Video Case Library ON THE JOB - Cengage Learning

Video Case Library
ON THE JOB
VIDEO CASES
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Camp Bow Wow: Innovative Management for a Changing World 2
Barcelona Restaurant Group: The Evolution of Management Thinking 2
Camp Bow Wow: The Environment and Corporate Culture 3
Holden Outerwear : Managing in a Global Environment 4
Theo Chocolate: Managing Ethics and Social Responsibility 5
LivingSocial Escapes: Managing Small Business Start-Ups 6
Modern Shed: Managerial Planning and Goal Setting 6
Theo Chocolate: Strategy Formulation and Execution 7
Plant Fantasies: Managerial Decision Making 8
Modern Shed: Designing Adaptive Organizations 9
Holden Outerwear : Managing Change and Innovation 10
Barcelona Restaurant Group: Managing Human Resources 10
Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams: Managing Diversity 11
Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams: Understanding Individual Behavior 12
Camp Bow Wow: Leadership 13
LivingSocial Escapes: Motivating Employees 13
Plant Fantasies: Managing Communication 14
Holden Outerwear : Leading Teams 15
Barcelona Restaurant Group: Managing Quality and Performance 16
BIZ FLIX
VIDEO CASES
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In Good Company 17
Casino 17
Charlie Wilson’s War 17
Lost in Translation 18
The Emperor’s Club 18
Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas
Inside Man 19
Played (I) 19
Failure to Launch 19
Rendition 20
Field of Dreams 20
Played (II) 20
Baby Mama 21
Because I Said So 21
Doomsday 21
Friday Night Lights (I) 22
Friday Night Lights (II) 22
Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins 22
In Bruges 23
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On the Job Video Cases
Chapter 1
Camp Bow Wow: Innovative
Management for a Changing
World
Nearly everyone who has been to camp has vivid memories of
the woodsy adventure. In particular, the sights and sounds of
the great outdoors leave a lasting impression on campers. There
are the cabins, the camp counselors, the campfire treats, the
wide open spaces, the incessant barking of the furry four-legged
camp goers—well, at least these are the sights and sounds for
visitors of Camp Bow Wow, the fastest-growing doggie daycare center in the United States.
Founded little more than a decade ago by dog-lover Heidi
Ganahl, Camp Bow Wow is a safe, happy place where people
can take their pets when no one is home to care for them. For
dog owners who work in the daytime, the Boulder, Coloradobased franchise offers premier doggie day-care services. For
pets that need to stay a little longer, Camp Bow Wow has overnight boarding with spacious cabins and comfortable cots.
Every day, the experienced counselors at Camp Bow Wow
supervise dozens of canine campers. Pooches receive plenty of
personal attention, including grooming, outdoor exercise, food,
baths, and medical support. For overprotective owners who
worry their pups might get homesick while they are away, the
camp’s Live Camper Cams enable anytime viewing of pet playareas using the Camp Bow Wow app for iPhone.
With more than 150 locations, Camp Bow Wow is one
of the hottest franchise businesses in the nation. The pet-care
service ranked No. 87 on Entrepreneur magazine’s list of fastestgrowing franchises in 2010, and the ranking is likely to go higher
as new franchisees prepare for launch. Camp Bow Wow franchise owners receive three weeks of startup training, and individual camps get corporate support in the form of co-op advertising,
a grand opening, and ongoing п¬Ѓeld operations and evaluations.
Sue Ryan, a Camp Bow Wow franchisee from Colorado,
knows the ins and outs of managing a doggie day camp. To help
launch her business a few years ago, Ryan recruited experienced
pet care worker Candace Stathis, who came on as a camp counselor. Ryan soon recognized that Stathis was a star performer with
a natural ability to work with clients and pets alike, and today
Stathis serves as the camp’s general manager. “Candace is good
with the dogs, good with the customers, good with the employees,
and she can manage the administrative part of the operation—she
does a little bit of everything,” Ryan said of her managerial top dog.
At Camp Bow Wow, store managers have distinct roles
from camp counselors. Whereas counselors typically take care
of dogs, answer phones, and book reservations, managers must
know how to run all operations and mange people as well.
“What I do,” said Stathis, “is make sure all the operational stuff
goes off without a hitch—so, making sure that the dogs all get
fed, that they get the meds when they’re supposed to, that the
staff is taking care of the dogs the way they are supposed to,
and making sure that everybody is attentive to the pets. You’re
managing the dogs, but you’re also managing the people.”
To keep camp running as efficiently as possible, Stathis
maintains a strict daily schedule for doggie baths, nail trimmings, feedings, and play time. Staying on schedule is no
easy task, especially during the busy holidays and summer
months—or whenever the pets get territorial. Stathis says that
while dogs get in occasional tussles, all camp staff members are
trained to handle such hairy situations. “It’s part of the job; we
are all really prepared to deal with it,” says Stathis.
When it comes to keeping dogs happy at play, an ounce of
prevention is worth a pound of cure. “We try to separate the
dogs first and foremost by temperament, and then by size,” says
Stathis. “We put an even amount of dogs in the yards—say, a
couple high-energy dogs with low-energy dogs—to try and
balance the yards out.” Other dog management strategies at
Camp Bow Wow include the 15 to 1 dog-to-counselor ratio
and the preliminary meet-and-greet, where pets are screened
for vaccinations and spay and neuter status.
For franchise owner Sue Ryan, having competent management running the camp equals less worry and more personal relaxation—perhaps even more time to go on safari in Africa. For
Candace Stathis, however, good management is simply about
doing the work she loves. “I love the people, I love the dogs, and
I wouldn’t change anything for the world,” Stathis says.
Discussion Questions
1. List the three broad management skill categories and explain which skills are needed most for each of the Camp
Bow Wow leaders highlighted in the video.
2. Which activities at Camp Bow Wow require high efficiency? Which activities require high effectiveness?
3. List two activities that leaders at Camp Bow Wow perform
daily, and identify which of the ten managerial roles discussed in the chapter п¬Ѓgure prominently for each.
Chapter 2
Barcelona Restaurant Group:
The Evolution of Management
Thinking
When Andy Pforzheimer was in college, he took a road trip to
New Orleans that would change his life. The sights and sounds
of the Big Easy were thrilling to the nineteen-year-old student,
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but it was the smells and tastes of the city restaurants that captured his imagination. While discussing the city’s eclectic dining with locals, a chef challenged Pforzheimer to go to France
to discover what cooking is all about.
Decades after heeding the chef ’s words, Pforzheimer is
himself a renowned chef and the co-owner of Barcelona Restaurant Group, a collection of seven wine and tapas bars in
Connecticut and Atlanta, Georgia.
Barcelona Restaurant Group prides itself on being “antichain.” When customers dine at any of Pforzheimer’s Spanish
cuisine restaurants, they experience the local color and personal
touch of a neighborhood eatery in Milan, Rio de Janeiro, or
SoHo. The wait staff is personable, and the head chef is known
for cooking up flavorful custom dishes to please regulars. Managers get to know customers’ tastes, and they often descend
upon tables, bringing flavorful specialties accompanied by
wines from Spain, Portugal, and vineyards around the world.
At Barcelona, life is all about authentic cuisine, exceptional
service, and a good time. But delivering this unique dining experience requires a unique approach to restaurant management.
Barcelona Restaurant Group gives employees the freedom and
control they need to impress customers.
The company begins by recruiting self-confident individuals who can take complete ownership over the establishment
and its success. When Andy Pforzheimer coaches new recruits, he instructs, “This is your restaurant—when customers
walk in the door, I don’t want them looking for me, I want
them looking for you.” The straight-talking restaurateur is
adamant that his staff be mature and willing to take responsibility for their work and success: “Some of our best managers
come from highly regulated large restaurant companies where
they were told how to answer a phone and how to set a table
and how to greet a guest. We don’t do that; we attempt to hire
grownups.”
The enormous trust Barcelona places in workers is evident
during weekly staff meetings. Pforzheimer routinely mixes it
up with employees, and the dialogue gets feisty at times. “I can
be difficult to work for,” the owner says candidly. “I’m interested
in having other people’s opinions thrown at me. I like managers
who talk back, and I like people who self start.”
Scott Lawton, Barcelona’s chief operating officer (COO),
shares Pforzheimer’s approach, and he underscores that Barcelona’s success depends on the mature initiative of employees:
“We give some basic guidelines as to what our philosophy is
and what our beliefs are, but we have to trust them to work
within those confines and make the right choice.”
In refusing to micromanage employee behavior, Barcelona
takes risks that other dining establishments would rather
avoid. Lawton insists such risks are intentional and beneficial:
“They might not always make the choice that I would make,
but sometimes they make a better one. To give them a correct
answer to every question is impossible, and it doesn’t work. In
fact, you’re actually limiting your ability to get better.”
While Barcelona’s leaders care about the wait staff, they
make it clear that employees must care about the clientele.
“We’re here for the customer experience,” Pforzheimer says.
“Everything else is secondary to that.”
Lawton agrees, and he adds that Barcelona’s insistence on
service excellence leads to high satisfaction among employees.
“If we can empower them to make the guests happy,” Lawton
argues, “they’re going to make money, the vibe in the restaurant
is going to be a ton of fun, everybody’s going to enjoy the shift,
and they’re going to be proud of what they’ve done. And they
are happy, because that’s a byproduct.”
Discussion Questions
1. In what ways is Barcelona’s management approach consistent with modern developments in management thinking?
2. In what ways does Barcelona’s management approach run
counter to contemporary developments in management
thinking?
3. What aspects of restaurant work are especially challenging to wait staff, and how does Barcelona’s approach to
management help employees overcome the downsides of
the job?
Chapter 3
Camp Bow Wow: The
Environment and Corporate
Culture
Founder stories play an important role in business. Andrew
Carnegie’s rise from a penniless immigrant to a captain of
industry is one of the most famous rags-to-riches stories in
American history. The tale of Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard
starting HP in a garage has inspired a generation of Silicon
Valley computer whizzes. More recently, Heidi Ganahl’s launch
of Camp Bow Wow has become a powerfully motivational
story of triumph over tragedy.
Most people know Camp Bow Wow as a fun franchise that
offers doggie day care for pet owners on the go. But the company’s emergence from a single kennel in Denver, Colorado, to a
$40 million dollar franchise is as inspirational a story as any in
business.
“After my husband died, I was struggling to find purpose
in life and energy to get out of bed every day,” said Heidi
Ganahl in a recent interview about her popular camp for dogs.
“I remember my dogs sitting there with tennis balls, dropping
them at the base of the bed, like, �Come on, get out of bed, life
goes on, you have to keep moving, play ball’, ” the 44-year-old
entrepreneur recalled.
When Ganahl and her п¬Ѓrst husband were in their midtwenties, the dog-loving duo dreaded leaving pets at cold
cramped clinics, and they dreamed of a better way to care for
animals. The couple drew up plans for a dog-friendly kennel
business and even began discussing a launch. Then, tragically,
Ganahl’s husband died on a Stearman WWII biplane joyride
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offered as a gift for his 25th birthday. Heidi’s life went into a
tailspin. Depressed and raising her child alone, Ganahl frittered
away nearly $1 million dollars received in a settlement, until
her brother stepped in and urged her to launch the business she
envisioned with her husband. The intervention was magic, and
Heidi’s dogs gave her the extra motivation she needed to move
forward. “I could not have started Camp Bow Wow if it wasn’t
for them,” Ganahl says of her furry four-legged friends.
Heidi’s life story has helped transform Camp Bow Wow
into one of the fastest growing franchises in the United States.
The transition from a small family business to a national chain,
however, required big changes in the company’s culture. “As I’ve
grown the company through the years with family and friends,
and then getting to know the people who work for me and the
franchisees who have come into the system, the focus had to shift
from a family-based culture to a business-and-performanceoriented culture,” Ganahl said. Her 2003 decision to turn Camp
Bow Wow into a franchise was the right move. “Beginning to
franchise wasn’t something that I originally had in the plan, but
it was the perfect fit for me because it allowed me to be the visionary and not handle the day-to-day operations,” Ganahl said.
According to Camp Bow Wow’s top dog, corporate culture
has many elements: it can mean logos and branded material, a
presence on the Internet, or even the relationships developed
with customers and employees. But a key element of Camp
Bow Wow’s culture that doesn’t exist in other franchises is the
staff ’s deep emotional connection with animals. The connection is immediately apparent at Camp Bow Wow’s corporate
headquarters, where offices are bustling with employees and
pets alike. “What we do is focus on what’s important to us, and
that’s the animals,” Ganahl said. “Whether it’s the Foundation,
our franchises, or our camp counselors, it all comes through
in different ways, and it all goes back to the same thing: it’s all
about the pets. If we keep that focus and that commitment, I
think our culture will be alive and well for a long time.”
Discussion Questions
1. What aspects of Camp Bow Wow’s corporate culture
are visible and conscious? What aspects are invisible and
unconscious?
2. Why did Camp Bow Wow have to change its culture when
it became a national franchise?
3. What impact does Heidi Ganahl’s story have on employees
at Camp Bow Wow?
Chapter 4
Holden Outerwear: Managing
in a Global Environment
Where can snowboarding enthusiasts find apparel that is fashionable around the globe, whether the destination is Vancouver’s Cypress Mountain, Switzerland’s Saas-Fee, or Loveland,
Colorado? Today’s style-minded boarders buy their snow duds
from Mikey LeBlanc, a snowboard professional who founded
Holden Outerwear in 2002 to inject fashion into the sport. In
just one decade, Holden’s independent do-it-yourself ethic has
hit slopes worldwide, from Japan and Norway to France and
Canada.
Holden is a brand with attitude. First, the company’s
namesake association with Holden Caulfield, the angst-fuelled
anti-hero of J.D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye, is a symbol
not lost on today’s youth. Next, Holden jackets and pants, with
their street-wear cuts borrowed from skate culture and the
global fashion industry, represent a rejection of the “Michelin
Man look” so common among skiers. “Fashion definitely figures
in to Holden—that’s where we look for inspiration,” LeBlanc
says of his brand’s distinct style. “A lot of our competitors look
inside our industry for inspiration. We’ve always looked outside, whether it was stores, current trends in fashion, or to our
friends.” Not only do Holden jackets make a statement, but
they also may be good for the planet. Holden fabrics are made
from hemp, recycled plastic, and bamboo, and п¬Ѓnished garments ship in biodegradable bags that reduce waste while keeping products free of dust.
Although Holden boasts followers throughout Asia, Europe, and North America, LeBlanc’s team manages business
operations from the sports-apparel Mecca of Portland, Oregon,
home to such iconic brands as Nike, Columbia, and Nau. To
serve stores in the United States and Canada, Holden maintains an in-house sales team led by a company sales manager.
Overseas marketing, however, is handled through partnerships
with outside distributors.
Like so many other American brands, Holden apparel is
“made in China.” LeBlanc explains that while he would like to
manufacture lines in the United States, government regulations, labor costs, and high corporate tax rates are too heavy a
burden. “If we were to produce garments in the United States,
our prices would be doubled,” LeBlanc says. “It’s really hard to
beat the price coming out of China.” Domestic costs are not
the only reason Holden produces outerwear in Asian factories:
availability of materials is another factor. “A lot of the goods are
located there—fabrics, buttons, and snaps,” LeBlanc says. “If
we were to make a garment in the United States, we would still
have to bring the pieces in from Asia.” In addition to the tricky
economics of domestic production, garment making requires
skilled laborers, and LeBlanc says that the United States lacks a
manufacturing base to do the job. “It’s really hard to find workers in the United States who know how to take garments and
do all the things you need when producing a technical garment.”
Finally, for any company that sources materials and labor
overseas, shipping is a vital, ongoing concern. In the early years,
LeBlanc used nearly a dozen shippers to transport garments
from China to warehouses in the United States and Canada.
To increase efficiency and reduce costs, LeBlanc found a way to
coordinate overseas factories through a single distribution hub
in China. Now Holden’s transport is carried out through just
two shipping companies.
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The behind-the-scenes management at Holden is paying off. Yet for small companies that have mastered the making, moving, and marketing of goods, scheduling can be the
difference between success and failure. “You want to be on
time—that’s the biggest thing,” LeBlanc says. “When I talk to
my retailers and ask what is the most important thing, the answer is time. The most important thing you can do is have your
product in stores on your in-date.” He adds that you have to
see things from the retailer’s perspective: customers shop retail
stores looking for products, and if they can’t find them they’ll
walk away—perhaps permanently.
Holden Outerwear may have an independent spirit, but
LeBlanc has no interest in missing the delivery dates of his
retail customers. After all, helping snowboarders suit up for
the world’s most challenging courses is a team effort, not a solo
performance by a heroic recluse in a Salinger novel.
Discussion Questions
1. Which stage of globalization characterizes Holden Outerwear’s international involvement?
2. Identify Holden’s primary approach to entering the international market. What are the benefits of this entry strategy?
3. What are the challenges of international management for
leaders at Holden?
Chapter 5
Theo Chocolate: Managing Ethics
and Social Responsibility
As a boy growing up in Philadelphia, just hours from Hershey, Pennsylvania, confectioner Joe Whinney fell in love with
chocolate. Halloween was sheer bliss for the youngster, and
Whinney recalls often getting lost in thought while munching
on a chocolate bar.
When he grew older, Whinney got an opportunity to visit
cocoa bean farms in the rainforests of Central America, while
serving as a volunteer for a conservation program. The experience was life changing.
Propelled by his combined love of chocolate and the
environment, Whinney dreamed of building the п¬Ѓrst organic
fair trade chocolate factory in the United States. In 1994 he
pioneered the import of organic cocoa beans to the United
States, and in 2006 Whinney’s Theo Chocolate company
became the п¬Ѓrst and only sustainable chocolate maker in the
nation.
Unlike U.S. chocolate manufacturers who deliver sweets
in high volume, Theo’s award winning chocolate is produced in
small batches. The company’s “bean-to-bar” production method
uses cocoa beans grown without pesticides and without harm
to the environment or farmers. The result is a creamy delectable
milk chocolate bar that is as good for the ecosystem as it is for
the palate.
Like other social entrepreneurs, Joe Whinney exudes a
sense of mission in everything he does. “After my experience
in Central America,” says Whinney, “I saw that social and environmental degradation were really business problems, and
I wanted to help save the world by making chocolate.” The
chocolate maker’s objective is to operate a business that is profitable, ethical, and good for the environment. “Our business
ethic,” says Whinney, “is informed by our belief that all life on
the planet is interconnected. We need consumers to be healthy
and well, our farmers to be healthy and well, and the entire
planet to be healthy and well in order for us to be successful
and profitable.”
Organic farming and fair trade are important to Whinney.
In Theo Chocolate’s world, organic means that the cocoa beans
are naturally grown and harvested in ways that preserve habitats and the balance of the ecosystem. Fair trade is an economic
concept that ensures equity between buyers and growers in
developing nations, as well as fair treatment of workers. Theo
Chocolate is proud of its status as a certified fair trade company. “Fair trade certification is important for us to build trust
with our consumers, so that we do what we say we are going to
do,” says Whinney.
Since fair trade certification is important in preventing
companies from exaggerating their green credibility, Theo chose
IMO Fair for Life to be its accountability certification program.
“What’s great about Fair for Life is that it is a certification that
ensures the economic and social integrity of our entire supply
chain, from the cocoa farmers that we work with all the way
through to our own factory operations,” remarked Whinney.
Debra Music, a fellow chocoholic and the vice president of
sales and marketing at Theo, says the company is an example
of “enlightened capitalism.” Music expresses pride in being the
only fair-trade-certified bean-to-bar chocolate factory in the
United States. “We’re trying to define the intersection of artisan
world-class chocolate making with sustainable practices,” Music
says. “Simply put, I like to say it’s about doing good while doing
well.”
While Theo Chocolate is п¬Ѓnding good success in the
organic foods industry, perhaps the most exciting thing for
“Theonistas” is that the company is being hailed as a voice for
change. Employees say they have gained a loyal following for
their efforts in the developing world, and business success has
opened up new opportunities for sharing their vision of a better world.
Discussion Questions
1. What practices at Theo Chocolate embody the concept of
sustainability?
2. What does Vice President Debra Music mean when she
says that Theo is a “triple bottom line” company? How is
this different from any other company?
3. What does the term fair trade mean to the leaders at Theo?
What happens if fair trade goals conflict with a company’s
primary responsibility to be profitable?
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Chapter 6
LivingSocial Escapes: Managing
Small Business Start-Ups
After graduating from college and working as a derivatives
trader on Wall Street, Maia Josebachvili began to plan weekend getaways to escape the bubble of city life. One night,
while seated around a campfire with a group of fellow campers, Josebachvili decided that her weekly planned excursions
could appeal to other young professionals. Willing to take
risks, Josebachvili left her job and founded Urban Escapes
(now called LivingSocial Escapes), a п¬Ѓrm that creates social
adventures for travel-minded individuals. “I left Wall Street
for a year, traveled around the world, and п¬Ѓgured out exactly
what it was that I wanted to do,” Josebachvili says. “I came back
and e-mailed 200 people and said, �Hey, I’m starting a camping
company, so come camping’. ”
An outdoors enthusiast who has hiked to Everest Base
Camp and climbed Kala Patthar in Nepal, Josebachvili began
her start-up with basic planning. Josebachvili’s first business
model predicted that organizing getaways could earn $12,000
in the first year, and she proceeded to launch in May 2008. “I
started with about $4,000, got a cheap apartment, and worked
from home and from coffee shops,” Josebachvili says. “After the
п¬Ѓrst bit of money came in from my trips, I invested $2,000 in a
Web site.”
As the concept began to catch on, Josebachvili looked to
business partner Bram Levy to handle business operations.
Like Josebachvili, the LivingSocial Escapes partner is a serious outdoor enthusiast with serious adventurer credentials,
including hikes in the Himalayas and scuba diving in the Great
Barrier Reef. With a background as a teacher and management
consultant, Levy was the perfect match for Josebachvili’s creative output. “I’m more of the business side,” Levy says. “Maia is
a real genius when it comes to what is exciting and interesting
to people, and what people get motivated about; I was able to
help organize the business, п¬Ѓgure out where we needed to go,
and figure out how to keep things more logically structured.”
After a successful п¬Ѓrst year, the partners decided to target
other nearby cities. When Josebachvili and Levy concluded
that п¬Ѓnances were in place for expansion, LivingSocial Escapes
began serving Boston, Philadelphia, and Washington D.C. According to Levy, money wasn’t a major problem. Since customers of LivingSocial Escapes pay up front for travel events, the
company always has cash in hand to carry out operations.
From the beginning, LivingSocial Escapes has pursued a
very simple objective: “keep it going.” Levy says that while it
would have been smart to write a yearly business plan with
goals and targets for set periods of time, the company instead
developed a core service and kept repeating it. “It truly was
organic growth, both in terms of the business model and the
financing of the business,” Levy says.
Although there is no single formula for start-up success, the
LivingSocial Escapes founders say that hard work, intelligence,
and luck are essential ingredients for any small business. The
“luck” part came when an outside company, LivingSocial, took
interest in buying Urban Escapes following the firm’s appearance in Inc. magazine. Executives at LivingSocial arranged to
meet Josebachvili and Levy at a local pub, and a few months
later the acquisition was complete. As a result, LivingSocial
Escapes can now target customers in dozens of cities.
“We had never considered the idea of selling,” Levy says.
“Not once did Maia have a conversation about selling the business. We thought we’d grow it as big and bad as possible, and
when it’s no longer big and bad and fun, that’s the end of it.”
But the partners found the offer too good to refuse. According to Josebachvili, six weeks transpired between the first pub
meeting and the signing the papers. “We signed the papers at
10 a.m. and were in the new office by 3 p.m. that same day,”
Josebachvili says.
The acquisition by LivingSocial has brought new opportunities for LivingSocial Escapes. With an abundant supply of
capital and resources, Josebachvili and Levy can take greater
risks than ever before, yet with the business model they created.
“What I’m most happy with,” Josebachvili says, “is that I’m now
part of a company that is growing faster than we were, with
such bright people, but I still get to do exactly what I love to do.”
Discussion Questions
1. Are Maia Josebachvili and Bram Levy entrepreneurs, social
entrepreneurs, or both? Explain.
2. Describe the personality traits of the LivingSocial Escapes
founders.
3. How did the founders of LivingSocial Escapes п¬Ѓnance
the company’s growth, and what options did they have for
additional funding?
Chapter 7
Modern Shed: Managerial
Planning and Goal Setting
In 2003, builder Ryan Smith was restoring an old home in
Washington when a client marveled at the small work shed
he set up for the project. The customer admired the compact
portable structure, and it dawned on Smith that the kit could
be decked out with modern features and used for studio spaces,
home offices, guesthouses, and more. Smith ran with the idea
and launched his own startup business, Modern Shed. Today
his company designs stylish prefabricated backyard dwellings
for nearly any purpose.
To make the best use of limited resources, Modern Shed
hires outside contractors to help produce its small paneled
sheds. Since the company doesn’t have an in-house marketing
and sales department, Smith outsources the firm’s marketing
planning to Seattle consultant Scott Pearl, a real estate veteran
who serves as the company’s go-to guy for sales. “Scott has
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always been interested in the real estate market—he’s a natural
to work with,” Ryan Smith said of his marketing partner.
But planning and goal setting can be a real challenge for
the small Seattle-based company. As a new product concept
that lacks a well-established market, Modern Shed п¬Ѓnds itself
in uncharted territory. Until recently, the company had few
clear sales objectives. “When I joined with Modern Shed,” Pearl
recalls, “they didn’t have any sales goals because they were still
primarily selling through their Web site and through their
dwell ad. So we had to start somewhere.” Fortunately for Modern Shed, Pearl is an experienced marketer who thinks outside
the box and has little trouble generating fresh ideas.
After being hired on as a consultant, Pearl began analyzing the company’s local ads to see what product types were
selling. He noted that Modern Shed was popular with people
who wanted small backyard offices and studio spaces, and he
determined that selling two 10 ft. x 12 ft. structures per month
would be an effective first sales goal. As expected, he was able to
achieve that goal in a timely manner.
Today Pearl is looking to expand the company’s sales goals.
Instead of focusing only on Modern Shed’s small structures,
Pearl has added sales targets for the company’s larger, more
profitable sheds. According to the marketing consultant, Modern Shed’s larger dwellings need to represent 25 percent of all
products sold—a stretch for the young firm.
With a new stretch goal in place for the company’s larger
dwellings, Pearl has begun creating a plan for how to achieve
his higher target. In recent months Pearl has narrowed down
consumer segments, and he believes he has identified a perfect
customer for the larger sheds: dual-income families that use
nannies and au pairs to manage the home. Since Modern Shed
manufactures a 12 ft. x 16 ft. dwelling with a bathroom and
comfortable living quarters, Pearl believes he can pitch the shed
as a “nanny solution” for Seattle’s well-to-do families. Using information gathered from local title companies, Pearl discovered
that his new residential target customer tends to live in upscale
neighborhoods with mid-century modern architecture. Once
Pearl’s marketing plan is finalized, Modern Shed’s sales teams
will be ready to contact customers by direct mail, telesales, and
personal sales appointments.
Pearl’s marketing plan appears to be a good next step toward achieving Modern Shed’s top-level strategic goals. “Modern Shed has been really popular with folks who are doing
backyard offices, studios, and guestrooms, but the potential in
the residential arena is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,” Pearl
says. According to the Seattle marketer, the economic recession
actually works in the company’s favor. “Because the downturn
in the economy has been so severe, we’re now seeing finished lot
prices in the Northwest as low as $15,000 per lot, which is unheard of,” Pearl said. “One of the reasons I’m driving this now is
that we may not in our lifetimes see land at the price it is today.”
Given the present state of the economy, Modern Shed’s low
cost living solutions could catch on quickly, especially in Seattle
where starter houses can average $300,000. “We might be able
to bring п¬Ѓnished lot and house product to market for under
$200,000, which would be unbelievable,” Pearl says. For certain,
if the plan works out, Modern Shed’s little living spaces could
become the next big thing.
Discussion Questions
1. What level of planning and goal setting does marketer
Scott Pearl perform for Modern Shed?
2. Do Scott Pearl’s goals meet the criteria of effective goal setting as discussed in the chapter? Explain.
3. What are some of the ways in which Scott Pearl’s plans and
goals benefit Modern Shed as an organization? Are there
potential downsides to such planning?
Chapter 8
Theo Chocolate: Strategy
Formulation and Execution
Seattle’s Theo Chocolate specializes in the divine. The cocoa
that the chocolate maker harvests to produce its delicious
candy bars comes from a tropical evergreen known as Theobroma cacao—translated literally, “food of the gods.” The heavenly flavor that resides in the plant’s cacao pods helps sustain
the worldwide confectionery industry, and Theo is one of the
newest companies to master the art of cacao cultivation.
Founded in 2006 by Joseph Whinney, Theo Chocolate
prides itself on being the first organic and Fair Trade Certified
chocolate maker in the United States. In addition to producing world-class chocolate, Theo integrates ethical standards
throughout its entire business, all the way from the cocoa farm
to the candy rack.
When Theo first started its production, the company offered
an exotic line of dark chocolate and milk chocolate bars and
truffles. These early treats had unusual names such as Coconut
Curry, the 3400 Phinney Bar, and Bread & Chocolate. Moreover,
the bars were wrapped in artistic watercolor packaging with
whimsical cover designs. Theo’s launch garnered accolades from
critics and organic food consumers alike, in part because of the
company’s creativity and sustainable business model.
But selling chocolate to foodies and green consumers didn’t
add up to the high volume that Joe Whinney and his management team hoped to achieve. In addition, Debra Music, Theo’s
vice president of sales and marketing, began noticing barriers to
mainstream acceptance of Theo’s products. In particular, Theo’s
flavors and product names were too funky for mass appeal, and
wrapper designs were so artistic that customers were confused
about what was inside the packaging. Managers knew something had to be done.
“When we looked at our numbers and realized we were
not growing at the rate that we thought we should, and that
in certain markets we were struggling,” Music remarks, “we decided to apply some science to what we were doing.” The marketing executive’s research turned up some possible solutions.
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“We found that we needed to be selling in places where people
wanted just a milk chocolate bar,” Music said. “Our products
were a little bit intimidating, so we decided to rein that in and
create a much more accessible product line.”
Founder Joe Whinney began working on a new strategy—
one based around the company’s ultimate goal. “The overall goal
is that we would like Theo to be the most loved chocolate company in the world,” said Whinney. But since widespread appeal
is rare for exotic products, Theo’s founder had to go back to the
drawing board. “When we decided to alter course and make
more accessible products, we looked at market data for the п¬Ѓrst
time, and we looked at what were the clear winners in the market,” Whinney says. “We decided that consumers were choosing
the winners already, so we designed products that we felt would
meet consumers’ expectations and allow us to stay true to our
ethics and quality.”
Since managers agreed that Theo needed a gateway product
that would attract consumers more easily, the company started
producing classic milk chocolate bars. Unlike the exotic bars
produced at the company’s launch, Theo’s classic line included
familiar taste combinations such as chocolate and mint, regular
milk chocolate, and cherries and almonds. “We created a classic
line that had more traditional flavors and that was in packaging
that was easy for consumers to understand,” says Whinney.
The end result is that Theo now offers two distinct product
lines for two different market segments. The company roasts a
Classic line of milk chocolate bars for mainstream customers,
and it offers Fantasy Flavors for more adventurous eaters. Each
line embodies the high quality and sustainability that make up
the Theo brand.
The strategy was a hit with consumers. “The growth was
fairly dramatic,” says Whinney. “We were able to access markets
that we weren’t able to before. In the Pacific Northwest we’re
the No. 1 selling chocolate brand in the natural and organic
category—and we’re the fastest growing in the top 10 across
the country.”
While some small businesses prefer niche markets, appealing to mainstream customers was consistent with Joe
Whinney’s belief that everyone should be able to enjoy Theo
Chocolate. “We believe that everyone should have access to
great chocolate, and so we wanted to make sure that we were
responding to the marketplace, listening to what people really
wanted, and then producing products that met our goals and
theirs as well.”
If Theo maintains its current growth, Joe Whinney’s goal of
becoming the most loved chocolate company in the world may
be more than just a dream—it could be divine destiny.
Discussion Questions
1. Evaluate Theo’s new strategy in light of the company’s
strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats.
2. Using the BCG Matrix, explain Theo’s decision to offer a
classic line of chocolate bars after having limited success
with Fantasy Flavor chocolates.
3. Which of the three competitive strategies—differentiation,
cost leadership, or focus—do you think is right for Theo
Chocolate? Explain.
Chapter 9
Plant Fantasies: Managerial
Decision Making
Teresa Carleo considered a career in cooking after a boss once
passed her up for a promotion. But when her husband urged
against it, the New York resident instead launched a landscaping business and began searching for opportunities to beautify
the Big Apple. Today, Carleo’s business, Plant Fantasies, is the
gardener for such well-known city properties as the Trump
Organization, John Jay College, and Jack Resnick & Sons.
“My niche is owners and developers in the real estate industry,”
Carleo says of her landscaping business.
While the opportunity to serve New York’s rich and famous may sound exciting, pleasing the Donald Trumps of
the world is a challenging task. Fortunately, Carleo is no mere
apprentice when it comes to high-class service. “The decision to
start the business was exciting, but the determination to stay
with the business was excruciating,” Carleo says of her demanding job. Carleo’s patience has been a virtue, however, as wealthy
New York City property owners pay top dollar for healthy
shrubs and fragrant flowers. Installation fees at Plant Fantasies
begin at $1,200, and high-end exterior landscapes can cost customers up to $600,000. With well over 100 clients, Plant Fantasies is able to generate nearly $5 million in annual revenues.
In New York City, where appearances matter, real estate
owners have little tolerance for wilting plants or lagging
service. Carleo’s attention to detail is evident in all of her
installations—most notably her rooftop gardens. Gardens
come carefully constructed with a drainage layer, waterproof
protective membrane, biodegradable coconut mat, soil, and lush
foliage. Each installation requires close collaboration between
architects, floral designers, landscape workers, and even code
inspectors. Once a garden is built, landscape teams keep a
watchful eye to make sure weeds are pulled and shrubs are
manicured. The same care and attention is displayed in other
company services, including holiday decorations and Christmas
trees. Whether it’s placing wreaths or planting gardens, fancy
flora is what Plant Fantasies does best.
In landscaping, success often boils down to big decisions
over little details. “It’s my role as a business owner to give suggestions and ideas—they’re looking to me for that,” Carleo says.
“They don’t know about plants and flowers, but they might
know that they like the color red.” While some decisions involve plant colors and types, others involve complex negotiation
with people, such as when Plant Fantasies builds designs created by outside landscape architects. “It’s easier when we are the
landscape designers because we are picking the plant material.
We have a sense of what we want to do, and we have faith in
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our design and choices,” says Carleo. “But when you’re working
with landscape architects, they could come up with something
that we don’t even really agree with.”
Despite Carleo’s confidence in her own decision making,
the Plant Fantasies owner understands the benefits of empowering others. “More and more, as I’m trying to grow the
company, I’m trying to get my team to be more independent of
me. I don’t want to know every single thing.” Regardless of who
makes decisions, Carleo expects all her employees to share her
high standards for quality: “I want them to take care of it, but I
want them to take care of it the way I would take care of it myself. And that’s hard, because not everybody is the same.”
Discussion Questions
1. Did Plant Fantasies owner Teresa Carleo follow the rational decision-making process to launch Plant Fantasies?
Explain.
2. List an example of a programmed decision at Plant Fantasies. Identify a nonprogrammed decision at Plant Fantasies.
3. How might managers at Plant Fantasies conduct the п¬Ѓnal
evaluation stage of the decision-making process when installing a new garden for a client?
Chapter 10
Modern Shed: Designing Adaptive
Organizations
If anyone knows about structural designs that are sturdy,
contemporary, and adaptive, it’s Ryan Smith, the owner and
founder of Modern Shed, a small Seattle company that builds
modernized space-saving dwellings.
Smith’s interest in building things began in childhood while
playing with a favorite plywood train set. His early fascination
matured into an architectural career, and Smith quickly established a reputation as a skillful builder with an eye for stylish
home design and renovation.
But in 2003, Smith stumbled upon a very little big idea:
after setting up a small temporary work shed while working
on a home restoration project, a client remarked that he really
liked Smith’s tiny work shelter. A light bulb went on inside
Smith’s creative mind, and the enterprising builder determined
that the kit could be decked out with modern living features
and sold for a range of uses. Today he builds small paneled
dwellings for use as studio spaces, home offices, pool houses,
project sheds, guesthouses, and more.
Like his stylish sheds, Smith’s company is built to be adaptive, scalable, and suited to the needs of the environment. Modern Shed counts only 12 to 14 full time employees in the firm’s
Seattle office. However, at times the company’s output rivals
that of a large builder, which is achieved through collaboration
with outside sales reps and a dealer network comprised of 35
independent contractors across the United States.
According to Smith, partnering with outside specialists was
the most efficient, effective, and flexible way to run a startup
company. “If you need to create a business organization, and
you bring it all in house,” says Smith, “you need to have the accounting position, the organizing position, the person who is
going to answer the phones, and the people who are going to
make the things—and you just can’t do that when you start a
company. It doesn’t make sense.”
One partner who helps boost Modern Shed’s output is
Scott Pearl, a marketing consultant who also lives in Seattle.
Pearl’s background is in real estate, where he worked on
multimillion-dollar projects before starting his own marketing
consultant п¬Ѓrm. In light of the recent crash of the real estate
market, Pearl is excited to be managing many of Modern Shed’s
sales and marketing functions. According to Pearl, Modern
Shed is one of the few building concepts thriving in today’s
depressed housing market. “Modern Shed has positioned itself
so that we’re insulated from what’s going on in the general marketplace,” the marketer states.
Smith’s dealer network is made up of dozens of such
partners who specialize in everything from materials and construction to sales and office processes. The partners connect
regularly to discuss projects and plans. “On a monthly basis
we’ll have conference calls with the reps and the dealers about
new products, new promotions, changes in pricing, and new
opportunities for them in terms of their marketing,” Pearl remarks. “It’s very lean and unstructured because all those folks
are independent contractors.”
What impresses Scott Pearl most about Modern Shed
is the organization’s ability to respond quickly to the needs
of the market. “We were recently approached by a nationally
recognized home-and-garden expert who wanted us to create
an entirely new product line of Modern Shed,” says Pearl. “The
fact that Ryan can just drop everything and focus on this, get
the team focused on it, and actually come up with a brand new
product in under eight weeks is phenomenal. It could not be
done unless the organization was nimble like we are.”
Small, flexible, responsive—these are the qualities that
have enabled Modern Shed to thrive even during an economic
recession. According to Smith, the logical process of building
sheds from smaller scale structures to larger ones is a metaphor
for how modern organizations should be built. “You can use
the analogy for organizations and people as well as structures,”
Smith states. “If you go too big you don’t understand it; you
have to start small.”
As for Scott Pearl, he doesn’t expect to become an employee of Modern Shed. Nevertheless, the marketing consultant considers himself an important part of Modern Shed’s organization and success.
Discussion Questions
1. Which of the п¬Ѓve approaches to structural design is used
at Modern Shed, and how are the company’s departments
organized and coordinated?
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2. What are the advantages and disadvantages of Modern
Shed’s organizational structure?
3. How did Ryan Smith determine whether his company
needed a mechanistic structure with a formal vertical hierarchy or an organic one involving free-flowing
partnerships?
Chapter 11
Holden Outerwear: Managing
Change and Innovation
While many apparel manufacturers dream of setting trends in
the world of fashion, Holden Outerwear is the ultimate fashion innovator. Founded in 2002 by professional snowboarder
Mikey LeBlanc, the Portland, Oregon, sports-apparel maker
has given traditional baggy outerwear a complete style makeover. Unlike ski-apparel brands that focus on utility at the expense of looking good, Holden believes technical garments can
look cool. “What I love most about Holden is that they take
cues from fashion and they’re not looking at what everyone else
in the outerwear market is doing,” says Nikki Brush, design and
development manager at Holden.
For Mikey LeBlanc, Holden is the perfect vehicle for expressing his two favorite interests, snowboarding and urban
wear. When the pro boarder is not out taming the mountain,
he’s somewhere talking about his company’s approach to design. “We brought an element of old world tailoring to our
stuff, so we deal with paper patterns and fit, and we work with
the shape of a garment—that was new to the industry,” LeBlanc
says. Most outerwear brands focus on keeping skiers warm and
dry, not on fashion. Not so with Holden. “We were the first to
bring a couple different fits,” LeBlanc adds. “We had a standard
fit and a skinny fit on our pants, for example.”
Soon after Holden launched, the company was heralded as
the new and improved outerwear maker because of its attention detail. “We use a lot of genuine leather, a lot of wool, and
things that weren’t found in outerwear,” LeBlanc says. Holden
pants and jackets possess unique features like leather covered
snaps, leather shoulders, and urban-style snaps and stitching. LeBlanc and his design teams keep a close eye on runway
brands like Marc Jacobs and G-Star, as Holden is always looking to bring new elements of style to the slopes. “It’s all about
bringing that element of fashion design instead of technical
design to outerwear,” says Holden’s founder. “We’ve been
labeled as the brand that pushes the style portion of technical
outerwear.”
As a trained designer, Nikki Brush relishes the innovative
aspects of working at Holden. “I have a pretty solid background
in development and designs, so I get excited about technology,
whether it’s working with the fabric mill or a garment manufacturer,” Brush says. In particular, the designer enjoys taking
a standard industry garment and doing it differently, as with
Holden’s use of denim. “I think our denim is very exciting.
Most companies are working in cheap nylons that are printed
to look like denim, but we are not.” Unlike brands that substitute faux materials, Brush works with true cotton twill, which
is first cut for style and then laminated with waterproofing. “It
performs on the mountain as high performance outerwear, but
looks like jeans,” Brush says.
By far Holden’s greatest innovation has been the creation of
a new eco-friendly fabric. In 2005, LeBlanc and a business partner had an idea to make a natural-п¬Ѓber waterproof breathable
fabric, which didn’t yet exist. So the partners pioneered it. In
addition to being technically durable, the new garment material
was hailed as an environmental breakthrough.
Today Holden has the attention of everyone in its industry.
Retailers wait anxiously to see LeBlanc’s newest collections,
and competitors from Burton and Salomon to Bonfire and
Walmart borrow heavily from Holden’s collections. LeBlanc
doesn’t worry too much about the rampant plagiarism that goes
on in his industry. As the pro-boarder sees it, imitation is the
highest form of flattery. Plus, Holden’s business is based on
п¬Ѓnding the next big thing. When it comes to style, Holden is
the leader, never the follower.
Discussion Questions
1. Identify the type of change that Holden’s leaders are managing on a daily basis.
2. Is Holden’s creative approach to outerwear an example of
disruptive innovation? Why or why not?
3. What resistance has Holden encountered while introducing innovative garment designs?
Chapter 12
Barcelona Restaurant Group:
Managing Human Resources
The restaurant business is always in flux, with workers coming
and going in a revolving-door fashion. This is true even of highend concepts like Barcelona Restaurant Group, a collection of
seven wine and tapas bars located in Connecticut and Atlanta,
Georgia.
At Barcelona, life is all about authentic cuisine, exceptional
service, and a great time. The restaurant group offers eclectic
Spanish cuisine with an authentic ambience that recalls a
neighborhood eatery in Milan or Rio de Janeiro. At Barcelona,
wait staff are friendly, and chefs are known to create personalized dishes that impress regulars. Barcelona’s flavorful tapas are
infused with olive oil, lemon, and smoky paprika, and the comprehensive wine list features top vintages from Spain, Portugal,
and vineyards around the world.
It takes the right mix of people to deliver this upscale culinary experience, and that’s a job for Barcelona COO Scott
Lawton. “Human resources is one of the most important things
we do in our business,” says Lawton. “This is a transient business, so people are constantly moving. The minute you stop
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looking for talent you’re actually sliding backwards—so, we’re
always hiring.”
For anyone who has waited tables, restaurant turnover is
a familiar experience. Cooks, servers, and bussers have short
careers in most establishments; managers typically stick around
longer. But Barcelona has exceptionally high standards for
service, and this requires letting go employees who aren’t up
to snuff. “In the three years I’ve worked here, only one or two
managers has quit,” Lawton states. “However, we’ve turned over
probably 60 to 70 percent of all management in the past three
years, and that’s because we were not afraid to let people go. We
demand a certain level of quality, and we’re continuously raising
the bar on our expectations.”
With so much talent revolving through the organization,
Lawton integrates recruitment into daily operations. The
restaurant keeps want ads running at all times, and managers
conduct interviews each and every day. The process is highly
strategic. According to Barcelona’s operations chief, smart restaurant managers can hire their way out of problems simply by
selecting the right people. “We can train people all day,” Lawton
states, “but we can’t train happy people with good attitudes—
we can’t train that into people.” Lawton instructs managers to
hire the right people with the right work attitudes.
Judging an applicant’s work attitudes is no easy task,
however. To ensure that Barcelona п¬Ѓnds the right employees,
Lawton uses a three-stage recruitment process. First, leaders conduct 20-minute interviews with dozens of candidates.
Next, applicants are sent on “a shop”—an assignment during
which candidates spend $100 dollars at a Barcelona restaurant
and write an essay about the event. For applicants who survive
the п¬Ѓrst two stages of the selection process, there is one п¬Ѓnal
assessment: “the trail.” At Barcelona, the trail acts as a kind of
test drive in which job candidates command the floor, interact
with wait staff and customers, and demonstrate job skills. Approximately one-fourth of the candidates who go on a trail can
expect to be hired.
At the end of the day, according to Scott Lawton, people
either possess the necessary intelligence and skills to run a restaurant or they don’t. The industry doesn’t have much time for
learning curves, and the success or failure of any establishment
depends on the performance of competent self-motivated employees. No one knows this more than Lawton. “For any company that is involved in customer service,” states the restaurant
veteran, “the most important thing you can do is have the right
people in front of your customers.”
Discussion Questions
1. List the three main activities of human resource management (HRM) and identify which activity is examined at
length in the video.
2. Of the various steps in Barcelona’s employee selection
process, the job interview is the most brief. Do you agree
with the company’s approach to interviewing? Why or
why not?
3. Identify Barcelona’s three-stage process for matching job
applicants with its organizational objectives, and explain
how each stage reveals the п¬Ѓt between job applicants and
the needs of the restaurant.
Chapter 13
Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams:
Managing Diversity
When Mitchell Gold and Bob Williams started their furniture
company in 1989, the rules governing the upholstery industry
were so outdated that the two businessmen had to write their
own. Trends taking hold in the larger business community
were far from the minds of most furniture executives, and
service throughout the industry was inconsistent. But Gold
and Williams had a vision for how they wanted to run things:
they would guarantee comfort, minimize costs, enact rigorous
controls, and produce the styles they liked for their own homes.
Most importantly, they would never skimp on quality.
But the entrepreneurs had one other important goal: to
foster a diverse workplace where employees could labor unburdened by stress, worry, or discrimination. To achieve their
ideal company, the partners began devising creative benefits and
worker-friendly facilities. More than 20 years later, Mitchell
Gold + Bob Williams (MG+BW) has some of the most generous benefits in the industry, and the company’s efforts have
earned high marks on the Corporate Equality Index—a business
diversity measure sponsored by the Human Rights Campaign.
To better understand the inclusive management practices
at MG+BW, it helps to know something about the Corporate
Equality Index rankings. For starters, MG+BW receives points
for having nondiscrimination policies and diversity training.
Next, all employees at the furniture company receive the same
benefits, regardless of race, gender, or religion—another ratings
booster. Maria Thompson, a manager of the flagship MB+BW
store in SoHo, says glass ceilings aren’t a worry for employees.
“As a woman working for this company, I don’t feel that my
gender has any correlation to my performance, my evaluations,
or my relationships with other coworkers—and that’s something very different,” she remarks.
Simply put, Mitchell Gold and Bob Williams believe
employees will be happier and more productive if they are
treated positively and have access to a comprehensive wellness
program. The benefits at MG+BW are so useful that many
employees satisfy personal needs through perks like gym facilities, on-site daycare, and the cafГ©. To help working parents,
MG+BW built a child enrichment center next to its headquarters in Taylorsville, North Carolina. With the help of the affordable daycare, parents spend less time driving around—and
that means more time with kids. Parents can even have healthy
lunches with their little ones at the cafГ©. Once the kids are
grown, MG+BW offers a college scholarship program to give
them a head start on their careers.
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Such benefits are not merely a means of attracting good
talent. Like other companies, MG+BW must manage employee stress if it wants to avoid poor employee performance,
absenteeism, burnout, turnover, aggression, and lawsuits. If employees are experiencing stress-related problems, the company
can’t expect high-performance results. To combat stress related
to harsh work environments, MG+BW has an air-conditioned
factory with good lighting. For stress related to health worries,
the company offers an annual health fair that delivers preventive care for common health issues. To alleviate stress arising
from diversity challenges, Gold and Williams maintain an effective diversity policy.
As employees have come to recognize, Mitchell Gold + Bob
Williams is a diversity trendsetter. The company’s founders envisioned a workplace where individuals felt safe and respected,
and now, some 20 years later, the business is reaping rewards of
diversity. With more than $100 million in annual sales, it’s clear
that people-focused business strategies are paying off.
Discussion Questions
1. What are advantages and disadvantages of diversity at
Mitchell Gold and Bob Williams?
2. Which belief is championed at MG+BW: ethnocentrism
or ethnorelativism?
3. How might a commitment to diversity at MG+BW help
managers with globalization?
Chapter 14
Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams:
Understanding Individual
Behavior
When Information Technology (IT) Manager Kim Clay began
answering phones as a consumer inquiry representative for
Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams (MG+BW), she was not particularly self-confident, nor was she certain about the direction
of her career. “When I first started working here, I definitely
wouldn’t say that confidence was something I exuded,” Clay
says of her early days at the furniture company. Clay took the
position because the company was near to her apartment, and
she also liked interacting with people. “In Consumer Inquiry,
I would answer the phone and tell people about our furniture
and where they could find it,” she recalls.
Although Clay’s start at MG+BW was uneventful, coworkers noted her positive work attitudes. “Kim was someone you
could really rely on and trust—she was a great communicator,”
says Dan Gauthreaux, vice president of human resources. “You
knew that if Kim was given an assignment or project, or needed
to follow up with this customer or expedite something, she
would make it happen.”
Clay soon moved on to the Customer Care department,
where she dealt with customer issues at the retail level. Her
good-natured personality was popular not only with customers, but also with coworkers who frequented her cubicle to get
help with computer issues. “It seemed that when people had
problems with their computers, they typically came to me and
asked for help,” Clay remembers.
In many organizations, hidden talents often remain hidden.
But at Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams, management pushes
employees to discover their talents and seize new opportunities.
In this case, MG+BW managers recognized Clay’s knack for
computers, and they came to her to discuss a new idea: a computer help desk. “We decided to create the help desk, which we
never had before,” Clay states. “Since everybody was coming to
me with computer questions, it seemed a good fit for me.” Although Clay lacked formal computer training, she was willing
to put herself out there and see where the opportunity might
lead. “I felt like it was a big challenge to move from customer
care to technology. I had never done anything with computers
before, so I was really excited to try it,” she says.
Today Kim Clay is the IT manager for the entire BG+BW
organization. Her positive work attitudes have made her an upand-coming leader over a high-tech process. At MG+BW, all
new furniture pieces begin with a production ticket generated
from a computer enterprise resource planning (ERP) system.
As items move through the process, computers track development all the way to п¬Ѓnal shipping and invoicing. Clay oversees
the computerized system from end to end. “It’s a constantly
changing п¬Ѓeld, and we have to stay on top of it to keep the
business competitive,” Clay states. “We have to know the new
technology that’s out there and incorporate it into our business
as quickly as we can.”
Although Clay’s rise through the ranks was no surprise to
those who saw her early potential, few could have predicted the
career path she made for herself at MG+BW. Vice President
Dan Gauthreaux, who recognized Clay’s work ethic and organizational commitment early on, never imagined she would
become a top manager over technology. But as Gauthreaux is
quick to add, MG+BW seeks maximum development for all
its employees. “There is a tolerance for letting folks expand and
develop on their own,” Gauthreaux says of the company’s approach to human resources. “We’re the kind of company that,
whomever Kim reports to, they’re not going to let her step off
that ledge and not be successful.” He adds that personal development is a learning partnership between the employee and the
organization: “Employees are encouraged to push themselves,
but we’ve created a culture where we’re not going to let each
other fail. There’s a sense that your success is my success.”
Discussion Questions
1. Which component of attitudes does Vice President Dan
Gauthreaux express when he says, “I think you can learn
from any job you do and try to make the best of it”?
2. How did Kim Clay’s organizational citizenship behavior lead to the creation of a new computer help desk at
MG+BW?
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3. What role did management play in fostering Kim Clay’s
high organizational commitment? In what ways does this
commitment benefit the organization?
Chapter 15
Camp Bow Wow: Leadership
Some of the world’s most iconic leaders have come from business. During the twentieth century, Henry Ford, Thomas J.
Watson, Sr., Sam Walton, and Bill Gates made contributions
that define how we live and work in the modern era. More
recently, executives like Indra Nooyi, Oprah Winfrey, and Meg
Whitman have reshaped leadership for a new century and inspired a generation of businesswomen in the process.
Heidi Ganahl, the 44-year-old founder of Camp Bow
Wow, is among the most recent leaders to take the business
world by storm. A little over a decade ago, while Ganahl was
laying tile in her new pet care facility in Boulder, Colorado, a
powerful passion gripped the young entrepreneur and inspired
confidence that her doggie daycare concept would catch on
with pet owners. Today Camp Bow Wow ranks among the
fastest-growing chains in America, with annual revenue of
nearly $50 million.
As the owner of a wildly popular pet franchise, Ganahl
is top dog to an increasing number of employees. “At Camp
Bow Wow, leading a franchise company means leading 2,000
employees that work at camps, at Home Buddies, and at Bow
Wow Behavior Buddies franchises,” Ganahl said of her expanding pet care empire. One challenge Ganahl faces in leading so
many talented people is getting everyone to follow a single business model. “One of the most important things about franchising is being able to duplicate and replicate the original business
and, as it evolves, keep everybody on the same page, with all the
facilities looking the same, the service the same, and the attributes of the brand the same,” Ganahl said.
While consistency and conformity are critical to the success of any chain, Camp Bow Wow seeks creative input from
the franchisees who bought in to the system. To maintain a
standard business template while encouraging fresh ideas, Ganahl keeps a door open for anyone who wants to meet and offer
feedback. “I found that the best way to get people committed
to a vision is to have an open door policy and let people communicate their ideas and be part of the growth and execution of
the brand,” says the CEO. “If you do that, you’ll come up with
amazing things that you wouldn’t have if you were not open to
involving your team, franchisees, and staff.” The policy has produced many visible improvements to the company, such as the
new Tea Cup Pup Lounge, a play zone for small dogs. Originally recommended by a franchisee from Pittsburgh, the new
play lounge has increased the safety and happiness of smaller
pups that play at the camps.
Since franchise companies attract hundreds of independent business owners into the system, Ganahl has to work
with many strong leaders. Sue Ryan, a Boulder businesswoman
who bought one of Ganahl’s original camp locations, says that
the hand-off of the business required two-way cooperation
and respect, especially since the location had pre-established
processes, goals, and staff. Despite some expected difficulties,
Ganahl’s approach made the transition as smooth as possible,
and Ryan came away from the experience with a deep appreciation of Ganahl’s leadership qualities. “She’s very down to
earth, so she doesn’t bring a lot of ego to the table,” Ryan said
of Camp Bow Wow’s founder. “Heidi knows what she has to
offer and is confident with it, but she doesn’t take it beyond
there.”
Another tricky part of Ganahl’s job involves managing personal relationships. Heidi founded Camp Bow Wow with the
help of family and friends, and many of these early contributors work at the corporate office today. “There’s a line between
friends, family, and business, and I’ve had a lot of friends and
family join the company,” Ganahl states. “It’s difficult at times to
hold folks accountable and to separate the business relationship
from the family or friendship.” She adds that the culture of a
family business is very different from the culture of a franchise,
but she insists that everyone in the organization is equally responsible for meeting the company’s performance metrics and
goals, regardless of personal connections.
Whether employees think of Heidi as boss, friend, or family, the Camp Bow Wow chief knows how to keep every individual focused on business. “We’re all in this together, and we’re
all representing the brand,” Ganahl states. “They’re all on the
front lines working with the customers and dogs; they are all a
vital part of Camp Bow Wow.”
Discussion Questions
1. Does Camp Bow Wow CEO Heidi Ganahl possess qualities associated with contemporary leadership?
2. In what way is Heidi Ganahl’s leadership charismatic and
visionary? Give examples.
3. Where does Heidi Ganahl’s leadership fall on the Leadership Grid discussed in the chapter? Explain.
Chapter 16
LivingSocial Escapes:
Motivating Employees
When today’s young professionals look to catch a break from
hectic city life, they look to LivingSocial Escapes. Founded in
2008 by Maia Josebachvili and Bram Levy, the social travel п¬Ѓrm
has earned high praise for its array of exciting outdoor adventures. Whether the moment calls for a lazy campfire gathering
or a thrilling encounter with nature, expert guides at the East
Coast trip service have a weekend getaway for any occasion.
LivingSocial Escapes offers a range of outdoor excursions.
From whitewater rafting in the Poconos to camping in the
Catskills, the company’s trips help customers escape the bubble
and recapture their lust for life. The firm’s passion for all things
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outdoors is rooted in the active lifestyles of founders Maia
Josebachvili and Bram Levy. Josebachvili’s adventure resume includes such titles as “professional skydiver” and “mountain-bike
racer.” Levy’s “outdoor cred” includes hikes in the Himalayas
and scuba diving in Australia’s Great Barrier Reef.
Not surprisingly, the business partners have a nontraditional approach to career development. Josebachvili’s
journey included a brief stint on Wall Street before launching
LivingSocial Escapes. Levy, a former management consultant,
joined LivingSocial Escapes because “it seemed like something
fun to do.” Levy says he figured he could “always come back to
the safe world” if things didn’t work out.
For the LivingSocial Escapes employees who work behind
the scenes to deliver “Zen Escape Yoga Hikes” and “Boulder
and Brew Tours,” work motivation comes naturally. The company’s managers, guides, and directors are driven by the freedom
that only a start-up company can offer. “We gave everyone a lot
of ownership in their cities,” Josebachvili says. “We said every
time you want to run a trip, you run it by us. We’d talk about it
and we’d see if it works. Within a few months I was like, �Okay,
if you know it’s going to work, don’t come to us—you got this’.
After a year, I felt really good about what they were doing.”
Although his start-up is yet in early development, Levy says
founding a company taught him important lessons about people and motivation. “When people are excited about something,
they’ll do virtually anything,” Levy states. “We had employees
across the country working for us for virtually no income and
no stability, and merely because they enjoyed what we had to
offer and they were having fun.” As part of his training for new
hires, Levy offers only the most basic outline of job responsibilities. “Think about the brand and what we’re trying to develop,”
Levy tells new recruits. “Now take it and formulate what you
think will be best and run with it.”
Since 2008, the LivingSocial Escapes roster has grown to
more than eight directors, twenty city managers, and dozens of
adventure guides. Josebachvili claims that the company’s directors, many of whom are in their mid-twenties, are excited about
rapid expansion. “We’re asking someone who’s 23 years old to
manage five different cities and city managers, as well as teams
under the city managers.” LivingSocial Escapes demands high
commitment from teams, but if the company succeeds, employees can share in the financial rewards—even part time guides
get special bonuses if trips are profitable.
At this early stage, working for LivingSocial Escapes is not
about stability or following a traditional career path: it’s about
adventure. “We’re selling the nontraditional path,” Levy states.
“There are plenty of opportunities to have the stable career
path that our parents’ generation had and wants us to have as
well. I think we’re selling the opportunity to do something truly
unique and different and have fun.”
Discussion Questions
1. Which needs in Maslow’s hierarchy are most important to
the employees who work for LivingSocial Escapes, and how
can managers use this information to develop a highly motivated workforce?
2. According to equity theory, how might a LivingSocial Escapes
guide react if he or she feels underpaid or unappreciated?
3. What outcomes or rewards possess high valence for managers and guides who work at LivingSocial Escapes?
Chapter 17
Plant Fantasies: Managing
Communication
Can companies really Twitter their way to profits? Is Facebook
replacing face-to-face meetings? Do personal hand-written
business letters have any place in the digital age? If Plant Fantasies is any indication, reports concerning the death of traditional
business communication are greatly exaggerated. “In terms of
e-mails and e-blasts and Facebook and tweeting, I don’t do it,”
says Plant Fantasies owner Teresa Carleo. “I feel it’s more significant and meaningful to make a connection with somebody.”
It’s hard to argue with success: since founding Plant Fantasies in
1987, Carleo has become gardener to some of New York City’s
most prestigious property owners—including Donald Trump.
At first glance, Carleo’s preference for traditional communication methods seems out of touch with twenty-first century
technologies. Far from being neo-Luddites, however, the leaders
at Plant Fantasies demand communication that works—and
that means matching the right communication methods with the
right business situations. For example, some tasks at Plant Fantasies involve installing and maintaining gardens. Other situations require collaboration with landscape designers. Still others
involve speaking with clients. Not all communication channels
are equally suited for each situation; tweeting may be effective in
one situation yet hopelessly inappropriate within another setting.
According to Steve Martucci, the sales director for Plant
Fantasies, nothing beats a personal meeting with clients. “When
there’s time, I think it’s a great idea to always do face-to-face—
it’s good for the customer,” the director states. “You want them to
see you and remember you. You want them to see that you took
the time to come there, and that you didn’t just shoot them an
e-mail in a cab going somewhere else.” According to Martucci,
most new business at Plant Fantasies is generated by word-ofmouth. In the past, the sales director spent time and money on
brochures and e-mail marketing strategies. Martucci returned
to face-to-face interaction after watching people ignore his electronic messages. “You need to meet people so they can put a face
with a name,” the sales director states. He also notes that e-mail,
while useful for some tasks, can eat up precious time. “E-mail
is the best way to get the basic information across, but the back
and forth for a conversation that would take a minute on the
phone is a waste of time. I’d rather just make the phone call.”
Although face-to-face interaction is preferred at Plant
Fantasies, electronic communication is part of the company’s
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overall communication strategy—especially when it comes to
coordinating labor-oriented tasks. For example, if the company
has 15 gardening jobs to fulfill in any given day, each job will
require coordination of trucks, tools, plants, equipment, and
laborers. To establish a daily agenda, Carleo sends a batch of
e-mail messages п¬Ѓrst thing in the morning. Then, as needed,
landscape workers use cell phones and text messaging to address issues on site. “We all have Blackberrys, so we all do direct
connect—which is very helpful because I have the trucks and
people going around,” Carleo explains.
To keep leaders on the same page at the office, Carleo
hosts daily meetings. “I try to have a meeting at least once in
my office.” Carleo says. We talk and try to problem solve and
throw ideas around.” According to Martucci, the daily meetings are useful, and each member comes away with different
perspectives. “We all listen differently. I’ll go into meetings
with Teresa, and she’ll hear some of it and I’ll hear other
things—so we both take away different things from the meeting.” Frequent contact is also important to Martucci, who admits being “a control freak” when it comes to staying connected
with subordinates. “I always need to know what’s going on, and
I constantly check in. I don’t think you can ever be too annoying,” he said.
Despite the many digital communication technologies at
her disposal, Teresa Carleo insists on making a personal connection with customers. After a friend’s hand-written note recently touched her in a unique way, the Plant Fantasies founder
decided to launch a personal letter writing campaign to clients.
“I think I have a better chance of my customers opening that
envelope than opening an e-blast,” Carleo remarked. “Maybe
I’m archaic, but my clients aren’t 20.”
Discussion Questions
1. Using the concept of channel richness, explain why leaders at Plant Fantasies place a high value on face-to-face
communication.
2. What impact might gender have on the communication
styles of Teresa Carleo and Steve Martucci? Give examples.
3. Which of the three types of formal organizational communication would you expect to originate from Teresa Carleo
and Steve Martucci, and why?
Chapter 18
Holden Outerwear:
Leading Teams
“I like the word �team’ because it brings people together,” says
Mikey LeBlanc, professional snowboarder and founder of
Holden Outerwear. The Portland resident launched Holden
in 2002 to support his snowboarding addiction, and today
LeBlanc’s company produces some of the most interesting
designs ever to appear on slopes.
With their stylish zippers, п¬Ѓt cuts, and leather shoulders
and snaps, Holden technical garments have more in common with urban skate wear than with traditional ski suits.
Recreational snowboarders wear Holden Outerwear because
the collections are sleek and fashionable; experts like Holden
because the performance outerwear promotes the right state of
mind for taming mountains.
When asked about the advantages of his company’s team
development process, LeBlanc waxes philosophical. “You can
watch an NBA team that has a superstar who doesn’t work well
with anyone, or you can watch a great team that works together.
That’s what we’re trying to have here at Holden,” LeBlanc says.
The soft-spoken snowboarding pro adds that working in teams
is necessary for practical and inspirational reasons. “It can’t be
just one person because you get spread too thin, and the inspiration of design would be lost,” he states.
Nikki Brush, a design and development manager at
Holden, shares LeBlanc’s perspective. Her appreciation of
teams was an evolution, however. Brush says her п¬Ѓrst workgroup experiences in college were anything but inspirational:
one student would cut a pattern, another person would cut
fabric, and still another would have to sew—but no one took
ownership of the project. Things changed when Brush entered
the workforce and received a team assignment that proved to be
transformative. “It was the first time I really felt like I worked
with someone as a team, because we were both on the same
page,” Brush remembers. “I trusted her, she trusted me, and
in the long run it made us so much better as designers—and
more effective at delivering the product.” The experience taught
Brush that teams make a difference when individual members
hustle, take ownership, and collaborate on shared goals.
Holden’s use of teams is something that emerged out of
necessity. For much of the company’s brief history, managers
worked independently on design projects—a preference that
offered ultimate control over the process. But as the company
grew, LeBlanc needed more designers, and he began looking to
outside freelancers for help. For the п¬Ѓrst time, Holden managers formed virtual teams to produce new apparel lines, and
many of the team members were outside contractors. LeBlanc
states that the transition was exciting and harrowing at the
same time: “Bringing new people in is always really scary. You’re
opening up your secrets, and you’re opening up the way you do
your process.” He likens the experience to inviting guests for
the holidays. “Bringing someone in is like bringing someone
home for Thanksgiving dinner—it’s like a family here,” Holden’s owner says with characteristic earnestness.
As for Nikki Brush, she remembers being the “guest” invited over for the holidays. The young designer was a freelancer
when Holden’s design chief first contacted her. In a matter of
months, she designed one of the most popular pieces of a new
Holden collection. Today she is a full time manager at the company. “What I bring is my strong attention to detail, as far as
both development and design go,” Brush says.
The switch from freelancer to in-house manager has been
positive for Nikki Brush, although her role on the team has
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changed. “Freelancing is interesting because you’re not invested
in the company, and you don’t know 100 percent where they’ve
been or where they’re going,” she says. Even so, she is happier
working inside the п¬Ѓrm. Not only does she now know where
Holden is going, but she helps set the course.
Discussion Questions
1. Is Design Manager Nikki Brush a part of a group, or part of
a team? Explain the difference.
2. What type of team did Nikki Brush participate in when
she was a freelancer? What type of team does she participate in as a full-time employee at Holden?
3. What are potential disadvantages of teams for Holden’s apparel designers? What can managers do to help avoid these
downsides?
Chapter 19
Barcelona Restaurant Group:
Managing Quality and
Performance
“We’re a chain that’s not a chain,” Andy Pforzheimer says of
his Barcelona Restaurant Group, a collection of seven wine
and tapas bars located throughout Connecticut and Atlanta,
Georgia. Launched in 1995 by Pforzheimer and business
partner Sasa Mahr-Batuz, Barcelona is the restaurant of choice
for diners who crave flavorful European tapas, sophisticated
modern ambience, and the largest collection of Spanish wines
of any restaurant group in the country.
An entrepreneur and renowned chef, Pforzheimer began
cooking his own meals in high school as a way to control his
weight for the school wrestling squad. While a freshman in
college, he routinely cooked dinners for black-tie events. At
age 19, while studying under a chef in France, Pforzheimer
learned a restaurant philosophy that would guide his management decisions throughout his career: “The French chef
used to say, �Restaurants are very simple things: good food,
good service, reasonable price.’ He’s right, and I’ll throw in
good location and management that pays attention to how
they’re running the business. That’s it—it’s really not that
complicated.”
But Barcelona is not just about good food: it’s about a
dining experience. Pforzheimer estimates that food makes up
50 percent of the total Barcelona experience, and the rest is
comprised of important intangibles: the music, the lighting, the
clientele, the atmospherics, and the conversation with managers
and wait staff. “Quality in a restaurant is about lots of tiny details,” Pforzheimer says. Barcelona’s owner notes that managing
a restaurant’s performance entails managing food quality, wait
times, hospitality, bussing, restrooms, prices, and more. For
Barcelona to be successful, each employee must deliver his part
of the total experience night after night.
To ensure consistent quality across the board, Barcelona
uses five “feedback loops” that gauge restaurant performance.
First, Barcelona participates in a Secret Shoppers program in
which restaurant reviewers make four unannounced monthly
visits to Barcelona locations. During the outings, the covert
shoppers rate Barcelona on 120 aspects of the dining experience. “We started doing it a few years ago with one or two
shops per month, and we’ve increased the frequency because it’s
really effective,” states Barcelona COO Scott Lawton. “We’re
actually п¬Ѓnding out details on things that are important to
us.” Second, Barcelona offers a credit card rewards network in
which customers get meal discounts and airline miles in return
for offering survey feedback. Third, the company issues comment cards in the check presenter, and owners read through all
comments. Fourth, the chain receives e-mails from friends and
family, and every e-mail addressed to Barcelona goes directly
to Pforzheimer. Finally, surveillance cameras allow owners to
monitor all work areas from any computer.
Although Barcelona’s feedback loops provide good quantitative data, the owners and general managers are the true
eyes and ears of the company. Pforzheimer and his leadership
teams walk the floor constantly to advise wait staff and gather
feedback from customers. On one occasion, a Cuban customer
complained that the bar’s mojitos had lost their zing after the
restaurant switched to inexpensive $9 dollar rum. The customer
suggested using Castillo brand rum, informing management
that it was inexpensive yet perfect for mojitos. Managers followed the customer’s advice, and now Barcelona serves great
tasting mojitos at lower expense. According to Pforzheimer, this
tactic of management by walking around has led to similar improvements in menu choices, recipes, music, artwork, and more.
And while managing costs is important, Barcelona refuses
to sacrifice quality to pinch a few pennies. “The fine line that we
walk,” says Scott Lawton, “is determining how can we give the very
best product and the very best service and still make a good profit.
It doesn’t have to be the best profit, but it has to be a good profit.”
There’s plenty at stake if Barcelona fails to control its
performance. Pforzheimer notes that disappointing one’s customers is the quickest way to kill a business. However, failure
is about more than losing money: it’s also about losing face.
“What’s at stake is my business and my self-respect,” says the
restaurateur. “Making people happy is what motivates chefs.”
Pforzheimer says if he can’t do that, he wouldn’t be able to stay
in the restaurant business.
Discussion Questions
1. How do managers at Barcelona control the company’s
п¬Ѓnancial performance?
2. What is the “balanced scorecard” approach to measuring
corporate performance, and in what ways does Barcelona
utilize this approach?
3. List the four steps of the feedback control model and
describe an instance where Barcelona followed this process
to improve its performance.
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Biz Flix Video Cases
Chapter 1
In Good Company
A corporate takeover brings star advertising executive Dan
Foreman (Dennis Quaid) a new boss who is half his age.
Carter Duryea (Topher Grace), Dan’s new boss, wants to
prove his worth as the new marketing chief at Sports America,
Waterman Publishing’s flagship magazine. Carter applies his
unique approaches while dating Dan’s daughter, Alex (Scarlett
Johansson).
Management Behavior
This sequence starts with Carter Duryea entering Dan
Foreman’s office. It follows Foreman’s interaction with Teddy
K. (Malcolm McDowell), Globecom CEO, after Teddy K.’ s
speech. Carter Duryea enters while saying, “Oh, my God, Dan.
Oh, my God.” Mark Steckle (Clark Gregg) soon follows. The
sequence ends with Carter asking, “Any ideas?” Dan Forman
says, “One.” The film cuts to the two of them arriving at Eugene
Kalb’s (Philip Baker Hall) office building.
What to Watch for and Ask Yourself
• Which management skills discussed in this chapter does
Mark Steckle possess? Which does he lack?
• The sequence shows three people who represent different hierarchical levels in the company. Which hierarchical levels do you
attribute to Carter Duryea, Dan Foreman, and Mark Steckle?
• Critique the behavior shown in the sequence. What are the
positive and negative aspects of the behavior shown?
Chapter 2
Casino
Martin Scorsese’s film is a lengthy, complex, and beautifully
photographed study of Las Vegas gambling casinos and their
organized crime connections during the 1970s. It completes
his trilogy that includes Mean Streets (1973) and Goodfellas
(1990).1 Ambition, greed, drugs, and sex destroy the mob’s
gambling empire. The п¬Ѓlm includes strong performances by
Robert De Niro, Joe Pesci, and Sharon Stone. The violence and
the expletive-п¬Ѓlled dialogue give Casino its R rating.
Organizational Form
This scene is part of “The Truth about Las Vegas” sequence
that appears early in the п¬Ѓlm. It follows the scenes of the casino
deceiving the Japanese gambler.
1
J. Craddock, ed., VideoHound’s Golden Movie Retriever (Detroit, MI: Gale
Cengage Learning, 2008), p. 182.
The scene starts with a close-up of Sam “Ace” Rothstein
(Robert De Niro) standing between his two casino executives
(Richard Amalfitano and Richard F. Strafella). In a voiceover narration he says, “In Vegas, everybody’s gotta watch
everybody else.” The scene ends after Rothstein describes the
former cheaters who monitor the gambling floor with binoculars. The film continues with the introduction of Ginger
(Sharon Stone).
What to Watch for and Ask Yourself
• Which organizational form discussed in this chapter best fits
this scene from Casino?
• Apply Fayol’s principles of management to this scene. Which
ones appear in the scene? Give examples from the scene of
what you see.
• Compare the Theory X and Theory Y assumptions shown in
Exhibit 2.4 to this scene. Which assumptions appear in this
scene from Casino?
Chapter 3
Charlie Wilson’s War
Democratic Congressman Charlie Wilson (Tom Hanks) from
East Texas lives a reckless life that includes heavy drinking and
chasing attractive women. The п¬Ѓlm focuses on the Afghanistan
rebellion against the Soviet troop invasion in the 1980s.
Wilson becomes the unlikely champion of the Afghan cause
through his role in two major congressional committees that
deal with foreign policy and covert operations. Houston socialite Joanne Herring ( Julia Roberts) strongly urges the intervention. CIA agent Gust Avrakotos (Philip Seymour Hoffman)
helps with some details.
Organizational Culture Observations
This sequence appears early in the п¬Ѓlm after a scene showing
the characters drinking and partying in a hot tub. It opens with
a shot of the Capitol Building. Congressman Charlie Wilson
talks to his assistant Bonnie (Amy Adams) while walking to
chambers for a vote. The sequence ends after Wilson enters the
chambers. The film cuts to Wilson’s office where Larry Liddle
(Peter Gerety) and his daughter Jane (Emily Blunt) wait for
Wilson to arrive.
What to Watch for and Ask Yourself
• This chapter discussed organizational culture as having three
levels of visibility. Visible artifacts are at the п¬Ѓrst level and are
the easiest to see. Which visible artifacts did you observe in
this sequence?
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• Values appear at the next level of organizational culture. You
can infer a culture’s values from the behavior of organizational members. Which values appear in this sequence?
• Organizational members will unconsciously behave according to the basic assumptions of an organization’s culture.
You also infer these from observed behavior. Which basic
assumptions appear in this sequence?
Chapter 4
Lost in Translation
Jet lag conspires with culture shock to force the meeting of
Charlotte (Scarlett Johansson) and Bob Harris (Bill Murray).
Neither can sleep after their Tokyo arrival. They meet in their
luxury hotel’s bar, forging an enduring relationship as they experience Tokyo’s wonders, strangeness, and complexity. Based
on director Sophia Coppola’s Academy-Award-winning screenplay, this film was shot entirely on location in Japan. It offers
extraordinary views of various parts of Japanese culture that are
not available to you without a visit.
(Rahul Khanna), Bell, and Louis Masoudi (Patrick Dempsey)
compete in a reenactment of the Julius Caesar competition. Bell
wins the competition, but Hundert notices that Bell is wearing
an earpiece. Earlier in the п¬Ѓlm, Hundert had suspected that
young Bell wore an earpiece during the competition, but Headmaster Woodbridge (Edward Herrmann) urged him to ignore
his suspicion.
This scene appears at the end of the п¬Ѓlm. It is an edited version of the competition reenactment. Bell announced his candidacy for the U.S. Senate just before he spoke with Hundert in
the bathroom. In his announcement, he carefully described his
commitment to specific values he would pursue if elected.
What to Watch for and Ask Yourself
• Does William Hundert describe a specific type of life that
one should lead? If so, what are its elements?
• Does Sedgewick Bell lead that type of life? Is he committed
to any specific view or theory of ethics?
• What consequences or effects do you predict for Sedgewick
Bell because of the way he chooses to live his life?
Cross-Cultural Observations
This sequence is an edited composite taken from different
parts of Lost in Translation. It shows selected aspects of Tokyo
and Kyoto, Japan. Charlotte has her п¬Ѓrst experience with the
complex, busy Tokyo train system. She later takes the train to
Kyoto, Japan’s original capital city for more than ten centuries.
What to Watch for and Ask Yourself
• While watching this scene, pretend you have arrived in
Tokyo, and you are experiencing what you are seeing. Do you
understand everything you see?
• Is Charlotte bewildered by her experiences? Is she experiencing some culture shock?
• What aspects of Japanese culture appear in this scene? What
do you see as important values of Japanese culture?
Chapter 5
The Emperor’s Club
William Hundert (Kevin Kline), a professor at the exclusive Saint
Benedict’s Academy for Boys, believes in teaching his students
about living a principled life. He also wants them to learn his
beloved classical literature. A new student, Sedgewick Bell (Emile
Hirsch), challenges Hundert’s principled ways. Bell’s behavior
during the 73rd annual Mr. Julius Caesar Contest causes Hundert
to suspect that Bell leads a less-than-principled life, a suspicion
confirmed years later during a reenactment of the competition.
Ethics and Ethical Behavior
Mr. Hundert is the honored guest of his former student
Sedgewick Bell ( Joel Gretsch) at Bell’s estate. Depaak Mehta
Chapter 6
Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole
Christmas
Readers and lovers of the Dr. Seuss original tale may feel put
off by Ron Howard’s loose adaptation of the story. Whoville, a
magical, mythical land, features the Whos who love Christmas
and the Grinch ( Jim Carrey) who hates it. Cindy Lou Who
(Taylor Momsen) tries to bring the Grinch back to the Yuletide
celebrations, an effort that backfires on all involved. Sparkling
special effects will dazzle most viewers and likely distract them
from the film’s departures from the original story.
Personality Traits
The selected scene is an edited version of the “Second Thoughts”
sequence early in the п¬Ѓlm. Just before this scene, fearless Cindy
Lou entered the Grinch’s lair to invite him to be the Holiday
Cheermeister at the 1,000th Whobilation celebration. In typical Grinch fashion, he pulls the trap door on Cindy Lou, who
slides out of his lair and lands on a snowy Whoville street.
What to Watch for and Ask Yourself
While viewing this scene, assess the Grinch on the following
personality traits. Use the adjectives “low,” “middle,” or “high” in
your assessment. Also describe the behavior you associate with
each trait.
• Internal locus of control: A belief that external forces have
little effect on a person; the person controls his or her destiny.
• High energy level: An intense focus combined with unconventional risk taking and an unwavering belief in a dream.
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• Innovative way: A commitment to finding creative solutions
to problems and issues.
• Need to achieve: Motivated to excel and picks situations in
which he or she is likely to succeed.
• Self-confidence: A feeling of confidence about handling
almost anything that could happen in the future.
• Tolerance for ambiguity: Untroubled by uncertainty and
disorder.
Chapter 7
Inside Man
New York City detective Keith Frazier (Denzel Washington)
leads an effort to remove Dalton Russell (Clive Owen) and his
armed gang from the Manhattan Trust Bank building. Complexities set in when bank chairman Arthur Case (Christopher
Plummer) seeks the help of power broker Madeline White
( Jodie Foster) to prevent the thieves from getting a particular
safe deposit box. This fast-paced action п¬Ѓlm goes in many
directions to reach its unexpected ending.
Planning
This scene starts as Captain John Darius (Willem Dafoe)
approaches the diner. Detectives Keith Frazier and Bill
Mitchell (Chiwetel Ejiofor) leave the diner to join Captain
Darius. The scene ends after the three men enter the New York
Police Department command post after Captain Darius says,
“Your call.” The film cuts to Madeline White and Arthur Case
walking along a river.
What to Watch for and Ask Yourself
• Does this scene show strategic or tactical planning?
• What pieces of the planning type does it specifically show?
Give examples from the scene.
• Do you expect this plan to succeed? Why or why not?
Chapter 8
Played (I)
Ray Burns (Mick Rossi) does prison time for a crime he did
not commit. After his release, he focuses on getting even with
his enemies. This fast-moving film peers deeply into London’s
criminal world, which includes some crooked London police,
especially Detective Brice (Vinnie Jones). The film’s unusual
ending reviews all major parts of the plot.
Strategy and Action
These scenes start with a nighttime shot of a house on
Edenville Street. Ray says, “OK, what we got, guys? Nathan.
One, two, three, four moves, okay?” They begin after Ray tells
Terry (Trevor Nugent) and Nikki (Meredith Ostrom) that
they have the robbery job. These scenes end as Ray and Terry
leave with the sound of the alarm. The п¬Ѓlm cuts to Detective
Brice sitting in his car under a bridge talking to Riley (Patrick
Bergin) on his cell phone.
What to Watch for and Ask Yourself
• This chapter strongly argued that strategic planning plays a
major role in an organization’s success. Ray guides the planning process in these scenes. As the sequence unfolded, did
you expect it to succeed or fail? Why or why not?
• This chapter defines a SWOT analysis as “a search for
strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats that
affect organizational performance.” Did Ray and the others
do such an analysis? If not, what was missing from their
analysis?
• Synergy results from combining organizational resources in
a way that gets more than the sum of individual resources.
Assess the synergy that occurred in these scenes. Did Ray
and the others combine in a way to have the most positive effect? Why or why not?
Chapter 9
Failure to Launch
Meet Tripp (Matthew McConaughey), who is 35 years old, has
a nice car, loves sailing, and lives in a nice house—his parents’.
Tripp’s attachment to his family usually annoys any woman
with whom he becomes serious. Mother Sue (Kathy Bates) and
father Al (Terry Bradshaw) hire Paula (Sarah Jessica Parker).
She specializes in detaching people like Tripp from their families. The term “failure to launch” refers to the failure to move
out of the family home at an earlier age.
The Bird Problem: Fast Decision Making!
This fast-moving sequence begins with the sound of a bird
chirping as it perches on a tree limb. Kit (Zooey Deschanel)
and Ace ( Justin Bartha) have waited patiently for the bird’s
arrival. This bird has annoyed Kit for many days. Ace believes
that Kit only pumped the shotgun twice. The sequence ends
after the bird leaves the house. The п¬Ѓlm continues with Kit and
Ace embracing and then cuts to a baseball game.
What to Watch for and Ask Yourself
• Does “The Bird Problem” present Kit and Ace with a programmed or nonprogrammed decision? What features of
their decision problem led to your choice?
• Assess the degree of certainty or uncertainty that Kit and
Ace face in this decision problem. What factors set the
degree of certainty or uncertainty?
• Review the earlier section describing the decision-making
steps. Which of those steps appears in “The Bird Problem?”
Note the examples of each step that you see.
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Chapter 10
Rendition
This charming fantasy film, based on W. P. Kinsellas’s novel
Shoeless Joe, shows the rewards of pursuing a dream.
U.S. government operatives suddenly whisk Anwar El-Ibrahimi
(Omar Metwally) from his flight from Cape Town, South
Africa, after it arrives in Washington, D.C. He is a suspected
terrorist whom the government sends to North Africa for
torture and interrogation (extraordinary rendition). Douglas
Freeman ( Jake Gyllenhaal), a CIA analyst, becomes involved.
He reacts negatively to the torture techniques and urges
El-Ibrahimi’s release. The story has other complications in the
form of El-Ibrahimi’s pregnant wife at home who desperately
works for her husband’s safe return.
Forces for Change
Organizational Structure
This scene opens with a night shot of the Washington Monument. It follows Kahlid’s (Moa Khouas) discussion with
Hamadi (Hassam Ghancy), the leader of the terrorist bomb
group. Congressional aide Alan Smith’s (Peter Sarsgaard)
voice-over says, “She called you?” The scene ends after Senator
Hawkins (Alan Arkin) tells Alan to back off. The film cuts
to a panning shot of a market area and Douglas Freeman
drinking.
Alan Smith’s question, “She called you?” refers to Corrine
Whitman (Meryl Streep), head of U.S. intelligence. She authorized the extraordinary rendition of El-Ibrahimi. Alan Smith,
earlier in the film, pressed her for El-Ibrahimi’s release and his
return to the United States. Whitman lied about El-Ibrahimi’s
existence. This scene does not explicitly discuss organizational
structure, but you can infer several aspects of structure from
the scene.
What to Watch for and Ask Yourself
• What formal tasks does this scene imply? What reporting
relationships does it show?
• Can you sense the division of labor represented by Senator
Hawkins and Alan Smith? Corrine Whitman does not
appear in this scene but is also part of a division of labor.
• Does the scene show line authority or staff authority? Does
it imply a functional or divisional structure? Give some
examples from the scene.
Chapter 11
Field of Dreams
Ray Kinsella (Kevin Costner) hears a voice while working in
his Iowa cornfield that says, “If you build it, he will come.” Ray
concludes that “he” is legendary “Shoeless Joe” Jackson (Ray
Liotta), a 1919 Chicago White Sox player suspended for rigging the 1919 World Series. With the support of his wife
Annie (Amy Madigan), Ray jeopardizes his farm by replacing
some corn fields with a modern baseball diamond. “Shoeless
Joe” soon arrives, followed by the rest of the suspended players.
This scene is part of the “People Will Come” sequence toward
the end of the п¬Ѓlm. By this time in the story, Ray has met
Terrence Mann ( James Earl Jones). They have traveled together
from Boston to Minnesota to find A. W. “Moonlight” Graham
(Burt Lancaster). At this point, the three are at Ray’s Iowa
farm.
This scene follows Mark’s (Timothy Busfield) arrival to
discuss the foreclosure of Ray and Annie’s mortgage. Mark,
who is Annie’s brother, cannot see the players on the field. Ray
and Annie’s daughter Karin (Gaby Hoffmann) has proposed
that people will come to Iowa City and buy tickets to watch a
baseball game. Mark does not understand her proposal. The
п¬Ѓlm continues to its end.
What to Watch for and Ask Yourself
• Who is the target of change in this scene?
• What are the forces for change? Are the forces for change
internal or external to the change target?
• Does the scene show the role of leadership in organizational
change? If it does, who is the leader? What does this person
do to get desired change?
Chapter 12
Played (II)
Ray Burns (Mick Rossi) does prison time for a crime he did
not commit. After his release, he focuses on getting even with
his enemies. This fast-moving film peers deeply into London’s
criminal world, which includes some crooked London police,
especially Detective Brice (Vinnie Jones). The film’s unusual
ending reviews all major parts of the plot.
Recruitment
These scenes begin with a close-up of a photograph of an ape
that Riley (Patrick Bergin) carefully examines. They follow Detective Brice’s order to Riley to kill the person who will not give
them money. He shoots him in a pub. The scenes end after Ray
Burns accepts Riley’s offer. He walks away while saying, “All
right. Let’s rock and roll, man. All right. Thanks, Riley.” Riley
says, “Thank you, Ray.” The film cuts to Terry (Trevor Nugent)
talking to Nikki (Meredith Ostrom) before Ray’s arrival.
What to Watch for and Ask Yourself
• This chapter emphasized a strategic approach to human
resource management. Detective Brice outlines a strategy
in the opening of these scenes for the job he describes to
Riley. What are the key parts of that strategy? What are the
human resource implications of the strategy?
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• Riley’s next step is to recruit Ray Burns. Which recruitment
guidelines and activities does he follow? Give examples from
that portion of the п¬Ѓlm scenes.
rearrangement of the sofa, which ends up in the same place it
started. The п¬Ѓlm cuts to Millie and Jason (Tom Everett Scott)
dining at his place.
• Does Riley give Ray a “realistic job preview”? Use examples
from the п¬Ѓlm scenes to support your answer.
Chapter 13
Baby Mama
Meet Kate Holbrook (Tina Fey), single, late thirties, successful in her career, but childless. She loves children and wants a
child but does not want to take chances with a pregnancy at her
age. Kate enlists the help of Angie Ostrowiski (Amy Poehler)
from South Philadelphia to act as her surrogate mother. Former attorney, now Super Fruity fruit smoothies’ owner Rob
Ackerman (Greg Kinnear) enters the scene and begins dating
Kate. Angie becomes pregnant but it is not clear whether the
child is Kate’s or Angie’s. The complex, intertwined relationships
and social interactions create an enjoyable comedy experience.
Diversity
These scenes start with a shot of Kate and Rob seated at a table
in a vegan restaurant. The vegan waiter ( Jon Glaser) approaches
the table and introduces himself. The scenes follow Kate preparing to leave for her date and talking to Angie about the book
she is reading. These scenes end after Rob says, “Term of endearment.” The film cuts to the two of them walking on a street.
What to Watch for and Ask Yourself
• This chapter defined diversity as “all the ways in which people
differ.” Do you sense the presence of diversity in these scenes?
• Do you sense differences among Kate, Rob, and the vegan
waiter? If so, what are the differences?
• What diversity characteristics appear in the scenes? List specific examples of what you see.
Chapter 14
Because I Said So
Meet Daphne Wilder (Diane Keaton)—your typical meddling,
overprotective, and divorced mother of three daughters. Two of
her three beautiful daughters have married. That leaves Millie
(Mandy Moore) as the focus of Daphne’s undivided attention
and compulsive behavior to п¬Ѓnd Millie a mate. Daphne places
some online advertising, screens the applicants, and submits
those she approves to Millie. Along the way, Daphne meets Joe
(Stephen Collins), the father of one applicant. Romance emerges
and the п¬Ѓlm comes to a delightful, though expected, conclusion.
Personality Assessment
This scene starts after Daphne answers her cell phone and
says the person has the wrong number. It follows the frantic
What to Watch for and Ask Yourself
• Which Big Five personality traits best describe Daphne?
Give examples of behavior from the п¬Ѓlm scene to support
your observations.
• Which Big Five personality traits best describe Millie? Give
examples of behavior from the п¬Ѓlm scene to support your
observations.
• Review the discussion of emotional intelligence earlier in
this chapter. Assess both Daphne and Millie on the four
parts of emotional intelligence.
Chapter 15
Doomsday
The Reaper Virus strikes Glasgow, Scotland, on April 3, 2008.
It spreads and devastates the population throughout Scotland.
Authorities seal off the borders, not allowing anyone to enter
or leave the country. No aircraft flyovers are permitted. Social
decay spreads, and cannibalistic behavior develops among the few
remaining survivors. Eventually, no one is left alive in the quarantined area. The Reaper Virus reemerges in 2032, this time in
London, England. Classified satellite images show life in Glasgow
and Edinburgh. Prime Minister John Hatcher (Alexander Siddig)
and his assistant Michael Canaris (David O’Hara) assign the task
of п¬Ѓnding the cure to Security Chief Bill Nelson (Bob Hoskins).
Leadership
This sequence starts at the beginning of the scene entitled “No
Rules, No Backup” (chapter 4 on the DVD) with a shot of the
Department of Domestic Security emblem. The п¬Ѓlm cuts to
Major Eden Sinclair (Rhona Mitra) standing in the rain smoking a cigarette while waiting for Chief Nelson. The sequence
ends after Michael Canaris leaves the helicopter while saying to
Sinclair, “Then you needn’t bother coming back.” He closes the
helicopter’s door. Major Sinclair blows her hair from her face
while pondering his last statement. The film cuts to the helicopter lifting off the tarmac.
What to Watch for and Ask Yourself
• Assess the behavior of both Major Sinclair and Michael
Canaris. Which leadership traits discussed earlier and shown
in Exhibit 15.5 does their behavior show?
• Apply the behavioral approaches to leadership discussed earlier in this chapter. Which parts apply to Sinclair and Canaris’s
behavior? Draw specific examples from the film sequence.
• Does this film sequence show any aspects of charismatic and
transformational leadership? Draw some examples from the
sequence.
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Chapter 16
Friday Night Lights (I)
The Odessa, Texas, passion for Friday night high school
football (Permian High Panthers) comes through clearly in
this cinematic treatment of H. G. (Buzz) Bissinger’s wellregarded book of the same title.2 Coach Gary Gaines (Billy Bob
Thornton) leads them to the 1988 semifinals where they must
compete against a team of much larger players. Fast-moving
pace in the football sequences and a slower pace in the serious,
introspective sequences give this п¬Ѓlm many п¬Ѓne moments.
Motivation
This sequence starts with a panning shot of the Winchell’s
house. Coach Gaines says to Mike Winchell (Lucas Black),
“Can you get the job done, Mike?” The sequence follows a harsh
practice and Mike talking to his brother or sister from a telephone booth. The п¬Ѓlm continues with the Odessa-Permian vs.
Cooper football game.
What to Watch for and Ask Yourself
• This chapter defined motivation as “the forces either within
or external to a person that arouse enthusiasm and persistence to pursue a certain course of action.” Does Mike
Winchell show the characteristics of this definition early
in the sequence? Do you expect him to show any of the
characteristics after the sequence ends and he returns to
the team?
• Which needs discussed earlier in this chapter does Mike
appear focused on early in the sequence? Which needs can
become his focus later in the sequence? See the “Hierarchy of
Needs” and “ERG Theory” sections earlier in the chapter for
some suggestions.
• Apply the various parts of goal-setting theory to this
sequence. Which parts of that theory appear in this
sequence?
Chapter 17
Friday Night Lights (II)
The Odessa, Texas, passion for Friday night high school
football (Permian High Panthers) comes through clearly in
this cinematic treatment of H. G. (Buzz) Bissinger’s wellregarded book of the same title.3 Coach Gary Gaines (Billy
Bob Thornton) leads them to the 1988 semifinals where they
must compete against a team of much larger players. Fastmoving pace in the football sequences and a slower pace in
the serious, introspective sequences give this п¬Ѓlm many п¬Ѓne
moments.
Communication
This sequence4 begins with a shot of Coach Gaines and the
team gathered around him during the half-time break. He
starts his speech to the team by saying, “Well, it’s real simple.
You got two more quarters and that’s it.” It ends after Gaines
says, “Boys, my heart is full. My heart’s full.”
What to Watch for and Ask Yourself
• This chapter emphasized the speaker and the listener(s) in
the communication process. Coach Gaines is the speaker and
each team member and the assistant coaches are listeners.
Only Gaines spoke. Did he still meet the basic requirements
of effective communication? Draw examples from his speech
to support your conclusions.
• This chapter distinguished between purpose-directed communication and strategic conversation. Which of these communication types best fits this sequence? Draw examples
from the sequence to make your point.
• Assess the effectiveness of this communication event. How
do you expect team members and the assistant coaches to
react in the second half of the game?
Chapter 18
Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins
Hollywood talk-show host Roscoe Jenkins (Martin Lawrence)
returns to his Georgia home for his parents’ 50th wedding
anniversary. Cultures clash between the big-city Roscoe and
other family members. The culture clash becomes even more
severe because of the presence of his upper-class п¬ЃancГ©e, Bianca
Kittles ( Joy Bryant), who does not understand this family and
feels superior to them.
Conflict: It Can Sneak Up on You
This sequence starts with Roscoe and his brother, Sheriff Otis
Jenkins (Michael Clarke Duncan), carrying a tub of п¬Ѓsh and ice
from Monty’s butcher shop to Sheriff Jenkins’s pickup truck.
It follows the baseball game during which Roscoe hit a ball
that struck Mama Jenkins (Margaret Avery) in the head. This
sequence ends after Sheriff Jenkins knocks out his brother. The
п¬Ѓlm continues with Roscoe walking down a dirt road. Betty
(Mo’Nique) approaches in her car.
What to Watch for and Ask Yourself
• Based on your understanding of a team as described in this
chapter, do Roscoe Jenkins and his brother Sheriff Otis
Jenkins form a team in this п¬Ѓlm sequence? Why or why not?
4
2
J. Craddock, ed., VideoHound’s Golden Movie Retriever (Detroit, MI: Gale
Cengage Learning, 2008), p. 368.
3
J. Craddock, ed., VideoHound’s Golden Movie Retriever (Detroit, MI: Gale,
Cengage Learning, 2008), p. 368.
This sequence is heavily based on the section entitled “Half-Time”
(chapter 27 on the DVD). However, we edited in scenes from other parts of
the film to reduce the number of identifiable talent to whom we must pay a fee.
If you have seen this п¬Ѓlm, you will know that this exact sequence does not exist
at any point in the п¬Ѓlm.
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• This chapter defined conflict as “antagonistic interaction in
which one party attempts to block the intentions or goals of
another.” Does the interaction in this film sequence show this
definition in action? Give examples from the sequence.
• Which conflict-handling style best fits the behavior shown in
this п¬Ѓlm sequence? Give some examples from the sequence.
Chapter 19
In Bruges
Hit man Ray (Colin Farrell) botches the simple job of murdering a priest in a confessional. The “botch” occurs when
a bullet passes through the priest’s body into a young boy’s
head. Deeply troubled, Ray and fellow hit man Ken (Brendan
Gleeson) go to the beautiful medieval Flemish city of Bruges,
Belgium. Ken engages in tourist activities, which Ray п¬Ѓnds
highly boring. Various characters, such as an American dwarf
actor and a beautiful woman selling drugs on a п¬Ѓlm set, add
color and interest to this п¬Ѓlm.
Customer Focus
This sequence has two parts that are separated by a title slide
that reads, “And another interaction for the ticket seller.” Watch
Part I up to the title slide and pause the п¬Ѓlm. Answer the п¬Ѓrst
two questions. Restart the п¬Ѓlm sequence and play to the end.
Answer the third question.
Part I. This sequence starts as Ken enters the tower to buy a
ticket. It ends after he asks the ticket seller (Rudy Blomme)
whether he is happy. This sequence follows the discussion
about the city of Bruges between Ken and Ray.
Part II: This sequence begins as Ken and Harry Waters (Ralph
Fiennes) approach the bell tower. It follows their discussion over
beers about where Harry should shoot Ken. The ticket seller
tells Ken that the tower is closed because a visitor had a heart attack. This sequence ends after Harry’s interaction with the ticket
seller. The п¬Ѓlm continues with various scenes based on the plaza.
What to Watch for and Ask Yourself
• Ken is the customer and the ticket seller responds to him as
a customer. Do you perceive the ticket seller as having a customer focus as emphasized in this chapter? Why or why not?
• The ticket seller will interact with Ken and Harry Waters in
Part II of this п¬Ѓlm sequence. Do you predict that the ticket
seller’s customer approach could result in negative results for
him? Why or why not?
• Part II offers a lesson in customer focus. What did the ticket
seller fail to understand about his customers?
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