1.samsung Electronics Success by Design PDF
1.samsung Electronics Success by Design PDF
1.samsung Electronics Success by Design PDF
Introduction
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Strategic Marketing
named Samsung as one of the fastest growing brands in its 2005 brand survey. The
top management attributed the companys success to a great extent to its new design
capabilities.
However, as of 2006, several small and big companies were following in Samsungs
footsteps, and hiring design houses and consultancies to improve their product
designs. It seemed that in the future, design itself was in danger of being
commoditized.
Background Note
The Samsung Group was founded by Byung-Chull Lee (Byung) in 1938, in Taegu,
Korea, as an exporter of dried fish, vegetables, and fruits. Byung later established
flour mills under the Samsung name (Korean for three stars). He also produced
confectionery machines in this period (Refer Exhibit I for the companies under the
Samsung Group as of 2006).
Exhibit I
Company
Business
Samsung Corning
Co. Ltd.
Glass (for picture tubes of TVs and monitors), ITOcoated glass (for LCDs), rotary transformers, cerio
nano powder, and PDP filter.
Samsung Corning
Precision Glass Inc.
Samsung Networks
Samsung Heavy
Industries
Samsung Techwin
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S No
Company
Business
Samsung Total
Petrochemicals Co.
Ltd.
10
Samsung
Petrochemical Co.
Ltd.
11
Samsung Fine
Chemicals Co. Ltd.
12
Samsung BP
Chemicals Co. Ltd.
13
Samsung Life
Insurance Co. Ltd.
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15
16
Samsung Securities
17
Samsung
Investment Trust
Management
18
Samsung Venture
Investment
Source: www.samsung.com.
In 1951, Samsung Moolsan, a holding company, was established, which later became
Samsung Corp. In 1953, Cheil Sugar Manufacturing Co. was set up, which later
became an independent company. In 1958, Samsung acquired Ankuk Fire and Marine
Insurance (later renamed Samsung Fire and Marine Insurance) and DongBang Life
Insurance in 1963 (later renamed Samsung Life Insurance). In 1966, the Group
founded Joong-Ang Development, an entertainment (theme parks) and services
company, which was later renamed Samsung Everland.
In 1969, Samsung Electronics Manufacturing Co. (SEMC) was incorporated. In the
1970s, the Samsung Group forayed into the shipbuilding, chemical, and petrochemical
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industries. In 1974, the Group acquired a 50% stake in Korea Semiconductor Co., a
joint venture between Korea Engineering & Manufacturing Co. and Integrated Circuit
International. SEMC started exporting its products in the 1970s. In 1978, the Groups
electronics exports crossed the 100 billion won mark.
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Unlike most other industrial conglomerates, the Samsung Group does not have a holding
company and is more like a web of companies, subsidiaries, and affiliates, where each entity
owns shares in other companies in the Group. In 2006, the Korean Fair Trade Commission,
Koreas top trade regulator, criticized Samsung for its corporate structure and asked it to
create a holding company.
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Strategic Marketing
In February 1984, SEMC was renamed as Samsung Electronics. In the mid-1980s, the
Samsung Group began to concentrate on R&D activities. In 1986, the Samsung
Economic Research Institute (SERI) (which later became an independent entity) was
set up, while the Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology (SAIT) was set up in
1987. The SAIT R&D center helped the Group enter other technology-intensive
industries in later years.
Byung passed away on November 19, 1987, after having managed the Group for
almost fifty years. After Byungs death, his son Kun-Hee Lee (Lee) became chairman
of the Group. In 1988, on the 50 th anniversary of the Groups founding, Lee
announced the Second Foundation of the company, with the aim of directing the
Group toward becoming a modern world-class corporation.
The 1990s saw a series of technological innovations at Samsung. The company
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developed the worlds first 16M DRAM in 1990, a 10.4 inch TFT-LCD panel in
1992, the worlds first 64M DRAM in 1992, an ultra-light 100g mobile phone, a
digital video recorder (DVD-R), the worlds first 8mm VCR in 1993, and the worlds
first 4X (four power) zoom camera in 1994. In 1995, it developed real-time MPEG-III
technology and a 22-inch TFT-LCD panel. In 1996, it developed a 1 GB DRAM and
in 1999, a 1 Gigabit flash memory prototype and a 24-inch TFT-LCD panel.
Samsungs technological innovations continued in the 2000s as well.
By 2006, Samsung had grown to become a leading player in the semiconductor,
telecommunication, digital media, and digital convergence technologies. The
company earned revenues of US$ 56.7 billion and a net income of US$ 7.5 billion (in
2005). It employed 113,600 people in 90 offices in 48 countries. It was estimated to
be the largest manufacturer of memory chips, TFT-LCDs, color TVs, and color
monitors in the world.
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DRAM or Dynamic Random Access Memory is a type of RAM (the primary storage in a
computer) that stores each bit of data in a separate capacitor.
Thin-Film Transistor LCDs are a variant of Liquid Crystal Displays (LCD). They are
believed to be an improvement over ordinary LCDs.
Les Echos, Samsung challenges Sonys stronghold, www.samsung.com, March 12, 2002.
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Lee came to the conclusion that apart from using cutting-edge technology, Samsung
could create value through design. He then communicated his vision for Samsung and
the role that design would play in the future, to his managers.
Lee was not sure, however, whether his designers were capable of delivering designs
that would appeal to a global audience. Therefore, he hired a Japanese design
consultant to evaluate Samsungs designers. The consultant came to the conclusion
that the designers were top notch; the problem lay in the processes and systems in
place. As a first step, Samsungs design center at Suwon, a small town, was shifted to
Seoul.
In 1994, Lee announced major plans to secure a new competitive advantage for
Samsung through design innovation. Samsung set aside US$ 126 million for its design
initiatives till 2000.
Soon, Lee sent a group of 17 designers from Samsung to the Art Center College of
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Design (ACCD) , Pasadena, California, to broaden their ideas about design. Samsung
later engaged the services of Gordon Bruce (Bruce) and James Miho (Miho), design
consultants and members of the faculty at the ACCD. The design consultants helped
establish a design school Innovative Design Lab of Samsung (IDS) close to the
companys headquarters in Seoul, to train the designers. Around US$ 10 million were
spent on setting up the eight-storied design lab.
Samsungs determination to excel in design inspired the government of South Korea
to announce the beginning of a Design Era in the country, in an effort to encourage
businesses to recognize the importance of design and use it as a competitive
advantage.
Design Philosophy
The Japanese consultants who had initially evaluated Samsungs design team had also
suggested that the company should incorporate Korean values in its designs. However,
Samsung found it difficult to arrive at a uniquely Korean identity. Company officials
were asked to travel the length and breadth of the country in search of places and
objects which could represent Korea. Eventually, it was believed that Lee himself
chose Seokguram, a remote mountain cave that housed an 8 th century Buddha, and the
phrase Balance of Reason and Feeling as the design philosophy for Samsungs
product design and graphic communications (Refer Exhibit II for a graphic
representation of balance of reason and feeling). It is very Oriental
not black
and white, but a balance of things. It states that we will meet the emotional needs of
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our customers with the technological solutions we have, said Hyun-joo Song,
executive in charge of design identity.
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The ACCD was established in 1930 in Los Angeles by Edward A. Adams. It offers
undergraduate programs in advertising, environmental design, film, fine art media, graphic
design, illustration, photography and imaging, product design, and transportation design,
and graduate programs in film, art and industrial design.
Frank Rose, Seoul machine, www.wired.com, May, 2005.
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Strategic Marketing
Exhibit II
Reason and feeling are opposites, but they are essential to each other. In design
terms, reason is rational, sharp-edged, and very geometric. Feeling is soft and
organic it makes an emotional connection with the user. Taken together, reason and
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feeling give us a way to frame our design identity, which is always evolving, said
Sangyeon Lee, head of Samsungs San Francisco design studio.
The Reason and Feeling approach was to have six guiding principles such as to
balance consistency with variety, harmonize with the environment, design for
experience, etc. Every Samsung product was to have consistent characteristics and a
common design language which were to provide real as well as emotional benefits
to customers. All products were required to have outstanding features and high levels
of convenience.
Design Strategy
Samsungs design strategy involved several initiatives. To begin with, the company
decided to create a global brand identity. Therefore, in 1993, the Samsung
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wordmark was launched (See Exhibit III for the Samsung wordmark), and later in
1999, Samsung began implementing a global brand communication strategy.
Exhibit III
Source: www.samsung.com.
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15
16
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In an effort to communicate the importance of design, Lee declared 1996 as the Year
of Design Revolution for the Samsung Group. The same year, Samsung engaged
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Tom Hardy as the Corporate Design Advisor to guide its efforts in improving its
design capabilities.
In order to maintain high levels of creativity, Samsung began sending its more
experienced designers to work abroad in diverse industries such as furniture,
cosmetics, and fashion for periods ranging from six months to two years. This enabled
the designers to think out-of-the-box. On their return, they were encouraged to share
their experiences with other designers so that the knowledge could spread across the
company. Around 20 designers were sent on such programs every year.
In 2001, Samsung inaugurated the new Design Management Center at Seoul. In 2003,
Samsung opened a usability lab in Seoul where engineers, designers, specialists from
the social sciences, and consumers tested everything right from taking the products
out of their boxes to the icons and menus on screens. Findings from such
observational research were used to help the designers improve their designs.
Samsung created world-class design infrastructure, including design labs and research
centers, to improve its design capabilities. In an effort to get a global perspective and
secure talent from different cultural backgrounds, it established design centers in the
US (San Francisco, Los Angeles), the UK (London), Italy (Milan), Japan (Tokyo), and
China (Shanghai). In addition, it improved its facilities at the Corporate Design Center
in its home country.
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Tom Hardy, a well-known design consultant, served as corporate design advisor at Samsung
between 1996 and 2003.
Bill Breen, The Seoul of design, www.fastcompany.com, December 2005.
Frank Rose, Seoul machine, www.wired.com, May, 2005.
Confucianism refers to a system of thinking based on teachings of Kong Fuzi (popularly known
as Confucius), a sage and a philosopher, who lived between 551 and 479 BC in China.
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Strategic Marketing
breaking away from some of the traditions and behavior patterns. For example, South
Koreans, like people belonging to other oriental cultures, respected their elders and
teachers and dared not question them. However, at the IDS, designers were
encouraged to question their superiors and express their opinions. All employees were
encouraged to speak their mind, irrespective of their age or position. Bruce said, In
the beginning of the program, designers cared a lot about their positions (like assistant
designer, designer, senior designer, or principal designer) and were unable to discuss
their ideas with those in other positions. However, as they went through the IDS
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program, they opened their minds to others and changed their attitudes. Also, in
another departure from convention, there was no dress code at the IDS. The trainees
were also paid their usual salary while they attended full-time classes six days a week
on subjects as varied as engineering, marketing, and design.
The consultants also noted that though the designers were expected to design products
for international markets, most of them had never traveled outside Korea. To
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understand who you are, you need to get out of your environment, pointed out
Bruce. Therefore, Bruce and Miho took the designers on a worldwide tour in an effort
to expose them to various cultures and thus expand their horizons. The team visited
Egypt, India, Italy, Greece, USA, and the UK.
From the fourth year onward, marketers and engineers also started attending one-year
programs at the IDS along with designers, so that communication and understanding
between the different functional groups would improve.
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Samsung DLP TV
Source: www.tv.about.com.
Samsung was also one of the best-selling brands in large high-end TVs (other than
DLP TVs) in the US, a position which it managed to achieve primarily due to its
emphasis on design. The Samsung Bordeaux LCD TVs, whose design was inspired by
wine glasses, were a huge hit in the US and in Europe.
In an affirmation of its design prowess, Samsung began to be a regular fixture in the
annual lists of IDEA winners. In 1997, it was ranked 15 th in the list, but by 2001,
along with Apple Computers, it had moved to first place, a position it continued to
hold even in 2006 (See Exhibit V for the list of IDEA winners). Through the 2000s,
Samsung won several awards (Refer Exhibit VI for a list of some of the awards won by
Samsung).
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DLP technology was originally developed at Texas Instruments in 1987. In this technology,
the image is created by microscopically small mirrors placed in a matrix on a semiconductor
chip. Each mirror represents one pixel.
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Strategic Marketing
Exhibit V
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
5 year
Total
Samsung
19
Apple
17
IBM
15
Nike
13
HP
12
Philips
10
Corporate
Source: www.businessweek.com.
Exhibit VI
Design Awards
S No
Product
Award
Touch Messenger
Digital Presenter
(Techwin UF 80)
Laptop (M40)
Miniket (SC-M110)
LCD Monitor
DLP Projection TV
(85 series)
9
10
11
12
LCD Monitor
S No
Product
Award
13
14
LCD Monitor
16
17
Smart Cooker
18
Modular TV concept
19
20
21
LCD Monitor
(NEXCA SDC-80)
Source: www.ide a.com.
Convergence Products
In addition to providing great-looking products, Samsungs designers also strove to
offer real benefits to consumers. For instance, Samsung launched several hybrid
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products (or digital convergence products) that combined the features of two or
more products, thus providing greater convenience to customers. In fact, Samsungs
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vision was to lead the digital convergence revolution , and design was to be a
significant contributor to achieving this (Refer Exhibit VII for photographs of some
convergence products from Samsung).
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Strategic Marketing
Exhibit VII
Convergence Products
10 Megapixel Camera Phone
Source: www.gizmodo.com.
Watch Phone*
* Yet to be launched.
Source: www.gsmarena.com.
Source: www.dvdreview.com.
Samsung launched 5 mega pixel and 7 mega pixel camera phones in 2005, followed
by a 10 mega pixel camera in 2006. These models combined a full-feature digital
camera with a mobile phone. It also launched the i730, a mobile phone that could be
used to read and send e-mail and browse the Internet. In mid-2006, Samsung launched
the SGH-i310, a mobile phone with 8 GB of storage capacity
enough to store
around 2,000 MP3 files. The Samsung Extiva, a DVD player that could also play
video games, the X series notebook computers that doubled as mobile TVs and yet
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Nuon is a technology which allows additional features in a DVD player like CD-ROM
readability.
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were thin and light enough to be carried around in a handbag, and Zipel, a refrigerator
that had a digital photo album and a TV receiver, were some of the other innovative
products developed by Samsung.
Criticism
Some critics commented that even if Samsungs design capabilities had improved
greatly, the company still lacked a coherent design. Samsung has improved, but I
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dont see an identity in their design that really speaks to consumers, said Jim
Wicks, vice-president (in charge of designing cell phones), Motorola Inc. According
to some other critics, the company still did not have the design culture of Apple
Computer Corp., or the breadth and depth in design that Sony possessed.
In spite of the improvements in the design process, the design of some of the products that
Samsung introduced was still poor. For example, the Samsung Q1, a tablet PC launched
in 2006, was panned by critics for its lack of features, small screen, and high price. One
critic had this to say: With no DVD drive, keyboard, or decent sized screen, and just over
two hours battery life, one wonders what applications the Samsung Q1 hopes to address
that arent already being handled. Reading online newspapers perhaps? I doubt whether
being able to download newspapers and read them on a seven inch screen will do it for
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people who are being asked to shell out $1100.
Another recurring criticism was that some of the high-design products were
unrealistically priced. Critics said that the company was trying to exact prices that
were more than the designs deserved. For instance, the 102 plasma TV launched in
2006 was priced at US$ 80,000 (Refer Exhibit VIII for a photograph of the worlds
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largest plasma TV).
Exhibit VIII
Source: www.engadget.com.
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David Rocks and Moon Ihlwan, Samsung design, www.businessweek.com, November 29,
2004.
Stan Beer, Samsung misses the mark with Q1 Origami, www.itwire.com, May 07, 2006.
In 2006, Matsushita Electronics claimed that it produced a larger plasma screen (103
inches).
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Strategic Marketing
Some of Samsungs products were also criticized for their poor user interface.
However in 2004, Samsung had announced that it would pay greater attention to this
aspect in its designs. Choi said, In the past, physical design was our focal point. In
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the future, the user interface will be emphasized more.
In May 2006, Samsung was faced with an embarrassing situation when two of its
mobile phone models in the Skin series, the SPH-V8900 and the SCH-V890, were
found to have icons similar to that of Apple and Microsoft products. Samsung
quickly withdrew the models from the market. There were a few mistakes while
we were developing the new product. We have already fixed the designs and I
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believe that the old models are not being sold in the market any more,
explained the chief of Corporate Design Center, Samsung. Although the
withdrawal was swift, the incident showed that Samsung had much ground to
cover before it can be called a design icon.
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David Rocks and Moon Ihlwan, Samsung design, www.businessweek.com, November 29,
2004.
Simon Burns, Samsung admits to copying handset icons, www.vnunet.com, May 08,
2006.
Design The new competitive difference, www.agelessmarketing.typepad.com, July 18,
2005.
John A. Byrne, Welcome to the design revolution, www.fastcompany.com, June 2004.
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Exhibit IX
Good design also allowed Samsung to command a price premium. For example, its
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mobile phones had the highest average unit sale price (US$ 215) in 2002 in their
category. It was believed that the company was able to achieve this because its mobile
phones featured a combination of cutting-edge technology and innovative design.
Yves Behar, a reputed industrial designer, believed that design bred customer loyalty.
According to him, design could be used to create emotional bonds with customers.
Samsung too was trying to connect with its customers by introducing products with
appealing designs. In the first and second quarter of 2006, Samsung was the number
one company in terms of worldwide TV sales (revenue). It was among the best-selling
brands in Europe and North America, two of the most sophisticated markets in the
world, in terms of technology and design (Refer Exhibit X for worldwide sales (in %)
of the top-selling brands).
Industry observers hailed the Samsung chairman for his vision in using design to
transform his company from just another electronics company into an innovator. Lee
foresaw that Samsung could wield design as a competitive weapon and use it to
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transform itself from an also-ran imitator to a world-class innovator, wrote Bill
Breen, columnist, Fast Company.com.
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According to Strategy Analytics, a US-based consumer survey firm. The figures for Nokia
and Motorola were US$ 148 and US $155 respectively.
Bill Breen, The Seoul of design, www.fastcompany.com, December 2005.
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Strategic Marketing
Exhibit X
Brand
Samsung
14.6
13.1
Sony
11.0
10.8
LG
9.8
8.1
Panasonic
9.5
7.2
Philips
8.6
8.8
Others
46.6
52.0
Source: www.neasia.nikkeibp.com.
However, looking at design trends and the fact that even smaller players were coming
up with products with interesting designs, it seemed as though in the future, design
would no longer be an adequate differentiator, as most products were expected to be
well designed. As Walter Herbst, CEO, Herbst LaZar Bell, a product design firm,
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said, Good design is not good enough any more.
Outlook
In September 2006, Samsung unveiled the Syncmaster 971P, an LCD monitor. The
product was unique in the sense that it had a geometric shaped stand, unlike
conventional LCD monitors (See Exhibit XI for a photograph of the Syncmaster
971P). The company claimed that the S-Shaped stand gave the monitor additional
stability. The model came with a high glossy finish, with all the cables and buttons
hidden from sight. We focused on creating artistic value from the design of the new
monitor, as well as maximizing functionality and user convenience. Samsung wants to
go beyond design and sensitivity to realize artistic value, high-functionality, and
maximum convenience in our products, to become the design icon in the global
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monitor market, said Yoon Ho Ha, senior vice president, Visual Display Division,
Samsung.
At IFA 2006, Samsung partnered with European furniture and interior design
companies Fritz Hansen (Denmark), Poliform and Gervasoni (both from Italy) and
Tillberg Design (Sweden), to showcase its range of audio, video, and mobile products.
The idea was to emphasize the design excellence of Samsung brand products. The
project involved placing Samsung products in four different kinds of interiors
Scandinavian, Mediterranean, Contemporary European, and Oriental.
Samsung believed that to stay ahead of the competition, it had to not only introduce
new designs but also continuously launch new products. For this, Samsung put
together an elite CNB (Creating New Businesses) Group to identify long-term social
and technological trends that could provide inputs for developing new product lines.
The CNB Group consisted of a team of designers from different business units. The
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Group came up with animated what-if films and 3-D mockups which were shown to
top executives for discussion and approval. It is not about what is happening now. It
is about imagining what our living environment will be like five or ten years down the
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road, said Ki-seol Koo, head of the CNB group.
Exhibit XI
Source: www.samsung.com.
In October 2006, Samsung reported net profits of 2.16 trillion won on sales of 15.22
trillion won for the third quarter of 2006-07 (Refer Exhibit XII for Samsungs
financials between 2000 and 2005).
Exhibit XII
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
Sales
34,284
32,380
39,813
43,582
57,632
57,458
Gross Profit
12,290
7,866
13,513
14,063
20,353
17,300
Operating
Profit
7,435
2,295
7,478
7,193
12,017
8,060
Income before
Tax
8,100
3,083
8,870
6,904
13,125
8,870
Net Income
6,015
2,947
7,052
5,959
10,787
7,640
Source: www.samsung.com.
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Strategic Marketing
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