Student #: 14025147, 11209559, 14027895, 14024392
Introduction:
“…everything should be continuously rediscussed…”
Frederico Minoli (Gavetti, 2004, pg.861)
In the summer of 1996 Frederico Minoli was appointed as the CEO of Ducati in order to lead the company into a new era of profitability and to establish Ducati as a brand to contend with in the sports motorcycle segment. In the years preceding the revolutionary turnaround, the company changed hands a number of time which resulted in a lack of overall strategic direction. Minoli was faced with a company which, despite having a team of top engineers, had gained a reputation for average quality as a result of inefficient production and poor management. Until 1996 it was driven by the imaginations of its engineers rather than by goal-oriented strategic decisions. Minoli described Ducati’s top management as operating in “a structured chaos” (Gavetti, 2004, pp.861). He believed that by incorporating certain basic structural changes and by redefining company’s strategic goals, it could be turned into a profitable brand-driven company.
Ducati’s turnaround focused on brand building which was supported by the reconfiguration of a number of activities ranging from increased efficiency in the production process to broadening its customer base. Having almost doubled its market share in 2001, Minoli wanted to find new sources of growth. Among others he considered the cruiser market, currently dominated by Harley Davidson. His goal was to compete directly with Harley Davidson in Europe by introducing a cruiser that combined Ducati’s high performance ...