Strategic
issues of Made in Italy has been created to offer an overview of the so-called
Made in Italy industries (e.g.: fashion/textile, furniture/design, luxury
goods/jewellery, household, wine/food and tourism) to international and Italian
students, who wish to gain a greater understanding of the strategic,
managerial, organizational and brand capabilities of Italian companies. The
course examines the principal distinctive features of the Italian business
system in terms of social relations, industrial districts, family firms,
entrepreneurial attitudes, creativity and design. Case studies, together with
class discussions and speeches from guests (entrepreneurs and managers from top
Italian companies, consultants and journalists) are used extensively in the
course. As well, company and cultural visits to the most famous Italian
symbol-intensive companies (in the fields of fashion, design, luxury goods and
wine/food) are organized as a compulsory part of the course.
Topic One –
The determinants of the competitive advantage of Italy:
1. An
introduction to the Italian economic system;
2. the
«Made in Italy» industries;
3. the
Italian system in an international context;
4. the
roots of Italian competitiveness: creativity, design, innovation, networks,
society, family.
Topic Two –
Italian industrial districts:
1. industrial
districts and clusters as the prevailing organizational form of Made in Italy industries;
2. the
strengths and weaknesses of Italian industrial districts;
3.industrial
districts’ profiles (fashion/textile, furniture/design, luxury goods/jewellery,
household,
wine/food, tourism/culture):
3.1
pipeline, history, demand conditions, key actors, related and supporting
industries;
3.2 market
segmentation, positioning and competitive analysis;
3.3
district and corporate brand identity;
3.4
critical issues in the product development process;
3.5
prevailing strategic behaviours.
Topic Three
– The Italian champions:
1. the business model of Italian champions (e.g.:
Benetton, Luxottica, Ferrari, Armani, Illycaffè, Ferrè,
Valentino, Ferragamo, Divani & Divani, Tod’s,
Diesel, Nordica, Antinori, Barilla, Campari, Cinzano,
Martini, Piaggio-Vespa, Prada, Ferrero, Aprilia,
Missoni, Dolce & Gabbana, Giugiaro, Pininfarina,
Artemide, La Murrina, etc.);
2. strategic
issues of Italian champions (symbolic-intensive management, branding,
networking and
localization, international competitiveness, etc.);
3.
the role of entrepreneurs, entrepreneurial attitudes and “familiness” (case
discussions and guests).