Planning Review: Volume 15 Issue 6
Table of contents
Who should control american business?
Milton LeontiadesBack in 1932 Berle and Means first drew the public's attention to the growing separation between business ownership and control. In large public companies, they pointed out…
New York Radio: Cooperative strategy in a fragmented market
William Copulsky, Shirley H. BakerRadio broadcasting is a fragmented industry — one in which many of the local stations are small, and stations have little chance to establish a dominant market share. Since there…
Strategy implementation: Competition among supermarkets
John Leslie Livingstone, Douglas J. TigertThe retail food market has been wracked by traumatic changes for more than a decade. In the 1970s A & P, the largest chain at that time, was well on the way to oblivion until…
Using on‐line information for strategic advantage
James McGraneFor about two decades, the focus of corporate planning has been more on internal information than external information. If planners used electronic data bases at all, they were…
Compact Discs: New tool for competitive analysis
Warren Briggs, James ColemanAn important part of any strategic competitive analysis has always been access to timely and relevant data that can be pruned into useful information. Some new and still rapidly…
Cash flow planning
Mark E. Haskins, Robert D. Higgs, J. Edward KetzThe results of recent surveys of businesses indicate that cash flow is the single most important problem they face. The business press has noted that “cash‐flow planning is one of…