November 26, 2020

ICFAI University - Introduction to Management – Paper

2020

 Introduction to Management – Paper I


Max Marks: 100, Duration: 3 Hrs


PART I – INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT

Management: An Overview: Definitions of Management; The Role of Management; Functions of Managers; Levels of Management; Management Skills and Organizational Hierarchy; Approaches to Management.


Evolution of Management Thought: Early Approaches to Management; Classical Approach; Behavioral Approach; Quantitative Approach; Modern Approaches to Management; Emerging Approaches in Management Thought.


Social and Ethical Responsibilities of Management: Social Responsibilities of Management; Arguments for and against Social Responsibilities of Business; Social Stockholders; Measuring Social Responsiveness; Managerial Ethics.


PART II – PLANNING

Fundamentals of Planning: Definitions of Planning; Nature of Planning; Significance of Planning; Types of Plans; Steps in the Planning Process; Prerequisites for Effective Planning; Limitations of Planning.


Objectives: Nature of Objectives; Evolving Concepts in MBO; The Process of MBO; Benefits of MBO; Limitations of MBO; Making MBO Effective.


Strategies, Policies and Planning Premises: Nature and Purpose of Strategies and Policies; The Three Levels of Strategy; Strategic Planning; Competitive  Analysis in Strategy Formulation; Major Kinds of Strategies and Policies; Porter’s Competitive Strategies; Strategy Implementation; Effective Implementation of Strategy; Planning Premises.


Managerial Decision-Making: Significance and Limitations of Rational Decision-making; Managers as Decision-makers; Decision-making Process; Types of Managerial Decisions; Decision-making Under Certainty, Uncertainty and Risk; Management Information System vs. Decision Support System; The Systems Approach to Decision-making; Group Decision-making; Decision-making Techniques.


PART III – ORGANIZING

Fundamentals of Organizing: Definitions of Organizing; Benefits of Organizing; Traditional Perspectives on Organizing; Closed System vs Open System; Formal vs Informal Organization; Span of Management; Organizational Environment for Entrepreneuring and Intrapreneuring; The Process of Organizing; Prerequisites for Effective Organizing.


Strategic Organization Design: Designing Organizational Structures: An Overview; Major Structural Alternatives; Other Bases for Departmentation; Strategic Business Units; Choosing the Pattern of Departmentation.


Line and Staff Authority and Decentralization: Authority Defined; Power: Bases of Power; Line and Staff Relationships; Centralization vs. Decentralization; Delegation of Authority; Balance- The Key to Decentralization.


Effective Organizing and Organizational Culture: Avoiding Mistakes in Organizing by Planning; Avoiding Organizational Inflexibility; Avoiding Conflict by Clarification; Ensuring Understanding of Organization Structure; Organizational Culture.


<< Back


Introduction to Management – Paper II


Max Marks: 100, Duration: 3 Hrs


 

PART I – STAFFING

Human Resource Management and Staffing: Human Resource Management: An Overview; Staffing; Recruitment; Selection; Socialization Process of New Employees.


Performance Appraisal and Career Strategy: Significance of Appraisal; Formal vs. Informal Appraisals; Performance Rating Methods; Criteria for Appraising Managers; Formulating Career Strategy.


Organizational Change and Organization Development: Organizational Change; Planned Change Through Organization Development; Organizational Development Process; Approaches to Manager Development; Organizational Conflict.


PART II – LEADING

Managing and the Human Factor: The Nature of People; Behavioral Models; Managerial Creativity; Innovation and Entrepreneurship; Harmonizing Objectives: The Key to Leading.


Motivating Employees for Job Performance: Definitions and Meaning of Motivation; Classification of Motivation Theories; Motivational Techniques; A Systems and Contingency Approach to Motivation.


Leadership: Definition and Meaning of Leadership; Key Elements of Leadership; Leadership Theories


Managing Communications: Definitions of Communication; Significance of Communication in Organizations; Communication Process; Communication Flows in an Organization; Barriers to Communication; Gateways to Effective Communication.


PART III – CONTROLLING

The Control Function: Planning and Controlling; Importance of Controlling; Levels of Control; Basic Control Process; Types of Control; Requirements for Effective Controls.


Control Techniques: Major Control Systems; Financial Control; Budgetary Control; Quality Control; Inventory Control.


Productivity and Operations Management: Production and Productivity; Productivity Problems and Measurement; Operations Management and its Importance; Operations Research for Planning, Controlling and Improving Productivity; Operations Research Methodology; Some Operations Research Techniques; Other Tools and Techniques for Improving Productivity.


Direct Control versus Preventive Control: Direct Control versus Preventive Control; Direct Control; Preventive Control; Management Audit and Enterprise Self-Audit.


Management Information Systems: Management Information; Components of an Information System; Types of Information Systems; Management Information Systems.


PART IV – EXPANDING HORIZON IN MANAGEMENT

International Management: Reasons for going International; International Management Functions; Japanese Management and Theory Z; Multinational Corporations. 


https://www.icfaiuniversity.in/regulations/mba/curriculum_groupA.htm 

ICFAI Unversity - MBA Curriculum

 2020


The MBA Program - Curriculum


The MBA Program


Group/Subject


GROUP A


Introduction to Management


Managerial Effectiveness  


GROUP B


Financial Accounting


Economics


GROUP C


Quantitative Methods


Management Accounting


GROUP D


Financial Management


Marketing Management


GROUP E


Information Technology & Systems


Operations Management


GROUP F


Organizational Behavior & HRM


Business Law


GROUP G


Project Management


Management Control & Information Systems


GROUP H


Business Policy & Strategy


Business Ethics & Corporate Governance


ELECTIVES IN FINANCE

GROUP I


Security Analysis 


Portfolio Management


GROUP J


Treasury & Forex Management


Strategic Financial Management


ELECTIVES IN MARKETING

GROUP I


Advertising & Communications


Services Marketing


GROUP J


International Marketing


Sales & Distribution Management


ELECTIVES IN INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS

GROUP I


International Business Environment


International Management - I


GROUP J


International Management - II


Management of Multinational Corporations


ELECTIVES IN HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT

GROUP I


Performance Measurement  & Reward Systems


Recruitment, Training and Development


GROUP J


Leadership and Change


Strategic Human Resource Management


ELECTIVES IN BANKING

GROUP I


Money & Banking and Credit Management


Central Banking & Commercial Banking


GROUP J


Treasury Management & Risk Management in Banks


Management of Banking Companies


ELECTIVES IN INSURANCE

GROUP I


Life Insurance and Group & Health Insurance


General Insurance: Personal & Commercial


GROUP J


Insurance Management – I


Insurance Management – II


ELECTIVES IN INVESTMENTS

GROUP I


Security Analysis – I


Security Analysis – II


GROUP J


Portfolio Management – I


Portfolio Management – II


ELECTIVES IN IT & SYSTEMS

GROUP I


Data Warehousing and Data Mining


Software Project Management


GROUP J


E-Business


Cryptography and Computer Security + Disaster Recovery


ELECTIVES IN OPERATIONS

GROUP I


Quality and Productivity Management


Supply Chain Management


GROUP J


Management of Service Operations


Management of International Operations


GROUP K

Integrated Case Studies


https://www.icfaiuniversity.in/regulations/mba/annexureiv.htm 



 

November 25, 2020

Introduction to Supply Chain Management - 1995 Article Summary


An Introduction to Supply Chain Management


Ram Ganeshan
Terry P. Harrison

Department of Management Science and Information Systems
303 Beam Business Building
Penn State University
University Park, PA 16802 U.S.A.



A supply chain is a network of facilities and distribution options that performs the functions of procurement of materials, transformation of these materials into intermediate and finished products, and the distribution of these finished products to customers. Supply chains exist in both service and manufacturing organizations, although the complexity of the chain may vary greatly from industry to industry and firm to firm.

Realistic supply chains have multiple end products with shared components, facilities and capacities.

Traditionally, marketing, distribution, planning, manufacturing, and the purchasing organizations along the supply chain operated independently. These organizations have their own objectives and these are often conflicting. Marketing's objective of high customer service and maximum sales dollars conflict with manufacturing and distribution goals. Many manufacturing operations are designed to maximize throughput and lower costs with little consideration for the impact on inventory levels and distribution capabilities. Purchasing contracts are often negotiated with very little information beyond historical buying patterns. . Clearly, there is a need for a mechanism through which these different functions can be integrated together. Supply chain management is a strategy through which such an integration can be achieved.

Coordination between the various players in the chain is key in its effective management. Cooper and Ellram [1993] compare supply chain management to a well-balanced and well-practiced relay team. Such a team is more competitive when each player knows how to be positioned for the hand-off. The relationships are the strongest between players who directly pass the baton, but the entire team needs to make a coordinated effort to win the race.


Supply Chain Decisions

We classify the decisions for supply chain management into two broad categories -- strategic and operational. As the term implies, strategic decisions are made typically over a longer time horizon. These are closely linked to the corporate strategy (they sometimes part of the corporate strategy), and guide supply chain policies from a design perspective. On the other hand, operational decisions are short term, and focus on activities over a day-to-day basis. The effort in these type of decisions is to effectively and efficiently manage the product flow in the "strategically" planned supply chain.


There are four major decision areas in supply chain management: 1) location, 2) production, 3) inventory, and 4) transportation (distribution), and there are both strategic and operational elements in each of these decision areas.


Location Decisions

The geographic placement of production facilities, stocking points, and sourcing points is the natural first step in creating a supply chain. The location of facilities involves a commitment of resources to a long-term plan. Once the size, number, and location of these are determined, so are the possible paths by which the product flows through to the final customer. These decisions are of great significance to a firm since they represent the basic strategy for accessing customer markets, and will have a considerable impact on revenue, cost, and level of service. These decisions should be determined by an optimization routine that considers production costs, taxes, duties and duty drawback, tariffs, local content, distribution costs, production limitations, etc. (See Arntzen, Brown, Harrison and Trafton [1995] for a thorough discussion of these aspects.) Although location decisions are primarily strategic, they also have implications on an operational level.


Production Decisions

The strategic decisions include what products to produce, and which plants to produce them in, allocation of suppliers to plants, plants to DC's, and DC's to customer markets. As before, these decisions have a big impact on the revenues, costs and customer service levels of the firm. These decisions assume the existence of the facilities, but determine the exact path(s) through which a product flows to and from these facilities. Another critical issue is the capacity of the manufacturing facilities--and this largely depends the degree of vertical integration within the firm. Operational decisions focus on detailed production scheduling. These decisions include the construction of the master production schedules, scheduling production on machines, and equipment maintenance. Other considerations include workload balancing, and quality control measures at a production facility.


Inventory Decisions

These refer to means by which inventories are managed. Inventories exist at every stage of the supply chain as either raw materials, semi-finished or finished goods. They can also be in-process between locations. Their primary purpose to buffer against any uncertainty that might exist in the supply chain. Since holding of inventories can cost anywhere between 20 to 40 percent of their value, their efficient management is critical in supply chain operations. It is strategic in the sense that top management sets goals. However, most researchers have approached the management of inventory from an operational perspective. These include deployment strategies (push versus pull), control policies --- the determination of the optimal levels of order quantities and reorder points, and setting safety stock levels, at each stocking location. These levels are critical, since they are primary determinants of customer service levels.


Transportation Decisions

The mode choice aspect of these decisions are the more strategic ones. These are closely linked to the inventory decisions, since the best choice of mode is often found by trading-off the cost of using the particular mode of transport with the indirect cost of inventory associated with that mode. While air shipments may be fast, reliable, and warrant lesser safety stocks, they are expensive. Meanwhile shipping by sea or rail may be much cheaper, but they necessitate holding relatively large amounts of inventory to buffer against the inherent uncertainty associated with them. Therefore customer service levels, and geographic location play vital roles in such decisions. Since transportation is more than 30 percent of the logistics costs, operating efficiently makes good economic sense. Shipment sizes (consolidated bulk shipments versus Lot-for-Lot), routing and scheduling of equipment are key in effective management of the firm's transport strategy.


Supply Chain Modeling Approaches

Clearly, each of the above two levels of decisions require a different perspective. The strategic decisions are, for the most part, global or "all encompassing" in that they try to integrate various aspects of the supply chain. Consequently, the models that describe these decisions are huge, and require a considerable amount of data. Often due to the enormity of data requirements, and the broad scope of decisions, these models provide approximate solutions to the decisions they describe. The operational decisions, meanwhile, address the day to day operation of the supply chain. Therefore the models that describe them are often very specific in nature. Due to their narrow perspective, these models often consider great detail and provide very good, if not optimal, solutions to the operational decisions.


To facilitate a concise review of the literature, and at the same time attempting to accommodate the above polarity in modeling, we divide the modeling approaches into three areas --- Network Design, ``Rough Cut" methods, and simulation based methods. The network design methods, for the most part, provide normative models for the more strategic decisions. These models typically cover the four major decision areas described earlier, and focus more on the design aspect of the supply chain; the establishment of the network and the associated flows on them. "Rough cut" methods, on the other hand, give guiding policies for the operational decisions. These models typically assume a "single site" (i.e., ignore the network) and add supply chain characteristics to it, such as explicitly considering the site's relation to the others in the network. Simulation methods is a method by which a comprehensive supply chain model can be analyzed, considering both strategic and operational elements. However, as with all simulation models, one can only evaluate the effectiveness of a pre-specified policy rather than develop new ones. It is the traditional question of "What If?" versus "What's Best?".



Network Design Methods

As the very name suggests, these methods determine the location of production, stocking, and sourcing facilities, and paths the product(s) take through them. Such methods tend to be large scale, and used generally at the inception of the supply chain. The earliest work in this area, although the term "supply chain" was not in vogue, was by Geoffrion and Graves [1974]. They introduce a multicommodity logistics network design model for optimizing annualized finished product flows from plants to the DC's to the final customers. Geoffrion and Powers [1993] later give a review of the evolution of distribution strategies over the past twenty years, describing how the descendants of the above model can accommodate more echelons and cross commodity detail.

Breitman and Lucas [1987] attempt to provide a framework for a comprehensive model of a production-distribution system, "PLANETS", that is used to decide what products to produce, where and how to produce it, which markets to pursue and what resources to use. Parts of this ambitious project were successfully implemented at General Motors.

Cohen and Lee [1985] develop a conceptual framework for manufacturing strategy analysis, where they describe a series of stochastic sub- models, that considers annualized product flows from raw material vendors via intermediate plants and distribution echelons to the final customers. They use heuristic methods to link and optimize these sub- models. They later give an integrated and readable exposition of their models and methods in Cohen and Lee [1988].

Cohen and Lee [1989] present a normative model for resource deployment in a global manufacturing and distribution network. Global after-tax profit (profit-local taxes) is maximized through the design of facility network and control of material flows within the network. The cost structure consists of variable and fixed costs for material procurement, production, distribution and transportation. They validate the model by applying it to analyze the global manufacturing strategies of a personal computer manufacturer.

Finally, Arntzen, Brown, Harrison, and Trafton [1995] provide the most comprehensive deterministic model for supply chain management. The objective function minimizes a combination of cost and time elements. Examples of cost elements include purchasing, manufacturing, pipeline inventory, transportation costs between various sites, duties, and taxes. Time elements include manufacturing lead times and transit times. Unique to this model was the explicit consideration of duty and their recovery as the product flowed through different countries. Implementation of this model at the Digital Equipment Corporation has produced spectacular results --- savings in the order of $100 million dollars.

Clearly, these network-design based methods add value to the firm in that they lay down the manufacturing and distribution strategies far into the future. It is imperative that firms at one time or another make such integrated decisions, encompassing production, location, inventory, and transportation, and such models are therefore indispensable. Although the above review shows considerable potential for these models as strategic determinants in the future, they are not without their shortcomings. Their very nature forces these problems to be of a very large scale. They are often difficult to solve to optimality. Furthermore, most of the models in this category are largely deterministic and static in nature. Additionally, those that consider stochastic elements are very restrictive in nature. In sum, there does not seem to yet be a comprehensive model that is representative of the true nature of material flows in the supply chain.



Rough Cut Methods

These models form the bulk of the supply chain literature, and typically deal with the more operational or tactical decisions. Most of the integrative research (from a supply chain context) in the literature seem to take on an inventory management perspective. In fact, the term "Supply Chain" first appears in the literature as an inventory management approach. The thrust of the rough cut models is the development of inventory control policies, considering several levels or echelons together. These models have come to be known as "multi-level" or "multi-echelon" inventory control models. For a review the reader is directed to Vollman et al. [1992].

Multi-echelon inventory theory has been very successfully used in industry. Cohen et al. [1990] describe "OPTIMIZER", one of the most complex models to date --- to manage IBM's spare parts inventory. They develop efficient algorithms and sophisticated data structures to achieve large scale systems integration.

Although current research in multi-echelon based supply chain inventory problems shows considerable promise in reducing inventories with increased customer service, the studies have several notable limitations. First, these studies largely ignore the production side of the supply chain. Their starting point in most cases is a finished goods stockpile, and policies are given to manage these effectively. Since production is a natural part of the supply chain, there seems to be a need with models that include the production component in them. Second, even on the distribution side, almost all published research assumes an arborescence structure, i. e. each site receives re-supply from only one higher level site but can distribute to several lower levels. Third, researchers have largely focused on the inventory system only. In logistics-system theory, transportation and inventory are primary components of the order fulfillment process in terms of cost and service levels. Therefore, companies must consider important interrelationships among transportation, inventory and customer service in determining their policies. Fourth, most of the models under the "inventory theoretic" paradigm are very restrictive in nature, i.e., mostly they restrict themselves to certain well known forms of demand or lead time or both, often quite contrary to what is observed.

The preceding sections are a selective overview of the key concepts in the supply chain literature. Following is a list of recommended reading for a quick introduction to the area.

Bibliography

Arntzen, B. C., G. G. Brown, T. P. Harrison, and L. Trafton. Global Supply Chain Management at Digital Equipment Corporation. Interfaces, Jan.-Feb., 1995.
Ballou, R. H. 1992. Business Logistics Management, Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, Third Edition.
Breitman, R. L., and J. M. Lucas. 1987. PLANETS: A Modeling System for Business Planning. Interfaces, 17, Jan.-Feb., 94-106.
Cohen, M. A. and H. L. Lee. 1985. Manufacturing Strategy Concepts and Methods, in Kleindorfer, P. R. Ed., The Management of Productivity and Technology in Manufacturing, 153- 188.
Cohen, M. A. and H. L. Lee. 1988. Strategic Analysis of Integrated Production-Distribution Systems: Models and Methods. Operations Research, 36, 2, 216-228.
Cohen, M. A. and H. L. Lee. 1989. Resource Deployment Analysis of Global Manufacturing and Distribution Networks. Journal of Manufacturing and Operations Management, 81-104.
Cooper, M. C., and L. M. Ellram. 1993. Characteristics of Supply Chain Management and the Implications for Purchasing and Logistics Strategy. The International Journal of Logistics Management, 4, 2, 13-24.
Deuermeyer, B. and L. B. Schwarz. 1981. A Model for the Analysis of System Service Level in Warehouse/ Retailer Distribution Systems: The Identical Retailer Case, in: L. B. Schwarz (ed.), Studies in Management Sciences, Vol. 16--Multi-Level Production / Inventory Control Systems, North-Holland, Amsterdam, 163-193.
Geoffrion, A., and G. Graves. 1974. Multicommodity Distribution System Design by Benders Decomposition. Management Science, 29, 5, 822-844.
Geoffrion, A., and R. Powers. 1993. 20 Years of strategic Distribution System Design: An Evolutionary Perspective, Interfaces. (forthcoming)
Houlihan, J. B. 1985. International Supply Chain Management. International Journal of Physical Distribution and Materials Management, 15, 1, 22-38.
Lee, H. L., and C. Billington. 1992. Supply Chain Management: Pitfalls and Opportunities. Sloan Management Review, 33, Spring, 65-73.
Lee, H. L., and C. Billington. 1993. Material Management in Decentralized Supply Chains. Operations Research, 41, 5, 835-847.
Masters, J. M. 1993. Determination of Near-Optimal Stock Levels for Multi-Echelon Distribution Inventories. Journal of Business Logistics, 14, 2, 165-195.
Schwarz, L. B. 1981. Introduction in: L. B. Schwarz (ed.), Studies in Management Sciences, Vol. 16--Multi-Level Production / Inventory Control Systems, North-Holland, Amsterdam, 163-193.
Stenross, F. M., and G. J. Sweet. 1991. Implementing an Integrated Supply Chain in Annual Conference Proceedings, Oak Brook, Ill: Council of Logistics Management, Vol. 2, 341-351.
Vollman, T. E., W. L. Berry, and D. C. Whybark. 1992. Manufacturing Planning and Control Systems, Irwin, Homewood, IL.



Referenced by:
Contributors: Ram Ganeshan , Terry Harrison 



Updated on 26 Nov 2020
Published on 18 March 2016

November 22, 2020

NRAOMTR.blogspot.com registered 2 Million Hits - 23 January 2017 - Performance Updates

On November 23, 2020 the blog reached 3 million page views.

https://nraomtr.blogspot.com/2020/11/nraomtrblogspotcom-3-million-page-views.html


On 23 January 2017, Management Theory Review, https://nraomtr.blogspot.com registered 2 million pages showing its global popularity in management blogs. This is an addition to 2 million page view already registered on Knol Platform from where the content is transferred to this blog.

The blog was started in 2011 - In 3 years it got a million page views.

__________________





__________________


I thank all readers and friends who supported the blog for many years.



___________________

Big global audience for the blog.

Country-wise Audience 


____________________


Important Project of the Blog - Around 450 essays on management


MBA Core Management Knowledge - One Year Revision Schedule

-----------------------------------
31 May 2019
All time

Posts

EntryPageviews
142465
110432
81424
72575
51672
47553
41836
2 May 2019, 9 comments
38727
33668

Pages

EntryPageviews
28 May 2019, 3 comments
15968

_________________________

Month August 2019

Total  21,241

EntryPageviews
846
819
397
344
310
238
220
211
207
204

__________________________

Month June 2019

Posts



________________________
Month

Posts

Pages

EntryPageviews
28 May 2019, 3 comments
44

Week

Posts

Pages

EntryPageviews
28 May 2019, 3 comments
19
--------------------------------------


Target for June 24000 page views

9 May 2019 - one week top posts

Posts                                                            Pageviews
Principles of Management – Koontz and O’Donnell 2 May 2019, 12 comments  152
Competitive Strategies for Followers and Nichers  2 May 2019, 1 comment 75
Marketing Communication: Channels and Promotion To... 7 May 2019, 49 comments 73
Total Industrial Engineering - H. Yamashina 2 May 2019, 2 comments 58 ***
Organizational Buying Processes and Buying Behavio... 2 May 2019, 7 comments 54
The Nature and Purpose of Planning - Review Notes 2 May 2019, 2 comments 52
Industrial Management - Evolution of The Subject 6 May 2019, 1 comment 45 ***
Financial - Cost and Management Accounting - Subje... 10 Dec 2015, 2 comments 44
Kaizen Costing and Kaizen Cost Management 7 May 2019, 4 comments 43 ***
Marketing and New Product Development - Kotler and... 2 May 2019, 18 comments 37 ***


9 May 2019 - one month top posts

Posts date of posting Comments Pageviews
Principles of Management – Koontz and O’Donnell 2 May 2019, 12 comments 612
Organizational Buying Processes and Buying Behavio... 2 May 2019, 7 comments 469
Marketing Communication: Channels and Promotion To.. 7 May 2019, 49 comments 294
The Nature and Purpose of Planning - Review Notes 2 May 2019, 2 comments 281 ***
Financial - Cost and Management Accounting - Subje... 10 Dec 2015, 2 comments 252 ***
Direct Marketing and Its Management - Kotler's Cha... 2 May 2019, 2 comments 223 ***
Competitive Strategies for Followers and Nichers 2 May 2019, 1 comment 211 ***
Industrial Engineering and Operations Management -... 10 Apr 2019, 6 comments 186 ***
Zero-Based Productivity Management of Supply Chain... 30 Apr 2019, 4 comments 135 ***
Marketing Strategy - Marketing Process - Kotler's ... 9 May 2019, 16 comments 111

*** new in the month compared to all time

9 May All time


Posts  Date of Posting Comments Pageviews
Marketing Communication: Channels and Promotion To... 7 May 2019, 49 comments 142244
Organizational Buying Processes and Buying Behavio... 2 May 2019, 7 comments 110308
Principles of Management – Koontz and O’Donnell 2 May 2019, 12 comments 81041
Human Resource Management - Introduction - A Revis... 2 May 2019, 26 comments 72566 ***
Evolution of Management Thought and Theory - Revie... 2 May 2019, 2 comments 51727 ***
Marketing Strategy - Differentiating and Positioni... 26 Nov 2011, 5 comments 47541 ***
Marketing Strategy - Marketing Process - Kotler's ... 9 May 2019, 16 comments 41781
The Marketing Concept - Kotler 2 May 2019, 9 comments 38699 ****
Communication: Importance and Definition 2 May 2019, 2 comments 33654 ****

Starts show that in the month they are not appearing

All time top keywords for the blog
Search Keywords
Entry Pageviews
content

1043
site:blogspot.com marketing language:en

614
site:blogspot.com review management language:en

393
site:blogspot.com digital marketing language:en

302
site:blogspot.com hotel digital marketing strategy language:en

259
marketing concept

257
site:blogspot.com article marketing language:en

240
marketing management kotler

208
site:blogspot.com introduction to price action language:en

197
site:blogspot.com advertising strategies language:en

195

Monthly performances

March 2012        67013 page views

December 2016  70056 page views

April 2017            34778

May 2018             24362

Apri 2019             17110  Target 34778 first.  For May 31 it came to 18,416. Target for June 24362

June 2019             17519




Updated on 1 July 2019 1 June 2019,  10 May 2019, 23 January 2017