Intelligent Business: Management in Mid-Sized German Companies
Intelligent Business: Management in Mid-Sized German Companies
Intelligent Business: Management in Mid-Sized German Companies
If you are looking for new management ideas, should you always look at management in
companies bigger than yours?
B Vocabulary
Complete the sentences below. Look carefully at the words in italics. Use you dictionary and
refer to the attached text from The Economist.
1c, 2a, 3a, 4c, 5b, 6b. 7c, 8b, 9c, 10b. 11a, 12c, 13a, 14c, 15a, 16b, 17b, 18b, 19b, 20a
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Intelligent Business
8) A parochial firm is ...
a) a firm owned by a religious group.
b) a firm which operates in a small area.
c) a firm owned by a single family.
9) Anonymous company men ...
a) do not have names.
b) use false names.
c) are not well-known.
10) If you are hip, you are ...
a) young.
b) fashionable.
c) energetic.
11) If something is staid, it is ...
a) traditional but slightly old-fashioned.
b) obsolete.
c) no longer useful.
12) A niche is ...
a) a special place.
b) a secret space
c) a small space.
13) A spate refers to ...
a) a large number of, probably bad, events.
b) a group of valuable assets.
c) a large number of, probably angry, people.
14) A sceptic is someone who ...
a) a person who does not have any infectious diseases.
b) a person who often worried for no significant reason.
c) a person who does not automatically believe something heard or read.
15) If you overstate an argument, you ...
a) exaggerate the argument.
b) suggest the argument is not logical.
c) over-react to the argument.
16) If something is prosaic, it is ...
a) creative.
b) ordinary, not interesting.
c) familiar and friendly.
17) If your determination is dogged, you will ... {pronounced dogg –éd]
a) admit defeat very quickly.
b) not admit defeat until the last moment.
c) not admit defeat after you are defeated.
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Intelligent Business
18) If you innovate, you ...
a) make an old thing look as if it is new.
b) use new ideas in creative ways.
c) re-use ideas which has been used before.
19) A sustained success ...
a) requires regular injections of capital.
b) lasts for a long time.
c) will damage your reputation.
20) If you take a lesson to heart, you ...
a) change your behaviour because of the lesson.
b) memorise the lesson.
c) accept some parts of the lesson.
C Comprehension
Read the article carefully. Choose the best endings to complete the sentences below.
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Intelligent Business
D After reading – Discussion
Think about management in commercial operations of different sizes, a one person
freelance business, a small family business, a mid-sized business and a large international
corporation. How is management different in these different types of business?
These different cases can be harder to know what the best way is to manage how the
commercial will work and how is the correct time to stop attract more clients and have a
organized company to make sure that the company deliver what promises. Even if it is a
product or service.
How does the difference in management style influence communication, capital investment,
advertising and marketing, expansion, finding new markets, delivery to markets, customer
service and other factors?
If you have a collaborative open space culture inside your company you create a disruptive
and innovative scenario within your company that provides a lot of prosperity.
Businesses would like to have a large number of customers. But how does increasing the
number of customers change the management requirements? Businesses would like to offer
a large number of products in their catalogue. But how does increasing the number of
products in the catalogue change the management requirements?
If you don’t have a good structure inside the company you can’t be big. It is dangerous,
because you sometimes will have more clients then your company behave. But if you plan to
grow all of the scenarios inside the company to be bigger you can increase whatever you
think.
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Intelligent Business
Key
A Open answers.
B 1c, 2a, 3a, 4c, 5b, 6b. 7c, 8b, 9c, 10b. 11a, 12c, 13a, 14c, 15a, 16b, 17b, 18b, 19b, 20a
C 1g, 2c, 3a, 4j, 5i, 6k, 7e, 8f, 9h, 10b, 11d.
D Open answers
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Intelligent Business
Germany’s midsized companies have a lot to teach
the world
Nov 25th 2010 | from PRINT EDITION
MANAGEMENT gurus are constantly scouring the world for the next big idea. Thirty
years ago they fixated on Japan. Today it is India. The more restless are already
moving on to Peruvian or Zulu management. Yet in all this intellectual globe-trotting
the gurus have sorely neglected the secrets of one of the world’s great economies.
Germany is the world’s largest goods exporter after China despite high labour costs
and a strongish euro. It is also stuffed full of durable companies that have survived
hyperinflation and two world wars. Faber-Castell, a giant among pencilmakers, boasts
that Bismarck was a customer.
Although the term Mittelstand is sometimes applied to quite small, parochial firms,
the most interesting ones are rather bigger and more outward-looking. Most shun the
limelight: 90% of them operate in the business-to-business market and 70% are based
in the countryside. They are run by anonymous company men, not hip youngsters in
T-shirts and flip-flops.
Globalisation has been a godsend to these companies: they have spent the past 30
years of liberalisation working quietly but relentlessly to turn their domination of
German market niches into domination of global ones. They have gobbled up
opportunities in eastern Europe and Russia. They have provided China’s “factory to
the world” with its machine-tools.
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Intelligent Business
The Mittelstand dominates the global market in an astonishing range of areas: printing
presses (Koenig & Bauer), licence plates (Utsch), snuff (Pöschl), shaving brushes
(Mühle), flycatchers (Aeroxon), industrial chains (RUD) and high-pressure cleaners
(Kärcher). Kärcher’s dominance of the high-pressure market is so complete that in
2005 Nicolas Sarkozy caused a scandal, after a spate of riots, by calling for a crime-
ridden banlieue to be cleaned out “au Kärcher”.
How durable is the Mittelstand model? Sceptics worry that it will eventually become
the victim of globalisation: emerging-world companies will learn to produce their own
clever machines at a fraction of the cost. They also worry that Mittelstand companies
are too conservative. American start-ups can become global giants in a generation
(Wal-Mart, now the world’s biggest retailer, was not even listed on the stock
exchange until 1972). German companies are content to remain relatively small.
The first criticism is overstated. Mittelständler have not only focused on sophisticated
niches that are hard to enter. They have thrown their energies into building up ever
more powerful defences. They constantly innovate to stay ahead of potential rivals.
They are relentless about customer service. Their salespeople are passionate about
their products, however prosaic, and dogged in their determination to open up new
markets. Mr Simon’s “hidden champions”, mostly German Mittelstand firms,
typically have subsidiaries in 24 foreign countries, offering service and advice. Many
get the bulk of their revenues from service rather than products. Hako, which makes
cleaning equipment, generates only 20% of its revenue from sales of its machines.
The second criticism has more substance. Germany has a poor record at generating
start-ups or at quickly turning smallish firms into giants. Mittelstand firms are finding
it increasingly difficult to persuade the world’s best and brightest to make their
careers in rural backwaters. But for all that, the record of the Mittelstand over the past
three decades has been a history of global conquest rather than missed opportunities.
Koenig & Bauer, for example, gets 95% of its revenue from outside Germany.
German lessons
So the Mittelstand is likely to keep powering Germany’s export machine for years to
come. But does it have any lessons for the rest of the world? Mr Simon says that
although 80% of the world’s medium-sized market leaders are based in Germany and
Scandinavia, successful Mittelstand-style companies can be found everywhere from
the United States (particularly the Midwest) to northern Italy, so the model does seem
to be transferable.
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Intelligent Business
prosper; it is often better to focus on your traditional strengths in “old-fashioned”
industries. Second, niches that appear tiny can produce huge global markets.
The third lesson is that Western companies can preserve high-quality jobs in a vast
array of industries so long as they are willing to focus and innovate. Theodore Levitt,
one of the doyens of Harvard Business School, once observed that “sustained success
is largely a matter of focusing regularly on the right things and making a lot of
uncelebrated little improvements every day.” That is a lesson that the Germans
learned a long time ago—and that the rest of the rich world should take to heart.
http://www.economist.com/blogs/schumpeter
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