THE EXCELLENT CONSULTING GROUP COMMUNICATION FROM ART:

Outputs Diagnosis

Pages: 5, Double spaced

Sources:3

Order type: Case Study

Subject:Company Analysis

Academic level: Master

Style: APA

Language:English (U.S.)

 

Order Description

THE EXCELLENT CONSULTING GROUP

COMMUNICATION FROM ART:

Onward to the next project: Outputs of Whole Foods Market. As was indicated before, this is a follow-up using the Nadler-Tushman Congruence Model.
Analyze how Whole Foods Market, has been doing in terms of its performance, how it stacks up against its goals.

The executives have to know how congruent the outputs are across the three levels. So given the analysis of performance at each of the three levels, are the interactions of these outputs congruent – highly, somewhat, or very little.

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Medicine and Health

 

Three topics are:

1)contact irriant dermatitis
2)Noisy induce hearing loss
3)eye injury

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Employment Law Unit

46

Employment Law Unit V includes a Case Study assignment. It is similar to the activities  completed for  discussion board and subjective essays, but the deliverable (paper you submit) is more substantial.The case study is based on a work scenario.There are several cases listed at the ends of the chapters. (Chapter 12: pp. 398-400, Chapter 13: pp. 433-435) Choose one case as the basis for the assignment. Please choose a chapter and case that is interesting . Look up the case on the Internet and read about it. come back to the case later for the writing part of the assignment.  understand the important facts of the case and why (or why not) liability was found in that case. Pretend that a scenario “similar” to the case you chose has arisen in your company. You will have to invent a specific factual scenario! Use your imagination! Make it similar, but different, from the one you chose. As a matter of fact, to make the assignment more interesting, create a set of facts that do not arise to the level of whichever kind of liability (or cause of action) occurred in the case you chose from the book . Create a set of facts that are similar to liability but do not create a prima facie case. (Yes, I know I said it three times, but I wanted to be sure you understand what I mean.) The HR Director has asked you to prepare a memorandum outlining the legal issues and outlining a recommendation. Rather than a scholarly paper format, please use a technical writing format. Here is a list of grading features for your memo: MHR 6401, Employment Law 3 • Use standard memorandum format. (If you are unfamiliar with memo format, please look on the Internet using the key words “memo format” and choose any of the generally accepted formats. Be sure to put the term “Memorandum” at the top!) • Use these paragraph “headings” for your content: o Background (invented summary of the factual situation in your company), o Issue (statement of the primary relevant legal issue; use a format similar to: “The issue is ‘whether’ such and such actions constitute such and such discrimination.”), o Rule (statement of the status of the law in regard to that type of harassment), o Application (see paragraphs below for additional explanation), o Conclusion (statement of the way you believe your company’s pretend scenario will be resolved based on your research of other cases), o Recommendation (make a firm recommendation to the President regarding the best resolution in this case and a method of preventing such a situation from occurring in the future), o References (Include at least three source citations for your paper: probably your textbook, the actual case, and a statute or other case). • The memo should not be over three double-spaced pages in length, excluding the references. You will have to be concise in what you say! (Yes, I know that memos are supposed to be short and single-spaced, but this specific assignment fits the memo format very well so we will use it.) Hints for the application section:

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MEDIAN DEVIATION

20
MEDIAN DEVIATION                                                                                                                                                                                       PLACE AN ORDER TODAY & GET 15% DISCOUNT (CODE GAC15)

BUILDERS LTD

20

BUILDERS LTD : Case Study

Language Style: English (U.K.)

Order Instructions:

Case study.
Sally is Company Secretary of Builders Ltd., a family owned building company with a reputation for
quality workmanship and customer service.
Sally has become quite worried recently because she has noticed an increasing
number of customer complaints about the quality of the work done. The company’s suppliers are also beginning
to moan about the pressure that Builders puts on them to get non-stock items to the work sites at very
little notice and because of the late payment of their bills. The business regularly switches suppliers to get
the best price and quickest delivery times and recently has been trying to improve its cashflow through slower
payment of invoices. The company is also under pressure because trading conditions have been extremely
difficult in the building trade for the last couple of years; the business has managed to keep going but the
owners are not happy with the profits being made. To win jobs recently it has had to slash its prices even
though inflation in the industry has hit its costs severely.

Builders was set up in 1980 by Jimmy Down and is now run by his children John, Jim and Sally. John,
the oldest, is Managing Director and Jim is Operations Manager. The company now has 55 full time staff as
well as taking on casual labour as needed for specific jobs. In the past few years as full timers have left
or retired the business has tended to use more casual staff or subcontract to keep costs down. All employees
are recruited personally by John, Jim and Sally from amongst people they know and currently include 10 members
of their wider family. When recruiting they tend to rely on what they know about the person, or what other
people have said plus a short interview with one of them to find out more about the person.

Since the children took over complete control of the business in 2009 they have started to take on bigger jobs
including building new houses in small developments in and around Oxford. This has proved a real challenge as
neither John nor Jim has much experience of planning big jobs and the financial strain has been severe as has
the stress it has put on them personally. To help get the building of these homes going the company has
borrowed funds. None of the family are particularly good at understanding the finances but Sally is concerned
about the borrowing and the cashflow problems created by these bigger building projects that take longer to
complete and sell. The company has a few houses it has been trying to sell for a while. However despite some
home building projects the bulk of the company’s work remains improvements and repairs for individual home
owners where they rely on word of mouth marketing. All of the family have been brought up to believe that if
you do a good job word will soon spread and there’s no better way to generate business; unfortunately
enquiries seem to be less frequent nowadays and the conversion rate to actual orders has been falling.

Most recently John has been keen to find ways of growing the business significantly despite the present
economic climate and financial position of the business. John has ambitions to make the business much bigger
and keeps urging the others to “think big and aim high”. John has been trying to grow the company by bidding
for some very large corporate maintenance contracts (e.g. hospitals, hotels, office blocks etc.) in the last
year not only in Oxfordshire, which is where the business has operated before, but throughout the country.
These bids have taken up lots of John’s time and energy but have been unsuccessful as the company has lost out
to much bigger organisations. It seems that these customers want some assurance of high standards other than
just a local reputation and view Botley Builders as too much of a risk, even if it did have the capacity
required and could match the prices of others. There has been some muttering within the business.
The firm is wholly owned, equally, by John, Jim and Sally; they do not take a salary from the business relying
instead on dividends paid from the profits for their personal income. Sally is worried about the
sustainability of the business; all three of them have had to support the business financially in recent years
but they now have no significant personal resources remaining.

John and Jim personally visit every job to meet the customer and give an estimate. If successful they then
share the supervision duties and keep a close personal involvement with every project. They often have 25
simultaneous jobs – keeping them running smoothly sometimes presents a problem. Generally, the company is
friendly and informal and work is undertaken in a flexible way by whoever is free at the time. Generally
everyone tends to get on well ; however there can be friction when they duplicate work or think someone else
is dealing with a task and sometimes John thinks they avoid taking difficult decisions for fear of upsetting
people. As Company Secretary, Sally, is supported by one assistant and has a contract with a small local
accountancy firm, to deal with all the company paperwork including billing customers, paying suppliers,
payroll, returns to Companies House and so on.
Next week John has a charity dinner for a local hospice. This charity was one that Jimmy supported generously
for many years because he wanted to give something back to the community. The children have continued this
support giving a donation of £10,000 a year from the company since they have been in charge. Sally,however,
is beginning to wonder whether they should be looking after the business a bit more and worry about the rest
of society a bit less at the moment.PLACE AN ORDER TODAY & GET 15% DISCOUNT (CODE GAC15)

 

Examine why redistribution of wealth is considered to be an important function of a tax system

11

Examine the benefits and welfare system

Order type: Case Study

Question

Redistribution of wealth is considered to be an important function of a tax system. While this transfer can aim to reduce the income and wealth gap between the rich and the poor it can also lead to entrenched behaviours and dependency. Policy makers continuously strive to minimise the negative effects of this important function and reforms to the benefits and welfare systems are proposed and implemented from time to time.

Many research studies have looked at the relationship between taxation and labour supply and they have been summarised in Chapter 3 of Mirrlees Review titled ‘Labour Supply and Taxes’. The evidence suggests that reform of benefits and tax system can result in increased incentives for certain groups of people.

In July 2010 the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions presented to the UK Parliament a consultation document titled ‘21st Century Welfare’. This document outlined the intention of the coalition government to change the benefits system. After a period of consultation the Department of Work and Pensions published a second document titled ‘Universal Credit: welfare that works’.
In this assignment examine the benefits and welfare system by answering the following questions.

1) Identify and summarise the research evidence presented in Chapter 3 of Mirrlees Review titled ‘Labour Supply and Taxes’ which is most relevant to the reform of the benefit and welfare system.
2) Summarise the shortcomings of the existing benefits and welfare system identified by the document titled ‘21st Century Welfare’.
3) Summarise the proposed changes to the welfare and benefits system with reference to the document ‘Universal Credit: welfare that works’ and other documents available on the Department of Work and Pensions (DWP), Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC), Directgov websites and any other publication which are relevant.

 

4) Summarise the criticism which has been published by different organisations and in the press about the proposed changes to the benefits and welfare system.PLACE AN ORDER TODAY AND GET 15% DISCOUNT (CODE GAC15)

 

Fundamentals of Corporate Finance.

10

Fundamentals of Corporate Finance.

Order type: Case Study
Case Questions

Refer to text Fundamentals of Corporate Finance and answer the questions in the following mini case studies:

 

Case 1: Refer to a hotel and replace with data from the company in terms of expansion of the non-current asset base. Estimate the cash flows from such asset acquisition, assuming a cost of capital of 10%. Answer questions 1 (a, b, d, e, f) and
– then provide a theoretical explanation of each method of evaluation.
-then evaluate which is the best technique for capital budgeting (chapter 9)
After that Case 2 and 3: Identify the various forms of capital being employed by the company, and suggest changes to optimize the weighted average cost of capital (WACC). Assume costs of each component consistent with costs in the UAE, and compute the cost of the new WACC. Show all workings (chapters 14 and 16)

In case study 2: identify the various forms of capital being currently used and compute the individual cost of each form.

In case study 3: Suggest restructuring the capital base in a new form and compute the WACC. Justify your decisions.PLACE AN ORDER TODAY & GET 15% DISCOUNT (CODE GAC15)

 

Demonstrating the application of the theories, methods and techniques of purchasing and procurement on the case study selected by the lecturer.

4
Case Study

A written Research Report would be a maximum 2,000 words, demonstrating the application of the theories, methods and techniques of purchasing and procurement on the case study selected by the lecturer.

Measuring Purchasing Performance

A CERTAIN COLLEGE
Introduction
This is a medium sized college. Last year it had a total of 17,000 students enrolled, on three different sites each with a restaurant. It has four main groups of students:

• School leavers in the 16-19 age range, taking full-time GCE advanced level and vocational courses
• Employees of local organisations, studying on a part-time basis for professional and management qualifications
• Students following higher education courses, such as foundation degrees and higher national diplomas and certificates
• Adults taking leisure and recreational courses.

Last year, its income totalled £38 million, while total expenditure amounted to £37.3 millions. Of this, £25.2 million was paid out as salaries and £12.1 million was spent on operational expenses.
The Purchasing and Supply Function
Until the beginning of this year, it did not have a separate purchasing and supply function. All the college’s purchasing was undertaken by budget holders, such as senior and middle managers and certain administrative staff. None of these had any purchasing experience or qualifications and all purchasing decisions were based on past experience. The suppliers used were generally those who had dealt with the college for many years.

Last year the board of governors decided that it would be appropriate to appoint a purchasing manager. The post was advertised, applicants were short-listed and interviewed, and at the end of this process Nathan was appointed. He started in the role on 3rd January this year. One of his targets is to achieve savings of £1.0 million by the end of his first year in post.

One of Nathan’s first tasks is to carry out a review of all the spending. The largest amount of expenditure, £4.6 million, is on catering supplies for the restaurants, on each site. He discovers that each restaurant manager has contracts with different suppliers and there is little coordination between them.

During a meeting with the manager of the college’s main site restaurant, Nathan discovers that there have been many problems with the supplier of frozen foods. Deliveries are often late in arriving, sent to the wrong site, or are not of the quantity ordered. The restaurant manager claims that such poor supplier performance makes it difficult for him to match the standards required.

Purchasing Problems
Nathan discovers that all the budget holders order independently, often from the same supplier of books, stationery and computer consumables. Nathan arranges a series of meetings with various budget holders, but he finds that they are reluctant to give up their power to make buying decisions.

Nathan’s investigations also reveal that some services, such as cleaning and estate management, have been outsourced and these contracts have not been reviewed for more than four years. The cleaning contract costs the college £1.8 million, while the estate management contract has a cost of £1.0 million.
Nathan also finds out that the college operates its own travel agency, principally to provide training opportunities for those students on travel and tourism courses. However, it is college policy that all travel arrangements for staff and students have to be made through its own agency and not through competitors in the town.

The information in this case study is purely fictitious and has been prepared for assessment purposes only.
Any resemblance to any organisation or person is purely coincidental.
QUESTIONS
Questions 1 and 2 relate to the case study and should be answered in the context of the information provided.
Q1 Describe FIVE problems of purchasing and supply, at the College, that Nathan should investigate in order to save £1.0 million.

Q2(a) Explain the potential impact of poor supplier performance on the ability of the college restaurant managers to provide a quality service.

Q2(b) Describe THREE criteria that Nathan might use to measure the performance of the supplier of frozen foods.PLACE AN ORDER TODAY & GET 15%  DISCOUNT(CODE GAC15)

The case study of Engenco Cost Reduction.

3

The case study of Engenco Cost Reduction. Case Study

Introduction

Examine a case study and give an insight into business roles and the fundamentals of leadership and management. The word count is 1800 words.

Task

Consider the case study of Engenco Cost Reduction.

1. Identify and discuss the impact of any changes identified in the case study on the employees of Engenco.
2. What issues from the perspective of employees, shareholders and the Board of Directors must Engenco management consider when making major job cuts?
3. Having identified this information, provide an action plan to manage this change within the organisation, using your knowledge of the theories of change management, motivation and teams that will aid a smooth transition.

 

The scope of your discussion should include motivational, behavioural, relationship and management style considerations.

The signed assessment checklist and header sheet must be included within the assignment that you submit.

Outcome Expectations:

The course has a set of learning outcomes and those that apply to this assessment are detailed below. This assignment is designed to partially meet these outcomes. Other aspects of these outcomes will be tested in other assessments later in the course.

• Understand the constraints, processes and methods that might be employed in rolling out systems.
• Demonstrate an ability to review the strengths and weaknesses of others and understand how such review might be used to enhance the effectiveness of teams, groups and individuals, including being able to lead review meetings of projects and developments.
• Have a sound understanding of the implications of defensive behaviours in others.
• Have a good understanding and an ability to demonstrate basic task and people management skills.
• Demonstrate the ability to sell ideas and systems.
• Understand the strategies that are available for managing and undertaking peer review
• Demonstrate an ability to evaluate learning strategies and make appropriate choices in a range of contexts

Credit will be given for applying appropriate analysis tools to derive useful insights. The case study is one of introducing change under difficult circumstances so particular emphasis needs to be given to the management of change.
*
Cost Reduction at Engeco

Engeco is one of several key players in the energy industry in the UK in a market that is mature with a mixture of residential, commercial and industrial customers. Operations include most types of energy generation and supply, with investment in new technology, including piloting household wind turbines and supporting the development of domestic fuel cells. Privatised in the 1980s and exited by freedom from the public sector, it has spent the last 10 years experimenting with diversification into other businesses ranging from telecommunications, vehicle fleet operations and maintenance, to financial services including insurance and trading in wholesale energy. Many, but not all of these were sold again as Engeco clarified that its strengths lay in becoming an integrated energy and related home services business, which included the installation and servicing of home heating, security systems, cabling and care of kitchen appliances. It employs some 25,000 people in the UK with another 5,000 mostly in North America, with an average age between 25 and 35 years and 30% of the workforce are women.

Market background
The market in the UK is the most liberalised and developed in Europe and substantially deregulated, although the market regulator Ofgem sets the price framework for the network transmission infrastructure where the network owners still hold effective monop0olies. In the last few years, several foreign companies have entered the market as the energy industry in Europe has consolidated through convergence between gas and electricity, with merger and acquisition activity seen as creating the path to growth. These activities cross national boundaries with governments taking different attitudes, ranging from protectionism and seeing this activity saw ‘unpatriotic’ behaviour, to not seeing it as their role to interfere. The European Commission’s proposed energy strategy will address these different attitudes by breaking up companies that produce and supply energy into separate ownership. And opening up the market across Europe, extending choice of suppliers to its 500 million citizens. At the same time, it proposes setting targets to reduce carbon emissions and increase energy efficiency by 30% by 2020.

In line with its European competitors, Engeco has already made alliances and partnerships with other energy provides across Europe, starting with a joint venture in the Netherlands. This provided a launch pad for developing its activities in the region to which has been added partnering in Germany, acquisition in Belgium and the establishment of subsidiaries in Spain and Italy. Engeco has also widened its horizons beyond Europe with activities in North America, which include acquisitions in both Canada and the US through its related activities, operations in India and Africa.

Although now a major provider, there are now in excess of 40 other suppliers able to supply energy to domestic UK customers and with the market share very sensitive to price, any increase is usually accompanied by large numbers of customers switching supplier. Engeco has lost a million customers during the past year. Continuing pressure from consumer bodies to cut prices coupled with warmer weather affecting energy consumption has resulted in a dramatic drive to cut costs.

Human resources at Engeco
Engeco has a record as a good employer, with group wide HR strategies and policies that support the business. One of the first challenges with the new HR director, Kathryn Aldridge, was faced with when she arrived 5 years ago from a major oil company , was to move the HR function from a focus on transactions with their customers, to developing their understanding of what the people strategy meant. Her actions included encouraging people to learn more about the business through development moves into line management and involving the strategy director in HR Conferences. This made her smile as she remembered that this had been a two way process providing the opportunity to educate him as well. The strategic shift into concentrating on an integrated business had led to a focus on building a single culture based on core values that could apply across all aspects of the business. This included customer pride, trust and respect to provide the common culture underpinned by the ethical approach for which the organisation was becoming well known. This should mean that people can ‘feel at home’ and comfortable in whichever part of the organisation they move to.

Kathryn had just come out of the executive committee meeting and was reflecting on all that had been achieved in developing HR practices in the last five years since her move to Engeco.
She saw recruitment as key to the integrated culture with Engeco winning awards for its graduate recruitment in which much investment and effort was made. It had also developed a reputation for its scheme to recruit women into engineering and initiatives to help people with disabilities and the long term unemployed back to work in call centres. Apprenticeship schemes had been developed in both the UK and Canada, where there was a skilled trades shortage. These initiatives also reinforced the organisation’s concern to have an ethical culture and be ‘doing the right thing’.

They had also invested in training 1000 newly recruited engineers and providing their other 7500 engineers with refresher and advanced training. This training is mirrored for customer service and engineering support staff and 2,500 have been recently trained in new systems. Management development programmes cover each stage of a manager’s career, ranging from the talent to deliver the business strategy and includes change, people, business and personal skills. Typical development activities included work shadowing, coaching and mentoring, projects and secondments including international opportunities. The senior leadership programme has been developed in conjunction with a major business school for high potential senior managers.

Rewards at Engeco reflect market levels with options for flexible benefits and saving to buy shares with a bonus scheme to encourage higher performance. Business units had their own policies, which partly reflected the history of growth through acquisition, where the unit had evolved from the traditional business, the package reflected old public sector terms and conditions, with more emphasis on holiday and pension benefits rather than cash, whereas acquired employees may have had a more cash rich package. Even though these groups were in different locations, they performed similar roles and were often aware of the differences. At a senior level there is a single reward strategy across the whole of Engeco, irrespective of whether based in Europe or North America. For senior management, rewards include performance related pay, opportunities for international experience, contracts tailored to individual needs and flexibility to fit with lifestyle. Flexible working is also supported to enable other employees to balance work and caring commitments with the added benefit of saving on office space.
Engeco has traditionally felt it had a good relationship with its employees. However, the previous year had included the decision to move some back office roles to India, which led to lowering of scores in the annual attitude survey on career opportunities and whether employees felt they would recommend a friend to work for the company. The company uses a number of means to communicate with employees from the intranet – videos, team briefings and through various consultative meetings with its two trade unions in the UK and another two in North America. In the past Engeco has managed extensive changes including closing offices, working successfully together with the unions.

This time, Kathryn thought, it may not be so easy, after the success of their pilot outsourced operation to India and installing new customer systems, the Board had decided to transfer most of the rest of the back office activities out of the UK. The new Finance Director, Simon Pemberton, had also decided to take the opportunity to close the head office building on the outskirts of the capital to take advantage of a break in the lease and relocate. He felt that head office could operate on a much reduced staff and move to a smaller building 50 miles out, where the costs would be cheaper. The committee considered that head office should also demonstrate that they were reducing costs and jobs at a time when the rest of the workforce were expected to absorb job losses.

Unfortunately, there had been speculation suggesting large numbers of job losses in the press that morning, which included an interview with a very angry Sam Batton from their major union, protesting that ‘this would mean loss of customer service and they would not accept any compulsory job losses’. The communication plan had been ready to put into action the following week to coincide with the formal announcement and Kathryn had a meeting arranged with Sam and his other union colleague, Roy, to discuss the plans and their implications.

There had been so much achieved. Kathryn had developed a good team, some who been with the organisation for many years, seeing it through the many changes since privatisation, a couple from the graduate scheme with all the expectations of a bright future with Engeco and the few who had arrived with earlier acquisitions, bringing fresh ideas that she had managed to keep. She had been encouraging them to pursue their own development, spend more time in the business units gaining a wider perspective on the business, taking opportunities to be involved in projects and pursue professional qualifications. How was she going to support them through the inevitable cuts while they planned for the needs of those other units that would be affected and the future of the organisation?

This case study has been written using material based on a number of organisations and is not intended to reflect the practice of any particular company.

Task

Prepare and submit a report which identifies and discusses the impact of any changes identified in the case study on the employees of Engenco. Taking into account the perspectives of
of employees, shareholders and the Board of Directors what particular issues must Engenco management consider when making major job cuts?
Finally, having identified this information, provide an action plan to manage this change within the organisation, using your knowledge of the theories of change management, motivation and teams that will aid a smooth transition.

The scope of your discussion should include motivational, behavioural, relationship and management style considerations.

The signed assessment checklist and header sheet must be included within the assignment that you submit.

Outcome Expectations:

The course has a set of learning outcomes and those that apply to this assessment are detailed below. This assignment is designed to partially meet these outcomes. Other aspects of these outcomes will be tested in other assessments later in the course.

• Understand the constraints, processes and methods that might be employed in rolling out systems.
• Demonstrate an ability to review the strengths and weaknesses of others and understand how such review might be used to enhance the effectiveness of teams, groups and individuals, including being able to lead review meetings of projects and developments.
• Have a sound understanding of the implications of defensive behaviours in others.
• Have a good understanding and an ability to demonstrate basic task and people management skills.
• Demonstrate the ability to sell ideas and systems.
• Understand the strategies that are available for managing and undertaking peer review
• Demonstrate an ability to evaluate learning strategies and make appropriate choices in a range of contexts

Credit will be given for applying appropriate analysis tools to derive useful insights. The case study is one of introducing change under difficult circumstances so particular emphasis needs to be given to the management of change.

 

 
Cost Reduction at Engeco

Engeco is one of several key players in the energy industry in the UK in a market that is mature with a mixture of residential, commercial and industrial customers. Operations include most types of energy generation and supply, with investment in new technology, including piloting household wind turbines and supporting the development of domestic fuel cells. Privatised in the 1980s and exited by freedom from the public sector, it has spent the last 10 years experimenting with diversification into other businesses ranging from telecommunications, vehicle fleet operations and maintenance, to financial services including insurance and trading in wholesale energy. Many, but not all of these were sold again as Engeco clarified that its strengths lay in becoming an integrated energy and related home services business, which included the installation and servicing of home heating, security systems, cabling and care of kitchen appliances. It employs some 25,000 people in the UK with another 5,000 mostly in North America, with an average age between 25 and 35 years and 30% of the workforce are women.

Market background
The market in the UK is the most liberalised and developed in Europe and substantially deregulated, although the market regulator Ofgem sets the price framework for the network transmission infrastructure where the network owners still hold effective monop0olies. In the last few years, several foreign companies have entered the market as the energy industry in Europe has consolidated through convergence between gas and electricity, with merger and acquisition activity seen as creating the path to growth. These activities cross national boundaries with governments taking different attitudes, ranging from protectionism and seeing this activity saw ‘unpatriotic’ behaviour, to not seeing it as their role to interfere. The European Commission’s proposed energy strategy will address these different attitudes by breaking up companies that produce and supply energy into separate ownership. And opening up the market across Europe, extending choice of suppliers to its 500 million citizens. At the same time, it proposes setting targets to reduce carbon emissions and increase energy efficiency by 30% by 2020.

In line with its European competitors, Engeco has already made alliances and partnerships with other energy provides across Europe, starting with a joint venture in the Netherlands. This provided a launch pad for developing its activities in the region to which has been added partnering in Germany, acquisition in Belgium and the establishment of subsidiaries in Spain and Italy. Engeco has also widened its horizons beyond Europe with activities in North America, which include acquisitions in both Canada and the US through its related activities, operations in India and Africa.

Although now a major provider, there are now in excess of 40 other suppliers able to supply energy to domestic UK customers and with the market share very sensitive to price, any increase is usually accompanied by large numbers of customers switching supplier. Engeco has lost a million customers during the past year. Continuing pressure from consumer bodies to cut prices coupled with warmer weather affecting energy consumption has resulted in a dramatic drive to cut costs.

Human resources at Engeco
Engeco has a record as a good employer, with group wide HR strategies and policies that support the business. One of the first challenges with the new HR director, Kathryn Aldridge, was faced with when she arrived 5 years ago from a major oil company , was to move the HR function from a focus on transactions with their customers, to developing their understanding of what the people strategy meant. Her actions included encouraging people to learn more about the business through development moves into line management and involving the strategy director in HR Conferences. This made her smile as she remembered that this had been a two way process providing the opportunity to educate him as well. The strategic shift into concentrating on an integrated business had led to a focus on building a single culture based on core values that could apply across all aspects of the business. This included customer pride, trust and respect to provide the common culture underpinned by the ethical approach for which the organisation was becoming well known. This should mean that people can ‘feel at home’ and comfortable in whichever part of the organisation they move to.

Kathryn had just come out of the executive committee meeting and was reflecting on all that had been achieved in developing HR practices in the last five years since her move to Engeco.
She saw recruitment as key to the integrated culture with Engeco winning awards for its graduate recruitment in which much investment and effort was made. It had also developed a reputation for its scheme to recruit women into engineering and initiatives to help people with disabilities and the long term unemployed back to work in call centres. Apprenticeship schemes had been developed in both the UK and Canada, where there was a skilled trades shortage. These initiatives also reinforced the organisation’s concern to have an ethical culture and be ‘doing the right thing’.

They had also invested in training 1000 newly recruited engineers and providing their other 7500 engineers with refresher and advanced training. This training is mirrored for customer service and engineering support staff and 2,500 have been recently trained in new systems. Management development programmes cover each stage of a manager’s career, ranging from the talent to deliver the business strategy and includes change, people, business and personal skills. Typical development activities included work shadowing, coaching and mentoring, projects and secondments including international opportunities. The senior leadership programme has been developed in conjunction with a major business school for high potential senior managers.

Rewards at Engeco reflect market levels with options for flexible benefits and saving to buy shares with a bonus scheme to encourage higher performance. Business units had their own policies, which partly reflected the history of growth through acquisition, where the unit had evolved from the traditional business, the package reflected old public sector terms and conditions, with more emphasis on holiday and pension benefits rather than cash, whereas acquired employees may have had a more cash rich package. Even though these groups were in different locations, they performed similar roles and were often aware of the differences. At a senior level there is a single reward strategy across the whole of Engeco, irrespective of whether based in Europe or North America. For senior management, rewards include performance related pay, opportunities for international experience, contracts tailored to individual needs and flexibility to fit with lifestyle. Flexible working is also supported to enable other employees to balance work and caring commitments with the added benefit of saving on office space.
Engeco has traditionally felt it had a good relationship with its employees. However, the previous year had included the decision to move some back office roles to India, which led to lowering of scores in the annual attitude survey on career opportunities and whether employees felt they would recommend a friend to work for the company. The company uses a number of means to communicate with employees from the intranet – videos, team briefings and through various consultative meetings with its two trade unions in the UK and another two in North America. In the past Engeco has managed extensive changes including closing offices, working successfully together with the unions.

This time, Kathryn thought, it may not be so easy, after the success of their pilot outsourced operation to India and installing new customer systems, the Board had decided to transfer most of the rest of the back office activities out of the UK. The new Finance Director, Simon Pemberton, had also decided to take the opportunity to close the head office building on the outskirts of the capital to take advantage of a break in the lease and relocate. He felt that head office could operate on a much reduced staff and move to a smaller building 50 miles out, where the costs would be cheaper. The committee considered that head office should also demonstrate that they were reducing costs and jobs at a time when the rest of the workforce were expected to absorb job losses.

Unfortunately, there had been speculation suggesting large numbers of job losses in the press that morning, which included an interview with a very angry Sam Batton from their major union, protesting that ‘this would mean loss of customer service and they would not accept any compulsory job losses’. The communication plan had been ready to put into action the following week to coincide with the formal announcement and Kathryn had a meeting arranged with Sam and his other union colleague, Roy, to discuss the plans and their implications.

There had been so much achieved. Kathryn had developed a good team, some who been with the organisation for many years, seeing it through the many changes since privatisation, a couple from the graduate scheme with all the expectations of a bright future with Engeco and the few who had arrived with earlier acquisitions, bringing fresh ideas that she had managed to keep. She had been encouraging them to pursue their own development, spend more time in the business units gaining a wider perspective on the business, taking opportunities to be involved in projects and pursue professional qualifications. How was she going to support them through the inevitable cuts while they planned for the needs of those other units that would be affected and the future of the organisation?

This case study has been written using material based on a number of organisations and is not intended to reflect the practice of any particular company.

Task

Prepare and submit a report which identifies and discusses the impact of any changes identified in the case study on the employees of Engenco. Taking into account the perspectives of
of employees, shareholders and the Board of Directors what particular issues must Engenco management consider when making major job cuts?
Finally, having identified this information, provide an action plan to manage this change within the organisation, using your knowledge of the theories of change management, motivation and teams that will aid a smooth transition.

 

Psychodynamic and cognitive behavioural perspectives.

2

None Case Study

Read the case study below, and write an essay explaining what is understood and work with this client from both the Psychodynamic and cognitive behavioural perspectives.

Case Study
“Jane is a 50 year old woman who comes to see you on the advice of her GP, who has been treating her for depression. Jane is divorced with two adult children, aged 27 and 30, and for most of her adult life has been a full-time carer for her mother who was paralysed in a car accident, which killed her father when she was 29.
Jane’s mother died several month ago, and Jane now lives alone as her children moved away some years ago. Jane tells you that she wants to ‘get on’ with her life but is finding it extremely difficult. She would like to have a relationship, but finds it difficult to meet people and is anxious about leaving home for long periods. She would also like to restart her career as a nurse, which she gave up when she started to look after her mother, but she feels that it might be too late and worries that she is too old to retrain to meet the new practise requirements”.

The case study should include;
A summary of how Jane could be understood from a Psychodynamic perspective.
A description of how a Psychodynamic counsellor might work with Jane.
A summary of how Jane could be understood from a cognitive behavioural perspective.
A description of how a cognitive behavioural counsellor might work with Jane.
Identification of the main differences between the two approaches in working with Jane.
Identification of the similarities between the two approaches in working with Jane.
Evaluation of which approach is most appropriate for working with Jane and an explanation of why?
Reference to relevant literature, linking your ideas to theory.