, then use
numbers to estimate a base score for your product.
For example, price is worth eleven points. The perfect
Round 0 price of S$25 would get eleven points, but at
the opposite end of the price range, a price of S$45
would get one point.
However, the base score can fall because of poor
awareness (promotion), accessibility (place) or the
credit terms you extend to your customers.
BONDS
All bonds are 10-year notes. Your company pays a 5%
brokerage fee for issuing bonds. The first three digits of
the bond series number reflects the interest rate.
The last four digits indicates the year the bond is due.
The numbers are separated by the letter S, which stands
for “series.” For example, a bond with the number
12.6S2017 has an interest rate of 12.6% and is due
December 31, 2017.
Bond issues are used most often to fund long-term
investments in capacity and automation.
Bondholders will lend total amounts up to 80% of the
value of your plant and equipment (the Production
Department’s capacity and automation). Each bond
issue pays a coupon, the annual interest payment,
to investors. If the face amount or principal of bond
12.6S2017 were $1,000,000, then the holder of the bond
would receive a payment of $126,000 every year for ten
years. The holder would also receive the $1,000,000
principal at the end of the tenth year.
When issuing new bonds, the interest rate will be 1.4%
over the current debt interest rates. If your current debt
interest rate is 12.1%, then the bond rate will be 13.5%.
You can buy back outstanding bonds before their due
date. A 1.5% brokerage fee applies. These bonds
74
GLOSSARY
are repurchased at their market value, or street price,
on January 1 of the current year. The street price is
determined by the amount of interest the bond pays
and your credit worthiness. It is therefore different from
the face amount of the bond.
If you buy back bonds with a street price that is less
than its face amount, you make a gain on the repurchase.
This will be reflected as a negative write-off on the
income statement
Bonds are retired in the order they were issued.
The oldest bonds retire first. There are no brokerage
fees for bonds that are allowed to mature to their
due date.
If a bond remains on December 31 of the year it
becomes due, your banker lends you current debt to
pay off the bond principal. This, in effect, converts the
bond to current debt. This amount is combined with
any other current debt due at the beginning of the
next year.
BOND DUE DATE
Assume the face amount of bond 12.6S2017
is $1,000,000. The $1,000,000 repayment is
acknowledged in your reports and spreadsheets in the
following manner: Your annual reports from December
31, 2017 would reflect an increase in current debt of
$1,000,000 offset by a decrease in long term debt of
$1,000,000. The 2017 spreadsheet will list the bond
because you are making decisions on January 1, 2017,
when the bond still exists. Your 2018 spreadsheet would
show a $1,000,000 increase in current debt and the
bond no longer appears.
BOND RATINGS
Each year your company is given a credit rating that
ranges from AAA (best) to D (worst). In GlobalDNA,
ratings are evaluated by comparing current debt
interest rates with the prime rate. If your company has
no debt at all, your company is awarded an AAA bond
rating. As your debt-to-assets ratio increases, your
current debt interest rates increase. Your bond rating
slips one category for each additional 0.5% in current
debt int erest. For example, if the prime rate is 10% and
your current debt interest rate is 10.5%, then you would
be given an AA bond rating instead of an AAA rating.
BUYING CRITERIA AND THE
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION SCORE
The customer satisfaction survey starts by evaluating
each product against the buying criteria. Next, these
assessments are weighted by the criteria’s level of
importance. For example, the performance segment
considers product age and specs very important, while
75
What generates the score itself? Marketers speak of
“the 4 P’s”– price, product, promotion and place.
Price and product are found in the buying criteria.
Together they present a price-value relationship.
Your promotion budget builds “Awareness,” the
number of customers who know about your product
before purchasing. Your sales budget (place) builds
“Accessibility,” the ease with which customers can find
and purchase your product. To the 4 P’s we can add
two additional elements – credit terms and availability.
Credit terms are expressed by your accounts receivable
(A/R) policy. Availability addresses inventory shortages.
These are all considered to be part of the Customer
Satisfaction Score.
CREDIT POLICY
(ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE AND ACCOUNTS PAYABLE)
Your company determines the number of days
between transactions and payments. For example, your
company could give customers 30 days to pay their
bills (accounts receivable) while holding up payment to
suppliers for 60 days (accounts payable).
Shortening A/R (accounts receivable) lag from 30 to
15 days in effect recovers a loan made to customers.
Similarly, extending the A/P (accounts payable) lag
from 30 to 45 days extracts a loan from your suppliers.
the budget segment concentrates primarily on price.
A well-positioned product in a segment where
positioning is important will have a greater overall
impact on its survey score than a well-positioned
product in a segment where positioning is not important.
A perfect customer satisfaction score of 100 requires
that the product:
• Be positioned at the ideal spot (the segment drifts
each month, so this can occur only one month
per year);
• Be priced at the bottom of the expected range;
• Have the ideal age for that segment;
• Have a Service Life specification at the top of the
expected range.
The customer satisfaction score drives demand for your
product. Your demand in any given month is your score
divided by the sum of the scores. For example, if your
product’s score in April is 20 and your competitors’
scores are 27, 19, 21 and 3, then your product’s April
demand is:
20 / (20+27+19+21+3) = 22%
Assuming you had enough inventory to meet demand,
you would receive 22% of segment sales for April.
GLOSSARY
76
GLOSSARY
The accounts receivable lag impacts the customer
satisfaction score. At 90 days there is no reduction to
the base score. At 60 days the score is reduced 0.7%.
At 30 days the score is reduced 7%. Offering no credit
terms (0 days) reduces the score by 40%.
The accounts payable lag has implications for
production. Suppliers become concerned as the
lag grows and they start to withhold material for
production. At 30 days, they withhold 1%. At 60 days,
they withhold 8%. At 90 days, they withhold 26%.
At 120 days, they withhold 63%. At 150 days, they
withhold all material. Withholding material creates
shortages on the assembly line. As a result, workers
stand idle and per-unit labor costs rise.
CURRENT DEBT
Your bank issues current debt in one-year notes.
The Finance page in your interface displays the amount
of current debt due from the previous year. Last year’s
current debt is always paid off on January 1. The company
can “roll” that debt by simply borrowing the same
amount again. There are no brokerage fees for current
debt. Interest rates are a function of your debt level. The
more debt you have relative to your assets, the greater
risk you present to debt holders and the higher the
current debt rates.
As a general rule, companies fund short term assets like
accounts receivable and inventory with current debt
offered by banks.
Bankers will loan current debt up to about 75% of your
accounts receivable (found on last year’s balance sheet)
and 50% of this year’s inventory. They estimate your
inventory for the upcoming year by examining last year’s
income statement. Bankers assume your worst-case
scenario will leave three- to four-months in inventory
and they will loan you up to 50% of that amount.
This works out to be about 15% of the combined value
of last year’s total direct labor and total direct material,
which is displayed on the income statement.
Bankers also realize your company is growing, so as a
final step bankers increase your borrowing limit by 20%
to provide you with room for expansion in inventory and
accounts receivable.
EMERGENCY LOANS
Financial transactions are carried on throughout the year
directly from your cash account. If you manage your
cash position poorly and run out of cash, the simulation
will give you an emergency loan to cover the shortfall.
The loan comes from a gentleman named Big Al – a loan
shark who charges very high interest rates. Big Al lends
you the exact amount of your shortfall. You pay one
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EXCESS WORKING CAPITAL
Excess working capital is calculated as follows: Working
Capital = Current Assets – Current Liabilities, 90 Days
of Sales = 90/365 Sales, Excess Working Capital =
Working Capital – 90 Days of Sales
FINE CUT CIRCLE
The solid inner circle defines the heart of the segment.
Customers prefer products within this circle. We call
the inner circle the fine cut because products within it
“make the fine cut.” Fine cut circles have a radius of
2.5 units.
IDEAL SPOT
The ideal spot is that point in the heart of the segment
where, all other things being equal, demand is highest.
MAX INVEST
Max Invest is the maximum dollar amount you can
invest in your production plant in a given year.
This number is calculated depending on your capital
budget limit.
The capital budget limit is determined by the maximum
amount that can be raised through stock and bond
issues plus excess working capital, minus the total
amount of stock dividends to be paid in the current year.
year’s worth of current debt interest on the loan and
Big Al adds a 7.5% penalty fee on top to make it worth
his while.
For example, suppose the current debt interest rate
is 10% and you are short $10,000,000 on December
31. You pay one year’s worth of interest on the
$10,000,000 ($1,000,000) plus an additional 7.5% or
$750,000 penalty.
You do not need to do anything special to repay an
emergency loan. However, you need to decide what to
do with the current debt (pay it off, re-borrow it, etc.).
The interest penalty only applies to the year in which
the emergency loan is taken, not to future years.
Emergency loans are combined with any current debt
from last year. The total amount displays in the Due This
Year cell under Current Debt.
Emergency loans depress stock prices, even when
you are profitable. Stockholders take a dim view of
your management performance when they witness a
liquidity crisis.
GLOSSARY
For most companies, Excess Working Capital will
be zero.
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GLOSSARY
POSITIONING FINE CUT
Products inside the fine cut are within 2.5 units of the
center of the circle.
A product’s positioning score changes each month
because segments and ideal spots drift a little each
month. Placing a product in the path of the ideal spot
will return the greatest benefit through the course of
a year.
POSITIONING ROUGH CUT
Products placed in the rough-cut area are between 2.5
and 4.0 units from the center of the circle. Products here
are poorly positioned and receive lower customer
satisfaction scores. The farther they are from the fine
cut circle, the lower the score. Just beyond the fine cut,
scores drop 1%. Halfway across the rough cut, scores
drop 50%. Scores drop 99% for products that are
almost to the edge of the rough cut.
POSITIONING SCORE
The Marketing department must understand both what
customers want and their boundaries. In terms of a
product’s Accuracy and Speed, the Perceptual Map
illustrates these ideas with circles. Each segment is
described with a dashed outer circle (rough cut), a solid
inner circle (fine cut) and a dot we call the ideal spot.
PRICE FINE CUT
Within each segment’s price range, price scores follow
a classic economic demand curve; as price goes down,
the price score goes up.
PRICE ROUGH CUT
Devices priced $10.00 above or below the segment
guidelines will not be considered for purchase.
Those products fail the price rough cut.
Devices priced $1.00 above or below the segment
guidelines lose about 10% of their customer satisfaction
score. Devices continue to lose approximately 10% of
their customer satisfaction score for each dollar above
or below the guideline up to $9.99, where the score is
reduced by approximately 99%. At $10.00 above the
range, demand for the product is zero.
PRICE SCORE
Every segment has a $20.00 price range. Customers
prefer products priced towards the bottom of the range.
Price ranges in all segments drop $0.50 per year.
Segment price expectations correlate with the segment’s
position on the Perceptual Map. Segments that demand
faster, more accurate genetic diagnostic test devices are
willing to pay higher prices.
79
GLOSSARY
draft automatically, to submit your file or share with
teammates, you must click the Save button (1) and
select the departments you want to save to your
company file (2). Any time you save to the company
file you will overwrite the existing decisions for that
department (3). You can go back and update the
company file as many times as you’d like before the
round ends, but you must save your decisions to the
company file for them to be used when the round
processes (4).
PROFIT SHARING
Your company shares 2% of Net Profit by region with
your employees. You can view your total profits shared
with your employees on pages 3 and 4 of the Globe.
RETIRING BONDS EARLY
A bond with a face amount of $10,000,000 could cost
$11,000,000 to repurchase because of fluctuations in
interest rates and your credit worthiness. A 1.5%
brokerage fee applies. The difference between the face
value and the repurchase price will reflect as a gain or
loss in the income statement’s fees and write-offs.
ROUGH CUT CIRCLE
The dashed outer circle defines the outer limit of the
segment. Customers are saying, “I will NOT purchase
a product outside this boundary.” We call the dashed
circle the rough-cut boundary because any product
outside of it “fails the rough cut” and is dropped from
consideration. Rough-cut circles have a radius of
4.0 units.
SAVING & COLLABORATING
In GlobalDNA you will have the opportunity to
experiment with different business decisions and
assess their effectiveness before you commit to
them. While your decisions are saved as a personal
80
GLOSSARY
SAVING — UPDATING YOUR DRAFT
If you’re part of a team, saving your file will alert your
colleagues in the form of a notification through the
pullout box on the right of the screen (1). You will receive
the same notification if a team member updates the file
with their decisions. Opening this box will allow the team
to download any decisions from the company file and
overwrite the department data in their current file (2).
A red icon will appear on the update
drawer bar. Click to open.
Click ‘Load’ to update your draft with
that departments team decisions.
81
SEGMENT MOVEMENT
Each segment moves across the Perceptual Map a little
each month. In a perfect world, R&D would use iterative
design to position your product in front of the ideal
spot as many times as possible throughout the year.
SERVICE LIFE FINE CUT
Within the segment’s Service Life range, the customer
satisfaction score improves as Service Life increases.
However, material costs increase $0.30 for every
additional 1,000 hours of Service Life. Customers ignore
Service Life above the expected range — demand
plateaus at the top of the range.
SERVICE LIFE ROUGH CUT
Demand scores fall rapidly for products with Service
Life hours beneath the segment’s guidelines.
Products with a Service Life of 1,000 hours below
the segment guideline lose 20% of their customer
satisfaction score. Products continue to lose approximately
20% of their customer satisfaction score for every
1,000 hours below the guideline down to 4,999 hours,
where the customer satisfaction score is reduced by
approximately 99%. At 5,000 hours below the range,
demand for the product falls to zero.
GLOSSARY
SERVICE LIFE SCORE
Each segment has a range for Service Life. This is the
number of hours a product is expected to operate before
it malfunctions. Customers prefer products towards the
top of the range.
STOCK
Stock issue transactions take place at the current market
price. Your company pays a 5% brokerage fee for issuing
stock. New stock issues are limited to 20% of your
company’s outstanding shares in that year.
As a general rule, stock issues are used to fund long-term
investments in capacity and automation.
Stock price is driven by book value, the last two years’
earnings per share (EPS) and the last two years’ annual
dividend.
Book value is equity divided by shares outstanding.
Equity equals the common stock and retained earnings
values listed on the balance sheet.
Shares outstanding is the number of shares that have
been issued. For example, if equity is $50,000,000 and
there are 2,000,000 shares outstanding, book value is
$25.00 per share.
82
GLOSSARY
STOCK OUTS AND SELLER’S MARKET
What happens when a product generates high
demand but runs out of inventory (“stocks out”)?
The company loses sales as customers turn to its
competitors.
This can happen in any month. Below are some
possible scenarios in which demand outstrips supply.
1. After completing a capacity analysis, a company
decides that industry demand exceeds supply. They
price their product $9.99 above last round’s published
price range, forgetting that price ranges fall by $0.50
each round. Demand for the product becomes zero.
They should have priced $9.49 above last year’s range
2. A company disregards a competitor’s product
that is in the positioning rough cut. These products
normally can be ignored because they have low
customer satisfaction scores. However, when the
company increases the price of its own product, its
customer satisfaction score falls below that of the
competitor’s product in the rough cut which suddenly
becomes more attractive for buyers.
EPS is calculated by dividing net profit by shares
outstanding.
The dividend is the amount of money paid per share to
stockholders each year. Stockholders do not respond
to dividends beyond the EPS; they consider them
unsustainable. For example, if your EPS is $1.50 per share
and your dividend is $2.00 per share, stockholders would
ignore anything above $1.50 per share as a driver of stock
price. In general, dividends have little effect upon stock
price. However, GlobalDNA is unlike the real world in
one important aspect — there are no external investment
opportunities. If you cannot use profits to grow the
company, idle assets will accumulate. GlobalDNA is
designed such that in later rounds your company is likely
to become a cash cow, spinning off excess cash. How you
manage that spin-off is an important consideration in the
endgame, and dividends are an important tool at your
disposal.
You can retire stock. The amount cannot exceed the
lesser of either:
• 5% of your outstanding shares, listed on page 2 of last
year’s Globe; or
• Your total equity listed in last year’s Globe. You are
charged a 1.5% brokerage fee to retire stock.
83
GLOSSARY
3. The company fails to add capacity for that round.
A seller’s market sometimes appears because a
competitor unexpectedly exits a segment. This creates
a windfall opportunity for the remaining companies.
(However, a well-run company will always have enough
capacity to meet demand from its customers.)
How can you be sure of a seller’s market? You can’t,
unless you are certain that industry capacity, including
outsourcing, cannot meet demand for the segment.
In that case, even very poor products will stock out as
customers search for anything that will meet their needs.
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Comp-XM®, and GlobalDNA® are trademarks
of Capsim Management Simulations, Inc.
Copyright © 2016 Capsim Management Simulations, Inc.
All rights reserved.
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