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17/11/11.  Evaluate Lexar’s choices and performance to date.  What have they done right? Wrong?  What opportunities for growth should Lexar pursue?

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Presentation on theme: "17/11/11.  Evaluate Lexar’s choices and performance to date.  What have they done right? Wrong?  What opportunities for growth should Lexar pursue?"— Presentation transcript:

1 17/11/11

2  Evaluate Lexar’s choices and performance to date.  What have they done right? Wrong?  What opportunities for growth should Lexar pursue? ◦ Within Digital Photography ◦ Beyond Digital Photography

3  Choosing Digital Photography:  Advantages:  Avoid retaliation  Shape technical agenda of firm  CEO passion  Premium segment of market  Brand  Product Differentiation  Disadvantages: ◦ Focus may limit firm’s growth potential ◦ Must expand into areas where it doesn’t have current technical advantage

4  2002 ◦ Removed the word ‘digital film’ from its flash memory card packaging  2002 ◦ Shipped first USB Flash Drive  2003 ◦ Shipped its first MP3 Player

5  Lexar and Digital China Join Forces to Distribute Digital Media  FREMONT, Ca., October 15, 2004 -- Lexar Media, Inc. (Nasdaq: LEXR), a leading marketer and manufacturer of high-performance digital media and accessories, and Digital China Holdings Ltd. ("Digital China", HKSE stock code: 861), a leading IT products distributor, have entered into a strategic distribution agreement for Digital China to offer Lexar's complete line of flash memory cards, USB flash drives, digital music players as well as its Kodak branded flash memory cards, in the People's Republic of China.  Lexar Unveils Website Designed to Inform and Educate Digital Photographers  ORLANDO, FL, February 20, 2005 (PMA booth #4132) – Lexar Media, Inc. (Nasdaq: LEXR), a world leader in advanced digital media technologies, today announced a new web site designed specifically for digital photographers. Located at www.lexar.com/dp, the new site includes valuable information and tutorials to help photographers more fully utilize the unique features Lexar products offer and achieve a more rewarding experience shooting and working with digital images. Additionally, this new site provides detailed information about new photography techniques, products and services, as well as interesting feature stories and background information about the many professionals who count on Lexar's flash memory cards and accessories to help them succeed. www.lexar.com/dp  Crucial.com/uk Wins Customer Satisfaction Award from Price Comparison Website PriceGrabber.co.uk  Crucial.com/uk Awarded the PriceGrabber 1K Bronze Award Having Received 1,000 Positive Customer Reviews in Q1 of 2009  Key Messages:  Crucial.com/uk site received PriceGrabber 1K Bronze Award  Over 1,000 positive customer reviews in Q1 2009  Second consecutive such award from PriceGrabber, giving crucial.com/uk more than 2,300 positive reviews overall  Demonstrates a successful customer experience found by customers shopping direct from crucial.com/uk  Lexar Mobile Memory Cards Top Group Test in Mobiles Magazine  Lexar microSDHC Cards Recommended as Best Solution for Speed and Performance  London, August, 27, 2010 -- Lexar Media, a leading global provider of memory products for digital media, today announced that its range of microSDHC™ Mobile cards were recognised as the “best in test” in a recent round-up in Mobiles magazine, the leading magazine in France for guidance on mobile phones*. The Lexar® High- Speed Mobile microSDHC 8GB and 16GB cards, and the standard Lexar microSDHC 2GB and 4GB cards all received recognition in the June-July 2010 issue of the magazine.Mobiles magazine

6  Managing industry emergence ◦ Lexar successful at shaping preferences and evaluation metrics early on  Technology commercialization strategy ◦ Lexar entered product market – will this strategy prove successful over time  The role of identity in terms of guiding strategic choices ◦ Lexar as a digital photography company was successful early on, in the longer term will this continue?

7  http://www.lexar.com/ http://www.lexar.com/  http://www.globeforum.com/en/TopRightMe nu/Forums/Dublin/Right-now/#video http://www.globeforum.com/en/TopRightMe nu/Forums/Dublin/Right-now/#video  http://www.dconnolly.net/index.html http://www.dconnolly.net/index.html  http://www.globeforum.com/en/TopRightMe nu/Forums/Dublin/Innovators-Contest/ http://www.globeforum.com/en/TopRightMe nu/Forums/Dublin/Innovators-Contest/

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10 10 Knowledge Knowledge is a fluid mix of framed experience, values contextual information and expert insight that provides a framework for evaluating and incorporating new experiences and information (Davenport and Prusak, 1998)  Explicit Dimension  Tacit Dimension Knowledge Management An organisation’s ability to effectively acquire, create, retain, deploy and leverage knowledge

11 11 Data Information Knowledge Context Knowledge Hierarchy

12 12

13 13  Hard and soft data (Mintzberg, 1975)  Managers get more information and knowledge from face to face meetings than they do from documentation/ repositories (Kefalas,1973; Keegan, 1974; Mintzberg, 1975; Eisenberg, 1984; Davenport, 1994; Davenport et al., 1998)  “Knowing who to consult” (Keegan, 1974; Simon, 1977)

14 14  Strategic Scanning (El Sawy, 1985) ◦ Accommodation Information ◦ Assimilation Information  Proposed Solution: ◦ “Programs that allow users to record their creative ideas, provide editing, organizing, and outline facilities that later rearrange those thoughts into topics and give each topic a separate heading and sub-heading”.

15 15  Explicit Knowledge ◦ formal / codified ◦ documents, best practices, databases, proposals  Tacit Knowledge ◦ informal / uncodified ◦ experiential, within employee’s head, ◦ hard to effectively capture and share

16 16 ideascampaign.ie – smart/knowledge/innovation economy Fuelled by the power of the people ◦ Prime Time 3/3/09/ Morning Ireland 4/3/09 Access all areas: companies are making the most of technology Capitalising on IT is as important as knowing when to leave it alone ◦ From The Times, October 3, 2007, Mark Hunter Knowledge causes a fuss YOU know it, and she knows it, and that chap downstairs seems to have a basic grasp of the idea. Problem is, the other 6,000 people in the organisation don’t have a clue. ◦ From The Times, April 4, 2006 If I were boss Our chief exec has just come back form a corporate junket and is buzzing around talking about "knowledge management". Now he wants the team of line managers to start looking at ways of implementing this concept. The trouble is we are all left scratching our heads. How do we apply the concept to make our business more effective? ◦ The Guardian, Saturday November 13, 2004 The Guardian

17 17  Knowledge is not new  People in organisations have always sought, used and valued knowledge  Companies hire for minds rather than hands

18 18  Codification Strategy ◦ Computer centred ◦ Captured and stored in database  Personalisation Strategy ◦ Associated with an individual ◦ Shared person to person

19 19  Locate “experts” to help solve business problems  Link “knowledge holders” to “knowledge seekers”  Transfer valuable “Tacit” Knowledge

20 20 “Humans add the value that turns data and information into knowledge…it is unrealistic to assume that a company can throw knowledge management activities on top of its existing positions”. (Davenport and Prusak, 1998)  Chief Knowledge Officer (CKO)  Knowledge ◦ Integrator ◦ Writer ◦ Author ◦ Editor ◦ Synthesizer

21 21  Build organisational knowledge culture  Create knowledge management infrastructure  Make it all pay off

22 22  “the sum of individual knowledge used in the value creation process and the knowledge embedded in collective action”. (Von Krogh et al.,1996, pp.227)  Organisations ability to : ◦ Have a memory ◦ React ◦ Make decisions

23 23

24 24  “‘Techknowledgy’ is clearly part of Knowledge Management” (Davenport and Prusak, 1998)  KM is 80% about organization, and 20% about IT

25 25  Storage  Publishing  Subscription  Reuse  Collaboration  Communication

26 26  Knowledge should be ◦ Intuitively accessible ◦ Searchable to find relevant knowledge ◦ Inform how things get done  Alternatively you should be able to connect to experts

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28 28  Solution which complements strategy ◦ Technology is an enabler  Customized solutions which integrate with work processes ◦ Non invasive ◦ Build on Web and Email platforms  Combination of tools and technology ◦ Search / Categorization / Messaging / Collaboration

29 29  Business ◦ Prosthetics manufacturer  Technology ◦ LINK (Leveraging Internal Knowledge)  Web tool facilitates ◦ Expert finder  Describes people who might be working on things that you might be working on ◦ Ability to index sent items folder  Enables a user to build a personal work profile ◦ “Brokers Discussions”

30 30  Making it pay ◦ Reduced length of time to uncover knowledge related to a clinical trial by finding existing experts in the area within the organisation

31 31  Business ◦ Box design and manufacturer  Technology ◦ InnoBook: An interactive database of box design concepts, continually updated by over 300 designers  Utilised by 250 sites across Europe  Each design department has access to all designs and uses the system to search for base designs when an order is placed

32 32  Designers motivated to contribute their box designs to the repository  Initial reluctance to the utilisation of designs contributed to the system by other departments, question mark over the quality of the design not produced by the local team  Making it pay ◦ overcomes localisation of box design knowledge ◦ avoiding ‘reinventing the wheel’

33 33  Business ◦ Multinational data storage device manufacturer  Technology ◦ Primus a knowledge repository for customer solutions  Implemented by Customer Service Team in two locations – European and US

34 34  Objective ◦ to manage customer support knowledge issues by breaking down a problem or situation into its knowledge components ◦ to classify knowledge about the problem received or add new knowledge about the problem

35 35  Making it pay ◦ build a knowledge base of solutions and solve customer’s problems in a more time efficient and effective manner ◦ to provide an integrated approach to problem resolution and a solution for managing the knowledge across the CS group

36 36  People are the key to successful knowledge management  IS may be identified as one factor that can enable the capture, storage, creation and dissemination of organizational knowledge

37 37 The focus on utilising organizational knowledge should be on a dialogue between two individuals or a community of practice and not knowledge objects stored in a database (Hansen et al., 1999)

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