Founded in 1970, the Agency for Volunteer Service (AVS) was a non-governmental organization in Hong Kong with the mission of facilitating volunteerism and managing education, health, and welfare services. For more than two decades, it played an active role in the Hong Kong social service sector. However, in the years 1998 to 2001, several factors prompted AVS to undergo organizational transformation: a temporary crisis in management, a change in the source of government funding signalling a shift in the organization's mission, and the United Nations' designation of 2001 as the International Year of Volunteers. These changes compelled AVS to carry out a strategic review in 2001 and undergo radical organizational transformation. How should it implement strategic change to incorporate this new vision? Introduces students to the concept of radical organizational transformation and familiarizes students with managerial competencies common to successful transformations.
In April 2004, Singapore's Straits Times alleged in an article that T.T. Durai, CEO of the National Kidney Foundation (NKF), had been drawing on public donations to pay for his generous salary, perks, and expenses. The media also discovered that Durai had installed extravagant fittings, including a gold-plated tap, in his office bathroom. Singaporeans, especially donors, were outraged at how the NKF had mismanaged donor funds. Finally, after intense public pressure, Durai and the NKF Board resigned in July 2005. Illustrates the importance of governance, transparency, and public accountability among social enterprises, and the consequences of weak internal controls over financial reporting.
The Hong Kong Jockey Club had grown from simple origins into an enormous gaming operator, with a statutory monopoly on horse racing, football betting and lotteries. At the same time, the Club served as Hong Kong's largest charity and community benefactor. It was also Hong Kong's largest single taxpayer, the operator of a prestigious membership Club and had undertaken some of the most sophisticated implementations of information technology in Asia. Under the leadership of Lawrence Wong, the Jockey Club's first ethnic-Chinese executive, the club had set about installing management discipline in the organization and raising betting revenues. He had also overseen the launch of football betting in 2003. By 2005 the emergence of local illegal and unauthorized offshore gambling operators, typically Internet-based and which paid no taxes, operated with little overhead, few regulatory restraints, and could thus offer bigger payout and more betting options posed a significant threat to the club's revenues. Wong would have to lead the club's efforts to defend gaming revenues against a host of threats and competitive forces.
Founded in 1974, C. K. Yeung Worldwide Ltd. became one of the largest metal traders in Hong Kong in the 1980s. Looks at how the beliefs of its CEO, Joseph Yeung, in honest behavior and Chinese cultural philosophy influenced his management style and made him a successful business leader and entrepreneur.
The worldwide Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) epidemic could be traced back to an outbreak of atypical pneumonia in Guangdong Province, China in late 2002. In February 2003, this disease spread to Hong Kong with devastating results. Of the 1,755 people who were infected, 299 died. The senior management at Hong Kong's Queen Mary Hospital managed the SARS crisis by adopting effective infection control measures. They also implemented strategies in gaining employees' trust and co-operation amidst a growing public hysteria caused by severe hospital outbreaks and rising death tolls. They showed wisdom, integrity, and strong leadership during the crisis management.
It was estimated in 2002 that the size of the traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) market in China would be around $5 billion. A decade of Chinese regulatory reforms, Chinese pharmaceutical industry liberalization, changing Chinese lifestyle and demographics, and the Chinese pharmaceutical research and development facilities were factors explaining the huge TCM market potential in China. Multinationals wanting to enter this market might have to deal with inadequate intellectual property protection, corruption in health insurance reimbursement, complex regulatory procedures, and underdeveloped pricing, bidding, and distribution practices.