500 - Capsim Team Member Guide
500 - Capsim Team Member Guide
500 - Capsim Team Member Guide
1
Introduction 1
8
Plug-Ins 21
10
Forecasting 22
2
Industry Conditions 3
2.1 Buying Criteria 3
2.2 Buying Criteria by Segment
3
The Customer Survey Score 5
3.1 Buying Criteria and the Customer Survey
Score 6
3.2 Estimating the Customer Survey Score 8
3.3 Stock Outs and Sellers Market
4
Managing Your Company 9
4.1 Research & Development (R&D) 10
4.2 Marketing
11
4.3 Production
13
4.4 Finance
10.1
10.2
Qualitative Assessment
10.3
22
11
Balanced Scorecard 23
11.1 Guiding Your Company
23
12
Six Basic Strategies 24
Broad Cost Leader
24
Broad Differentiation
24
15
5
The Capstone Courier 17
5.1 Front Page
21
9
Situation Analysis 21
24
24
17
17
17
19
19
6
Proformas and Annual Reports 19
6.1 Balance Sheet
19
20
7
Additional Modules 20
Support Tickets
If you need assistance, please
submit a support ticket.
Login at capsim.com, click
Foundation then, in the left menu,
select Help > Support.
If you have problems registering,
send an email to
[email protected].
7.1 TQM/Sustainability 20
7.2 HR (Human Resources) 20
Management Tools
1 Introduction
Congratulations, you are now in charge of a sensor manufacturing
company. Your firm was created when the government split a
monopoly into identical competitors. When the company was a
monopoly, operating inefficiencies and poor product offerings were
not addressed because:
Although last years financial results were decent, your products are
getting old, your marketing efforts are falling short, your
production lines need revamping and your financial management
is almost nonexistent.
Competition in the post-monopoly era means you can no longer
ignore these issues. If you do, competitors with better products and/
or lower prices will take your market share.
The sample resources used for the Rehearsal, including its Capstone
Courier and Industry Conditions Report, mirror those used in the
actual simulation.
To access the Rehearsal, log in at the Capsim website and go
to the Getting Started area.
You and your competitors have access to the industry newspaper, the
Capstone Courier. The Courier, described in Chapter 5, is a complete
year-end report on the sensor industry including customer buying
patterns, product positioning, manufacturing capacity and public
financial information. Knowledge is power. If you have a question
about your company, your customer or a competitor, start with the
Capstone Courier.
The Couriers Segment Analysis pages report Customer Survey Scores
(detailed in Chapter 3) which play a large part in determining sales
distributions. In general, the higher the score, the greater the sales.
The Courier displays Last Years Results. The Courier
available at the start of Round 1 displays last years results for
Round 0, when all companies were equal just after the
monopolys breakup. The Courier available at the start of
Round 2 will display the results for Round 1. As the simulation
progresses and strategies are implemented, results among
the competing companies will begin to vary.
Company Departments
Online interactive
Downloadable PDF (pen and paper)
To access the Situation Analysis, log into your simulation and
go to the Getting Started area.
browser; and
An XLS Version that runs via Microsoft Excel.
Plug-ins are different than modules. Plug-ins and their decisions have
a greater overall impact on your organization.
For example, the simulation might include the Corporate
Responsibility and Ethics plug-in, which presents you with an
unexpected ethical dilemma. Group discussion and consensus is
imperative because your decisions will affect your financial results.
Your simulation Dashboard will notify you if your simulation includes
a plug-in.
Buying Criteria
R&D works with Marketing to make sure your product line meets
customer expectations.
2 Industry Conditions
The information reported in your Industry Conditions Report will
help you understand your customers.
Your customers fall into different groups which are represented by
market segments. A market segment is a group of customers that has
similar needs. The segments are named for the customers primary
requirements such as:
Traditional
Low End
High End
Performance
Size
The Industry Conditions Report lists market segment sales
percentages and projected growth rates unique to your simulation.
Buying Criteria
A product with a
2.1.1 Price
performance of 8
and a size of 12 is
positioned here
2.1.2 Age
Each segment has different age expectations, that is, the length of
time since the product was invented or revised. One segment might
want brand new technology while another might prefer proven
technology that has been in the market for a few years.
2.1.3 MTBF (Mean Time Before Failure)
or Reliability
2.1.4 Positioning
Example!
Market segments will not move faster to catch up with products that
are better than customer expectations. Customers will refuse to buy a
product positioned outside the circles. Customers are only interested
in products that satisfy their needs. This includes being within the
circles on the Perceptual Map!
Perceptual Maps Can Be Used for Many
Types of Products...
Buying Criteria for the previous year are reported in the Capstone
Couriers Segment Analysis pages. As you take over the company to
make decisions for Round 1, your reports reflect customer
expectations as of December 31, Round 0 (yesterday). The Industry
Conditions Report displays the Round 0 buying criteria for each
market segment. Here are two example segments.
Example 1 customers seek proven products at a modest price.
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 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.
Fine Cut Circle
Prices, set by Marketing at the beginning of the year, will not change
during the year.
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.
Segment Movement
Each segment moves across the Perceptual Map a little each month.
In a perfect world your product would be positioned in front of the
ideal spot in January, on top of the ideal spot in June and trail the
Example!
See your Industry Conditions Report for exact information.
Figure 3.1 Positioning Scores: The outer edge of the orange rough cut measures
4.0 units from the center of the circle; the edge of the green fine cut measures
2.5 units from the center. Segment ideal spots are represented by the black dots.
The example on the left displays a positioning score for a segment that prefers
products with slower performance and larger size. The example on the right
displays a score for a segment that demands cutting edge products with high
performance and small size. The orange areas represent the segment rough cuts,
where scores rapidly decrease towards zero.
Products inside the rough cut but outside of the fine cut (orange
areas, Figure 3.1) are badly positioned. They are between 2.5 and 4.0
units from the center of the circle. Customers will consider them but
they are at a significant disadvantage to products inside the fine cut.
Specifically, products in the rough cut have reduced customer survey
scores. Their score drops in a linear fashion. Just beyond the fine cut
the score drops 1%. Halfway between the fine and rough cut the score
drops 50%. The customer survey score drops 99% for products that
are just inside the rough cut.
Sensors that are about to enter the rough cut can be revised
by Research & Development (see 4.1.1 Changing
Performance, Size and MTBF).
The location of each segments rough cut and fine cut circles
as of December 31 of the previous year appears on page 11 of
the Courier.
Products inside the fine cut (green areas, Figure 3.1,) are within 2.5
units of the center of the circle. Ideal spots for each segment are
illustrated by the black dots. The example on the left illustrates a
segment that prefers proven, inexpensive technology. The ideal spot is
to the upper left of the segment center, where material costs are
lower. The example on the right illustrates a segment that prefers
cutting-edge technology. The ideal spot is to the lower right of the
segment center, where material costs are higher (see Figure 4.1 for
an illustration of material positioning costs).
Sensors priced $5.00 above or below the segment guidelines will not
be considered for purchase. Those products fail the price rough cut.
Sensors priced $1.00 above or below the segment guidelines lose
about 20% of their customer survey score (orange lines, Figure 3.2).
Sensors continue to lose approximately 20% of their customer survey
score for each dollar above or below the guideline, on up to $4.99,
where the score is reduced by approximately 99%. At $5.00 outside
the range, demand for the product is zero.
Price Fine Cut
Each segment sets a 5,000 hour range for MTBF (Mean Time Before
Failure), the number of hours a product is expected to operate before
it malfunctions.
MTBF Rough Cut
Demand scores fall rapidly for products with MTBFs beneath the
segments guidelines. Products with an MTBF 1,000 hours below the
The age criteria does not have a rough cut; 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 ages for these market segments are generally one
and a half years or less. Other segments prefer proven technology.
These segments seek older designs.
Each month, customers assess a products age and award a score
based upon their preferences. Examples of age preferences are
illustrated in Figure 3.4.
20 and your competitors scores are 27, 19, 21 and 3, then your
products April demand is:
20/(20+27+19+21+3) = 22%
To estimate the customer survey score, begin with the buying criteria
available in the Couriers Segment Analysis reports. For example,
suppose the buying criteria are:
Example!
The segment weighs the criteria at: Age 47%, Price 23%, Positioning
21% and MTBF 9%. You can convert these percentages into points
then use these numbers to estimate a base score for your product. For
example, price is worth 23 points. The perfect Round 0 price of
$20.00 would get 23 points, but at the opposite end of the price range,
a price of $30.00 would only get one point.
After your product leaves the factory and enters the marketplace, the
calculations for its score become less exact. The score will be
affected by the level of the products awareness (the percentage of
people who know about your product) and its segments
accessibility (the number of customers who can easily interact with
your company).
Awareness is built over time by the products promotion budget.
Promotion budgets fund advertising and public relations campaigns.
Accessibility is built over time by the products sales budget. Sales
budgets fund salespeople and distribution systems to service
customers within the products market segment.
Similar products with higher awareness and accessibility will score
better than those with lower percentages (see 4.2 Marketing for
more information on awareness and accessibility).
If the TQM/Sustainability module is enabled, some initiatives
can increase the customer survey score (see 7.1 TQM/
Sustainability).
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.
The Market Share Report of the Capstone Courier (page 10)
can help you diagnose stock outs and their impacts.
Usually, a product with a low customer survey score has low sales.
However, if a segments demand exceeds the supply of products
available for sale, a sellers market emerges. In a sellers market,
customers will accept low scoring products as long as they fall within
the segments rough cut limits. For example, desperate customers
with no better alternatives will buy:
Inventing Sensors
New products are assigned a name (click in the first cell that reads NA
in the name column), performance, size and MTBF. Of course, these
specifications should conform to the criteria of the intended market
segment. The name of all new products must have the same first letter
of the company name.
The Production Department must order production capacity to build
the new product one year in advance. Invention projects take at least
one year to complete.
$1
0.
00
$5
.5
0
$1
.0
0
10
Marketing
the products age is 4 years old, on the day it is repositioned, its age
becomes 2 years old. Therefore, you can manage the age of a product
by repositioning the product. It does not matter how far the product
moves. Aging commences from the revision date.
The Rehearsal Tutorials R&D Tactics show you how to run the
department. Log in at the Capsim website and go to Getting
Started for information about the Rehearsal.
4.2 Marketing
Marketing functions vary widely depending on the industry and
company. In general, the department drums up interest in the
companys products or services through a mix of activities.
These can include advertising, public relations and good old
fashioned salesmanship.
Your Marketing Department is concerned with the remaining Ps
(beyond R&Ds product): Price, place and promotion. Your
Marketing Department is also in charge of sales forecasting.
4.2.1 Pricing Sensors
11
Marketing
Promotion
Sales
If a product ended last year with an awareness of 50%, this year it will
start with an awareness of approximately 33%. This years promotion
budget would build from a starting awareness of approximately 33%.
Starting Awareness + Additional Awareness From Figure 4.2 =
New Awareness
If you have two or more products that meet a segments fine cut
criteria, the sales budget for each product contributes to that
segments accessibility. The more products you have in the segments
fine cut, the stronger your distribution channels, support systems,
etc. This is because each products sales budget contributes to the
segments accessibility.
If you have one product in a segment, there is no additional benefit to
spending more than $3,000,000. If you have two or more products in
a segment, there is no additional benefit to spending more than a
$4,500,000 split between the products, for example, two products
with sales budgets of $2,250,000 each (see Figure 4.3).
Sales budgets are less effective when products are not
completely positioned in the fine cut circle, when prices rise
above segment guidelines or when MTBFs fall below segment
guidelines.
publish awareness.
12
Figure 4.3 Sales Budget: For budgets above $3,000,000, the dotted red line indicates there
are no additional returns for companies that have only one product in a segment and the
dashed red line indicates returns for companies with two or more products in a segment.
Increases in sales budgets have diminishing returns. The first $2,000,000 buys 22% accessibility. For companies with two or more products in a segment, spending $4,000,000 buys
just under 35%. The second $2,000,000 buys less than 13% additional accessibility.
Production
4.3 Production
For manufacturers, production literally puts everything together. The
department coordinates and plans manufacturing runs, making sure
that products get out the door.
In your Production Department, each product has its own assembly
line. You cannot move a product from one line to another because
automation levels vary and each product requires special tooling.
As it determines the number of units to produce for the upcoming
year, Production needs to consider the sales forecasts developed by
Marketing minus any inventory left unsold from the previous year.
4.3.1 Capacity
13
Production
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 (Figure 4.4). Long moves are less affected. 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.
Changing Automation
A Production Schedule
Increases in first shift capacity (Put a positive number in
Buy/Sell Capacity.)
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Finance
4.4 Finance
Corporate finance functions differ from company to company. Duties
can include managing financial risk, determining borrowing levels
or even simple check writing. In general, the department monitors
the companys flow of money, the life blood of any business.
Your Finance Department is primarily concerned with five issues:
1. Acquiring the capital needed to expand assets, particularly plant
and equipment. Capital can be acquired through:
Current Debt
Stock Issues
Bond Issues (Long Term Debt)
Profits
2. Establishing a dividend policy that maximizes the return to
shareholders.
3. Setting accounts payable policy (which can also be entered in
the Production and Marketing areas) and accounts receivable
policy (which can also be entered in the Marketing area).
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 be made after all other departments enter
their decisions. After the management team decides what resources
the company needs, the Finance Department addresses funding
issues and financial structure.
One of the Finance Departments fiduciary duties is to verify that sales
forecasts and prices are realistic. Unrealistic prices and forecasts
will predict unrealistic cash flows in the proformas. Finance can
determine a range of possible outcomes for the year by changing (but
not saving) Marketings forecasts then rechecking the proformas.
Lowering forecasts decreases revenue and increases inventory (worst
case); raising forecasts increases revenue and decreases inventory
(best case).
Finance can print the worst case and best case proformas,
then compare them to next years annual reports.
Your bank issues current debt in one year notes. The Finance area in
the Capstone Spreadsheet displays the amount of current debt due
from the previous year. Last years 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 more risk you present to debt holders
and the higher the current debt rates.
All bonds are ten year notes. Your company pays a 5% brokerage fee
for issuing bonds. The first three digits of the bond, the series
number, reflect the interest rate. The last four digits indicate the
year in which the bond is due. The numbers are separated by the
letter S which stands for series. For example, a bond with the
number 12.6S2014 has an interest rate of 12.6% and is due
December 31, 2014.
As a general rule, bond issues are used to fund long term
investments in capacity and automation.
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Finance
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.
When Bonds Are Retired Early
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 companys 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.
EPS is calculated by dividing net profit by shares outstanding.
16
Production Analysis
Retire Stock
Retire Bonds
Issue a Dividend
Finance also establishes Accounts Receivable (A/R) and
Accounts Payable (A/P) policies.
17
year of the report? This indicates a long repositioning project that will
possibly put that product into another segment.
If a revision date has yet to conclude, the Courier will report
the products current performance, size and MTBF. The new
coordinates and MTBF will not be revealed until after the
completion of the project.
Figure 5.1 Market Segment Analysis: Segment Statistics and Buying Criteria
display in the upper-left corner of each segment analysis. Accessibility and
Market Share Actual vs. Potential Charts display to the upper right. Customer
Awareness percentages and December Customer Survey Scores display on
the lower part of the page.
18
Market Share
Units Sold to Segment
Revision Date
Stock Out (Whether the product ran out of inventory.)
Performance and Size coordinates
Price
MTBF
The products Age on December 31
Promotion and sales budgets
Balance Sheet
Awareness
Accessibility
Customer Survey Score
5.5.2 Awareness and the December
Customer Survey Score
6 Proformas and
Annual Reports
Proformas and annual reports include:
Balance Sheet
Cash Flow Statement
Income Statement
Proformas are projections of results for the upcoming year. Annual
reports are the results from the previous year. The proformas allow
you to assess the projected financial outcomes of your company
decisions entered in the Capstone Spreadsheet.
To access proformas, click the Proformas menu in the
Capstone Spreadsheet. To access the annual reports, click
the Reports menu in the Capstone Spreadsheet or, on the
website, log into your simulation and then click the
Reports link.
considered good.
Assets are divided into two categories, current and fixed. Current
assets are those that can be quickly converted, generally in less than
a year. These include inventory, accounts receivable and cash. Fixed
assets are those that cannot be easily converted. In the simulation,
fixed assets are limited to the value of the plant and equipment, (see
4.3.1 Capacity and 4.3.3 Automation).
The Perceptual Map (page 11) displays all the segments and every
product in the industry.
Are your products competitively positioned?
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
and equity.
Assets = Liabilities + Equity
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. Equity is divided
into common stock and retained earnings.
Retained earnings are a portion of shareholders equity. They
are not an asset.
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20
7 Additional Modules
Some simulations use additional modules. If a module is scheduled,
the simulation Dashboard will tell you the round it is set to begin and
provide a link to complete documentation.
The HR (Human Resources) and TQM (Total Quality Management)/
Sustainability modules described below are frequently enabled. HR
and TQM decisions are used by the Balanced Scorecard, which is one
of the simulation assessment methods (see Chapter 11). Other
modules include Labor Negotiation and Advanced Marketing.
7.1 TQM/Sustainability
TQM (Total Quality Management)/Sustainability initiatives can
reduce material, labor and administrative costs, shorten the length of
time required for R&D projects to complete and increase demand for
the product line. The impacts of the investments produce returns in
the year they are made and in each of the following years.
The two sustainability-oriented initiatives, the UNEP Green Program
and GEMI TQEM, can lower labor and material costs. The UNEP
Green Program also can improve customer perceptions about your
company, which lead to increased sales. The remaining initiatives
can also increase efficiency and lower costs.
Your company should determine which initiatives best serve its
purposes. If you plan to keep automation levels low so R&D projects
complete more quickly, you might want to invest in areas that lower
labor costs (for example, Quality Initiative Training). If your
company is competing in the high technology segments, with high
material costs, you might consider initiatives that reduce material
costs (for example, Continuous Process Improvement).
To maximize the effect, companies should find complementary
initiatives and invest in each of them. For example, to reduce material
costs, companies should consider investing in both CPI Systems and
GEMI TQEM Sustainability.
8 Plug-Ins
Some simulations use plug-in modules. Plug-ins have a more general
impact on your company. For example, the Corporate Responsibility
and Ethics plug-in described below will have an impact on your
corporate profits.
If a plug-in is scheduled, the simulation Dashboard will tell you the
round it is set to begin and provide a link to complete documentation.
8.1.1 Compliance
In todays wired society, social media and other outlets increase the
likelihood of non-compliance being brought to regulators or the
publics attention. Even if these do not result in legal or civil actions,
from a public relations standpoint, the perception of non-compliance
can be disastrous in the marketplace. Again, a strong code of ethics
can be your insurance in these situations.
9 Situation Analysis
The Situation Analysis will help your company understand current
market conditions and how the industry will evolve over the next
eight years.
The analysis can be done as a group or you can assign parts to
individuals and then report back to the rest of the company.
To access the Situation Analysis, log in at the Capsim website
and go to the Getting Started area.
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10
Forecasting
Forecasting requires a little math and a little logic. For example, does
your forecast predict your product will acquire half a segments sales
when there are four or five products in the segment? Unless your
products positioning, age and MTBF are significantly superior to the
other 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 products positioning, age and
MTBF are significantly inferior and your price is at the high end of the
range or above, chances are you can sell more.
Still, this number can be a good beginning as you assess your product
offer and speculate what your competitors will offer.
Keep in mind the possibility that your products sold because
competitors who otherwise would have made sales under produced
and stocked out. Page 10 of the Courier 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.
Any new products about to come to market must have a
plant. Plant purchases are reported on the Production
Analysis (Courier, page 4).
22
What monthly customer survey scores 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. If
the TQM/Sustainability module is on, some initiatives could increase
the score. (See How is the Customer Survey Score Calculated? in the
Online Guides FAQ|Reports section for more information on
assessing your product.)
The total number of units available for sale (that is, the
Production Schedule added to Inventory).
When a forecast is less than the total number of units available for
sale, the proforma income statement will display an inventory
carrying cost. When a forecast is equal to or greater than the number
of units available, which predicts every unit will be sold, the carrying
cost will be zero.
remains from the previous year, be sure to subtract that from the
1,500). At the end of the year, in the worst case you will have sold
1,200,000 units and have 300,000 units in inventory. In the best case
you will have sold 1,500,000 units and have zero inventory.
The spread between the positions will show up as inventory on your
proforma balance sheet. Your proforma income statement will also
reflect the worst case for sales. In the Finance area, if the December
31 Cash Position is negative, adjust current debt, long term debt and
stock issue entries until the December 31 Cash Position becomes
positive. This will help ensure against an emergency loan.
To see your best case, return to the Marketing spreadsheet and enter
1,500 in the Your Sales Forecast cell then review the December 31
Cash Position. The actual results should lie somewhere between the
worst and best cases.
Log into the Capstone Spreadsheet and select Marketing
under the Decisions menu. There are two forecasts per
product. The Computer Prediction assumes your
competition has mediocre products and therefore is not
reliable. The Your Sales Forecast column allows you to enter
forecasts of your own.
11
Balanced Scorecard
statement;
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Mission Statement
12
These six basic strategies can be the starting point for your own
custom strategy.
Low-priced products for the industry: Our brands offer solid value.
Our primary stakeholders are bondholders, customers, stockholders
and management.
Broad Differentiation
A Broad Differentiation strategy maintains a presence in every
segment of the market. The company will gain a competitive
advantage by distinguishing products with an excellent design, high
awareness and easy accessibility. The company will develop an R&D
competency that keeps designs fresh and exciting. Products keep
pace with the market, offering improved size and performance.
Prices will be above average. Capacity will be expanded as higher
demand is generated.
Mission Statement
Premium products for the industry: Our brands withstand the test of
time. Our primary stakeholders are customers, stockholders,
management and employees.
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Index
Rehearsal Tutorial 1
Reliability 3, 4, 7, 8, 10,
18
Research & Development
(R&D) 2, 5, 10, 14
Rough Cut
A
Accessibility 8, 9, 12, 18,
19
Accounts Payable (A/P) 15,
17
Accounts Receivable 17
Accounts Receivable (A/R)
8, 15, 17
Actual Sales 22
Age 3, 4, 8, 10, 11, 18
Annual Reports 2, 19
Automation 10, 13, 14, 15
Awareness 8, 9, 12, 18,
19
B
Balanced Scorecard 23
Balance Sheet 15, 19
Bonds 15
Book Value 16
Business Ethics 21
Buying Criteria 3, 6, 18,
19
C
Capacity 3, 13, 14, 15
Capstone Courier 1, 17
Capstone Spreadsheet 2
Cash Flow Statement 20
Computer Prediction 13,
23
Corporate Responsibility
and Ethics 21
Create a Sensor 10, 12
Current Debt 15, 16
Customer Survey Score 5,
6, 8, 18, 19
D
December Customer Survey
Score 18
Discontinue a Sensor 3, 14
Dividend 15, 16
Drift 4
E
Earnings Per Share (EPS) 16
Emergency Loans 16
MTBF 8
Positioning 7
Price 7
Forecasting 13, 22
MTBF 7
Positioning 7
Price 7
Human Resources 19
I
Ideal Spot 6, 18
Income Statement 13, 15,
20
Industry Conditions Report
1, 3
Invent a Sensor 10, 12
M
Marketing 2, 3, 5, 11
Market Segment Drift 4
Market Segments 3, 4, 5,
11
Market Share 18
Material Cost 10, 20
Modules 2, 19, 20
MTBF (Mean Time Before
Failure) 3, 4, 7, 8,
10, 18
N
New Sensor 10, 12
P
Perceptual Map 4, 5, 10,
14, 18
Performance
Product Attribute 10
Plug-ins 2, 19, 21
Positioning 3, 4, 7, 18
Potential Sales 18, 22
Practice Rounds 3
Price 3, 4, 7, 18
Production 2, 3, 13, 17
Productivity Index 21
Proformas 2, 19, 23
Promotion Budget 12, 18
Stock 15, 16
Stock Outs 9, 22
Survey Score 5, 6, 8, 18,
19
T
Terminate a Sensor 3, 14
TQM/Sustainability 9, 20
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