netrashetty
Netra Shetty
Musco Lighting is an American privately owned company, based out of Oskaloosa, Iowa that is noted for providing permanent or temporary lighting at major sports events and stadiums including the Super Bowl and Olympics.
The company derives its name from Muscatine County, Iowa, where it was founded and still maintains a large manufacturing plant.
Company projects range from the largest sports lighting project in the world to small Little League parks. In addition to its Academy Award, it has also won an Emmy Award for its providing temporary lighting for night time NCAA games, including games at Notre Dame Stadium, Ohio Stadium, Kinnick Stadium and Bearcat Stadium. The company illuminated the Statue of Liberty during its rededication, four Super Bowls, and was the official lighting company for the 1984, 1996 and 2000 Olympic Games[1]
As of 2006 it employed 1,000 people including 350 in Oskaloosa, 350 in Muscatine and 300 worldwide
Among the products of their Sports Lighting system is the Light Structure Green- an energy-saving pole-light system.
CEO
Jon Corzine
Director
Martin Glynn
Director
David Schamis
Director
Robert Sloan
Director
Eileen Fusco
Director
David Gelber
Director
Edward Goldberg
Director
David Bolger
Administration
IP
Economist
James O'Sullivan
North American Operations
TH
CFO
John MacDonald
COO
Bradley Abelow
Risk
MR
Legal
LF
Human Resources
Thomas Connolly
Equities
PF
Foreign Exchange
Paul Farrell
Interim, Asia-Pacific
KH
Interim, Europe
CP
A multinational firm's organizational structure that reflects the "global" philosophy that the world is basically one homogeneous market is called a "global structure." For example, by this philosophy, many large electronics and consulting firms, while allowing for minor local adjustments to packaging and language, basically project the same kinds of products and services around the world. However, there are several differences in terminology and philosophy in this field.
First, a "global" philosophy is characterized by seeing the world as one more-or-less monolithic market with similar tastes and preferences. In contemporary parlance this is opposite to a "multidomestic" (or multinational or multilocal) philosophy by which one sees the world as made up of many more-orless unique markets, each with its distinct tastes and preferences. A position between these two extremes is called regionalism, whereby one sees the world as being made up of a small number of quite homogenous regions. These constructs can be applied to industries, firms, and organizational structures, and it is informative to understand how global thinking at industry and strategic levels apply.
For example, George Yip sees globalization as a function of the degrees to which the global marketplace is fragmented, local customer needs are distinct, local sourcing imperatives exist, costs are heterogeneous, and trade barriers are significant to cross-border commerce. Thus Randall Schuler, Peter Dowling, and Helen De Cieri and other scholars refer to some industries-like commercial aircraft, copiers, generic drugs, most electronics and computer hardware-as global industries; while retail, the food industry, and most services are considered substantially multidomestic.
The company derives its name from Muscatine County, Iowa, where it was founded and still maintains a large manufacturing plant.
Company projects range from the largest sports lighting project in the world to small Little League parks. In addition to its Academy Award, it has also won an Emmy Award for its providing temporary lighting for night time NCAA games, including games at Notre Dame Stadium, Ohio Stadium, Kinnick Stadium and Bearcat Stadium. The company illuminated the Statue of Liberty during its rededication, four Super Bowls, and was the official lighting company for the 1984, 1996 and 2000 Olympic Games[1]
As of 2006 it employed 1,000 people including 350 in Oskaloosa, 350 in Muscatine and 300 worldwide
Among the products of their Sports Lighting system is the Light Structure Green- an energy-saving pole-light system.
CEO
Jon Corzine
Director
Martin Glynn
Director
David Schamis
Director
Robert Sloan
Director
Eileen Fusco
Director
David Gelber
Director
Edward Goldberg
Director
David Bolger
Administration
IP
Economist
James O'Sullivan
North American Operations
TH
CFO
John MacDonald
COO
Bradley Abelow
Risk
MR
Legal
LF
Human Resources
Thomas Connolly
Equities
PF
Foreign Exchange
Paul Farrell
Interim, Asia-Pacific
KH
Interim, Europe
CP
A multinational firm's organizational structure that reflects the "global" philosophy that the world is basically one homogeneous market is called a "global structure." For example, by this philosophy, many large electronics and consulting firms, while allowing for minor local adjustments to packaging and language, basically project the same kinds of products and services around the world. However, there are several differences in terminology and philosophy in this field.
First, a "global" philosophy is characterized by seeing the world as one more-or-less monolithic market with similar tastes and preferences. In contemporary parlance this is opposite to a "multidomestic" (or multinational or multilocal) philosophy by which one sees the world as made up of many more-orless unique markets, each with its distinct tastes and preferences. A position between these two extremes is called regionalism, whereby one sees the world as being made up of a small number of quite homogenous regions. These constructs can be applied to industries, firms, and organizational structures, and it is informative to understand how global thinking at industry and strategic levels apply.
For example, George Yip sees globalization as a function of the degrees to which the global marketplace is fragmented, local customer needs are distinct, local sourcing imperatives exist, costs are heterogeneous, and trade barriers are significant to cross-border commerce. Thus Randall Schuler, Peter Dowling, and Helen De Cieri and other scholars refer to some industries-like commercial aircraft, copiers, generic drugs, most electronics and computer hardware-as global industries; while retail, the food industry, and most services are considered substantially multidomestic.
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