Homework+ +Sweet+Music
Transcript of Homework+ +Sweet+Music
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CASE STUDY FOR CONTEMPORARY
Sweet Music
BAHCESEHIR UNIVERSITY
2009
Melih CELIK
Mesut YILMAZYILDIRIM
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SWEET MUSIC
For well over a century and a half, the C. F. Martin Guitar Company (established in
1833) of Nazareth, Pennsylvania, has been producing acoustic instruments considered to
be among the finest in the world. Like a Steinway grand piano, a Rolls Royce
automobile, a Buffet clarinet, or a Baccarat crystal vase, a Martin guitarwhich can cost
more than $10,000is among the best that money can buy. This family business has
managed to defy the odds and survive through six generations. Current CEO Christian
Frederick Martin IVbetter known as Chriscontinues to be committed to the guitar
maker's craft. He even travels to Martin dealerships around the world to holdinstructional clinics. Few companies have had the staying power of Martin Guitar. Why?
What are the keys to the company's success? A primary one has to be the managerial
guidance and skills of a talented leader who has kept organizational members focused on
important issues such as quality.
From the very beginning, quality has played an important role in everything that C.
F. Martin Guitar Company does. Even through dramatic changes in product design,
distribution systems, and manufacturing methods, the company has remained committed
to making quality products. The company's steadfast adherence to high standards of
musical excellence and providing a product to meet the needs of a demanding customer
base permeates everything that happens in the organization, top to bottom and in all work
areas. Part of that quality approach encompasses a long-standing ecological policy. Since
the company depends on natural wood products to manufacture its guitars, it has
embraced the judicious and responsible use of traditional natural materials and
encouraged the introduction of sustainable-yield alternative wood species. Based on
thorough customer research, Martin introduced guitars that utilized structurally sound
woods with natural cosmetic defects that were once considered unacceptable. In addition,
Martin follows the directives of CITES, the Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora.
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C. F. Martin Guitar Company is an interesting blend of old and new. Although the
equipment and tools may have changed over the years, employees remain true to the
principle of high standards of musical excellence. Building a guitar to meet these
standards requires considerable attention and patience. Family member Frank Henry
Martin explained to potential customers in the preface to a 1904 catalog, "How to build a
guitar to give this tone is not a secret. It takes care and patience. Care in selecting the
materials, laying out the proportions, and attending to the details which add to the
player's comfort. Patience in giving the necessary time to finish every part. A good guitar
cannot be built for the price of a poor one, but who regrets the extra cost for a good
guitar?" Almost one hundred years later, this statement is still an accurate expression of
the company's philosophy. Although the company is firmly rooted in its past, Chris is not
reluctant to take the company in new directions. For instance, in the late 1990s, he made
the bold decision to start selling guitars in the under-$800 market segment. This segment
accounts for 65 percent of the acoustic guitar industry's sales. The company's DXM
model was introduced in 1998. Although it doesn't look, smell, or feel like the company's
pricier models, customers claim it has a better sound than most other instruments in that
price range. Chris justified his decision by saying that "If Martin just worships its past
without trying anything new, there won't be a Martin left to worship."
The company is doing well under Chris's management. Revenues have continued to
increase and in 2000 were close to $60 million. The manufacturing facility in Nazareth
was expanded and new guitar models continue to be introduced. Employees describe his
management style as friendly and personal, yet firm and direct. Although C. F. Martin
Guitar Company continues to spread its wings in new directions, it hasn't lost sight of the
commitment to making the absolute finest products it can. And under Chris's
management, it won't.
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QUESTIONS
1) Which management skillconceptual, human, or technicaldo you think
would be most important to Chris Martin? Explain your choice.
Since Chris Martin acts as a top manager, conceptual skill are the most important
for him. Because to move C. F. Martin Guitar Company forward in the industry, the
directional planning and visualizing is needed , must come for the top of the organization.
For instance Chris Martin
However, in order to communicate this vision and directional plan to the
organizations lower managers and labor, Chris Martin must also have a certain amount
of human skills, so they will all support the plan and bring about organizational success.
Technical skills are the least needed one for Chris Martin. He should be able to hire
employees who have the necessary technical skills to make the outstanding Martin
guitars. However, hiring a person to see and develop organizational plans and mission
would be difficult, and therefore, this leadership must come from Chris Martin.
2) Check out the CITES Web site. What information could a manager find
there? How might an organization's commitment to social responsibility affect the
way managers perform the managerial functions?
Manager can find a lot of information concerning the current laws and regulations
and international trade restrictions concerning wildlife, natural environment and flora.
Because Martin guitars are made from wood the current international trade restrictions
and limitations of importing and exporting natural products are quite relevant to daily
business dealings at Martin Guitars.
An organizations commitment to social responsibility has an immediate impact on
the planning managerial function. If the company takes a particularly strong position of
using all natural products, with no artificial components, the procurement of supplies is
quite different. A company such as Martin Guitars would use a large quantity of natural
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wood, which could cause some tree preservation groups to watch the organizations
practices quite closely.
However, many customers could be influenced positively to buy a natural product,
particularly from a company that practices a nature-friendly style of production.
However, this socially responsible behavior has a lot of good effects on the planning
managerial function.
3) What management roles would Chris be playing as he (a) visits Martin
dealerships around the world, (b) assesses the feasibility of new guitar models, and
(c) keeps employees focused on the company's long-standing principles? Explain
your choices.
(a) When Chris visits Martin dealerships around the world he is acting as a
figurehead, a leader and a monitor. When he simply represents the company around the
world, he is being a figurehead. When he visits the dealerships and provides them with a
solid, he is being a leader and visible person to follow. He is also acting as a
disseminator. It means, Chris could be taking information from corporate headquarters
out to the individual dealerships and providing those dealerships with up-to-date
company information. And, Chris is being a monitor when he visits the dealerships,because he is gathering information from the dealerships that can be taken back to
headquarters and utilized for product and service improvements.
(b) He is acting as an entrepreneur and a disturbance handler, when Chris assesses
the feasibility of new guitar models. However as an entrepreneur he is on the cutting
edge of technology, moving the company to a new level. Chris could be a disturbance
handler when assessing the feasibility of a new guitar model if he is choosing between
multiple designs or if he is making a final decision on whether or not to go with a newmodel.
(c) When Chris is keeping employees focused on the companys longstand
principles he is being a negotiator, a leader and a resource allocator. The longstand
principles of Martin Guitars have been a key factor in guiding the organization
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historically, currently, and probably in the future. As he focuses employees on these goals
Chris would be a leader. Chris might also be using these principles as a negotiator and
resource allocator to end disputes.
4) Chris made the statement that "If Martin just worships its past without
trying anything new, there won't be a Martin left to worship." What are the
implications for managers throughout the company as they plan, organize, lead, and
control?
Chris is making a very clear statement that Martin Guitars must be progressive and
move forward with the future. It means; if Martin Guitars managers assume that customer
demands and competitors would remain status q, Martin Guitars would decline and even
cease to exist. Therefore, his message is to be innovative and creative in service, product,
and process. This definite directive for innovation and change should tell managers to be
innovative and creative in all managerial functions including planning, organizing,
leading, and controlling.
5) Chris's management style was described by employees as friendly and
personal, yet firm and direct. What do you think this means as far as the way he
plans, organizes, leads, and controls? Do you think this style would work in other
organizations or does this style work only because it's a family business and Chris is
the sixth generation of the family to run the business? Explain.
Chris plans, organizes, leads, and controls in a friendly manner; but can really get
quite serious and aggressive when the occasion demands. This type of management style
would probably be described as very people-oriented, but also process-oriented.
Yes, this style of management is quite effective in other organizations. For example,Bill Gates would probably be described in this same manner. He is the manager of lots of
employees. Gates is one of the best-known entrepreneurs of the personal computer
revolution. Although he is admired by many, a number of industry insiders criticize his
business tactics, which they consider anti-competitive, an opinion which has in some
cases been upheld by the courts. During Microsoft's early years, all employees had broad
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responsibility for the company's business. Gates oversaw the business details, but
continued to write code as well. In the first five years, he personally reviewed every line
of code the company shipped, and often rewrote parts of it as he saw fit.
As long as business is going well, Bill and Chris are pretty friendly and personal,
but during a difficult time, both gentlemen would probably choose to be less friendly and
more decisive and serious. Perhaps Chris must be a bit more friendly and personal
because this is a family business. Many employees could possibly be multigenerational
employee families, also. Many employees may have worked for Chris older relatives,
which would also tend to require him to be more personal and friendly.