MBA Programs with product as Tag

Marketing Communications Elective Course at Business School IUJ

Marketing Communications
Marketing communications covers the basic topic of how a company can get customers to buy, based on convincing them of the value of its product. This includes the use of the four elements of the “marketing communications mix”: advertising, sales promotion, personal selling and public relations. This course covers the role of each element of the marketing mix in each step of becoming a loyal customer, from first hearing of a product, interest, information search, etc. to product purchase and repurchase. We also cover the importance of profitability in deciding on a marketing communications mix, with emphasis on linking costs with the revenues they generate. In this course, students learn the role of communications in strategy, how to develop communications plans based on strategy, how to develop a media plan, and how to track results and analyze those results to determine profitability.

The Information Economy Course of MBA at Hitotsubashi University

ICS , Graduate School of International Corporate Strategy

[Term 4] The Information Economy (R. Davies) (2009/Term 3&4 (Spring&Summer))

Advances in digital technologies and network services continue to fuel expansion of the information economy. Epitomized by companies such as Amazon, Google, Yahoo!, eBay, Apple, Microsoft, Nokia, NTT DoCoMo, Sony, and Nintendo, the information economy is at the leading edge of new business models for selling products and services, with and without analogues in the traditional economy.

At the center of this evolution are software platform ecosystems, consisting of constellations of mutually dependent communities of businesses and consumers with a symbiotic relationship to one another that create value through the coordinated efforts of their members. Analysis of the underlying economics of these ecosystems provides important insights into business models, product design, pricing structures, and competitive dynamics, as well as the variable nature of the upstream and downstream integration of software platforms with hardware manufacturers, content providers, application and middleware developers, and end users.

These developments have also given rise to profound changes in the retail market, both traditional and virtual, as exemplified in Long Tail economics. The most successful Internet businesses today are capitalizing on new digital technologies that drive demand down the Long Tail distribution curve and create markets of infinite choice for consumers. By applying principles from economics, history, and business analysis to case studies and other media sources, this course aims to identify the fundamental trends that are shaping the information economy, forming new industries, transforming others, and often sweeping away old ones in a wake of “creative destruction.”
Course Structure

The course begins with introductory lectures on (1) the Long Tail, which currently manifests itself largely as an Internet phenomenon, and (2) the underlying features of software platform ecosystems. By mapping these ecosystems, we will discover important principles that influence pricing, design, organization, and the governance of businesses operating in the information economy. Subsequent lessons apply these principles to detailed analyses of some of the most prominent platform-based industries today, including personal computers, smart phones, video games, and digital media (music, movies, and books), identifying sustainable business models and the key technological drivers and revenue streams that lead to profitability. Following an investigation into issues involving copyrights in cyberspace, the focus shifts to an examination of business models that underlie Web-centric services, such as search and advertising, online auctions and payment systems, e-tailing, and social networking. The choice of cases, articles, and topics is updated each year. In the past, the course included cases on Apple iPod/iTunes, Electronic Arts, NetFlix, BitTorrent, Google, Amazon, eBay, NTT DoCoMo, Mobile Felica, and LinkedIn.
Teaching Method

The course will be taught using interactive lectures and class discussions based on assigned cases and other readings. There will be a midterm paper and an in-class final examination (open book), requiring focused analysis of specific industry trends and business models that will allow students to apply insights discovered in class and formulate their own views.

Advanced Corporate Finance Course at University of Hong Kong

FINA0304 Advanced Corporate Finance

Semester : 1 & 2
For Student of Year : 2&3

The objective of this course is to introduce the theoretical literature on the microeconomics of corporate finance in a unified framework. Topics covered include: corporate financing and agency costs, corporate financing under asymmetric information, liquidity and risk management, corporate finance and product markets, passive and active monitoring in corporate finance, lending relationship and investor activism, control rights and corporate governance, and takeovers. Subtle elements of information and agency considerations are emphasized.

Extra Information

Pre-requisite: FINA1003 Corporate finance
Mutually exclusive course: FINA0302 Theories of corporate finance

Marketing Management Course at Gadjah Mada University

Marketing Management (EKM 2102)

This is a follow on from Marketing Management which explores in greater depth the basic marketing concepts. The course explains the methods, techniques, and processes of formulating and developing a marketing plan to achieve their marketing objectives through certain steps in the marketing plan which includes activities such as segmentation, targeting, marketing strategies and programs formulation technically called product, price, place or distribution and promotion, and action plan. The objectives of this course are to enrich students with a better understanding about (1) the mechanism of making marketing decisions, (2) basic marketing concepts and recent development in marketing, (3) the role of marketing managers, and (4) the ability to implement the marketing concepts they learn into a marketing planning project/exercise.

Microeconomics Course at Gadjah Mada University

Microeconomics I (EKU 1133)

Description

The course covers deeper topics on microeconomics concepts and analysis.

Topics

Theories of consumer choice, consumer and producer behavior, output and input markets.

Objectives

Develop a deeper understanding of microeconomics concepts and various problems solving using hypothetical and simple empirical cases.

Microeconomics II (EKU 2135)

Description

The course builds on microeconomics with special reference to the usage of assumptions in microeconomics.

Topics

Basic assumptions in microeconomics, research on microeconomics concepts.

Objectives

Teach students to formulate actual problems into simle microeconomics models and analyze using acquired theories.

Macroeconomics I (EKU 1134)

Description

The course covers deeper topics on macroeconomics concepts and analysis.

Topics

Applying theories to macroeconomics problems, quantitative analysis of macroeconomics, and qualitative analysis of macroeconomics.

Objectives

Provide students with practices in solving macroeconomics problems based on the teories acquired.

Macroeconomics II (EKU 2136)

Description

The course examines greater depth of macroeconomics theories, including advance macroeconomics theories.

Topics

Fundamentals of economic growth process supply and demand in open economics, theory of economics fluctuations, determinants to aggregate demands, general equilibrium of product, money, and unemployment.

Objectives

Enhance students’ ability perform macroeconomics analysis in order to learn advance macroeconomics phenomena.