Sunday 31 May 2015

Business Strategy Game - Registering for the game

Before you can play the game, you need to register. TWO (2) sets of code are required for the registration process.

1. Go to the following website: http://www.bsg-online.com/

2. Click "New Students" or "Create Account" - whichever you click, you will arrive at the same page

3. Enter the Company Registration Code provided by me.

4. Tick "I accept the bsg-online.com Terms of Use

5. Click "Continue"

6. You will then be brought to the page where you have to complete the Registration Form.

7. Company letter - this is the last letter shown at the end of your Company Registration Code.

8. First Name - refer to examples below

9. Last Name - refer to examples below

Examples:

Leong Ah Kow = First Name LEONG     Last Name AH KOW

Eric Leong Ah Kow = First Name ERIC     Last Name LEONG AH KOW

Muthu a/l Ramasamy = First Name MUTHU     Last Name RAMASAMY

Rosmah binti Razak = First Name ROSMAH     Last Name RAZAK

John Dole = First Name JOHN     Last Name DOLE

10. Student ID - your student id, example: 14WBR99888

11. E-mail address - your valid email address

12. Confirm E-mail - type your valid email address again

13. Time Zone - ignore. By default, I have already set the time zone. Do not change the time zone.

14. Password - type your own password

15. Verify Password - type your own password again

16. Click "Continue Registration"

17. You will be brought to the BSG Registration page

18. Under "Pre-paid Registration", type in your Pre-Paid Access Code. This is the code that you paid the RM100 for.

19. Click "Submit Pre-Paid Access Code".

20. The registration process is now complete. Go to BSG's homepage, login using your email account and password; and you can start making decisions.

Saturday 23 May 2015

BBDM3093 COURSEWORK SEM 1 2015/16

You should have known by now that your coursework consists of THREE parts.

COURSEWORK 1 (Group-assessed)

This will carry 40 marks.

Play the Business Strategy Game over a period of 10 years, from Year 11 to Year 20. In other words, there are 10 rounds of decision-making, each round being referred to as one year in the game. Your Year-to-Date score at the end of Year 20 will determine your Coursework 1 marks. A maximum score of 110 or above (due to bonus points being awarded) will give you a maximum of 40 marks. Marks will be awarded proportionately to your score in the game. Thus if your score is 90, your marks will be (90*40)/110 = 32.7

COURSEWORK 2 (Group-assessed)

This will carry 20 marks.

This is the reflective writing part of your coursework. Maximum 2,000 words. Reflective simply means to look back to your experiences in playing the BSG and let your tutor read about what you have learnt or realized from the game. You can write with regard to the following:

a) skills required to become a competent/successful entrepreneur. For example, numerical/quantitative/financial skills to analyse various reports such as production report or financial statements. You may also bring in other skills such as communication skill, negotiation skill, conflict-solving skill, etc, because you guys are doing the coursework in a team and disagreements are bound to occur. All of these are exactly what an entrepreneur will do - analyzing all types of data, communicating with stakeholders, negotiating with financiers and suppliers, solving conflicts within the organization, etc.

b) knowledge deemed useful/beneficial/necessary to be possessed by an entrepreneur . For example, knowledge with regard to foreign exchange risks, knowledge pertaining to various distribution and promotional strategies.

Ensure that each point that you write about is justified with reference to your experience in playing the BSG. You may refer to specific sections of the game and also incidences that occur such as a conflict situation with members of your team.


COURSEWORK 3 (Individually-assessed)

This will carry 40 marks.

This part represents a presentation of how you had played the BSG in Coursework 1, what your company had achieved, and the lessons you had learnt from playing the game, with regard to entrepreneurship (a summary of Coursework 2). At this stage, your presentation marks will be awarded.

Your presentation is to be videotaped, uploaded to Youtube, and subsequently to be uploaded to Tarcbusinessreview.com. Only selected presentations are to be uploaded. Selected presentations are defined as presentations which are deemed excellent by tutors. Once uploaded to Tarcbusinessreview.com, students will pitch their videos and invite their friends to vote for the best video presentation. There are no courseworks for this stage, but the 3 best videos with the highest number of votes will be rewarded with a 3D2N stay in Resorts World Genting, courtesy of Comeyumchawithme. LOL!!!!




Friday 22 May 2015

Business Strategy Game - Blow Water

Now that all the orders and payments are in, briefing and practices will commence within the next two weeks. That is, once the local distributor of BSG delivers the licences (prepaid codes) to us. Altogether there are 173 sub-groups plus 6 tutors playing and competing against each other - a total of 179 "companies". These 179 companies will be divided into 15 industries. 14 industries will have 12 companies each and 1 industry will have 11 companies, making a total of 179 companies.

Each company will receive a set of industry code and prepaid code. You will then have to register online via the BSG homepage. The industry code denotes the industry that your company will be competing in. The prepaid code gives you the right to play the game. Each industry will consist of companies from different programmes of study (3RAC, 3RBU, and 2RMK) and your tutors. LOL!!!! Do not worry about your tutors - just like you, they are all beginners in BSG. You will be able to beat the sh*t out of them!!!

Registering for the game will be the first step in the whole process. There will be a briefing soon (during lecture time) with regard to how to register and how to play the game. Most likely, this briefing session will be in Week 4.

The game will be played over 10 rounds of competition. Each round is known as a Year, so the game will start from Year 11 and end in Year 20. All companies in every industry will start at the same position in Year 11. Therefore, it is assumed that your company has already been in existence for 10 years (ie. Year 1 to Year 10). You will start the game by making decisions for Year 11. There will be a deadline for the decisions. For example, you start the game at 0015 hours Monday, and the deadline for decisions is 2359 hours Wednesday. You can change your decisions any number of times as long as you do it before the deadline. On the deadline, the decisions that you saved before the deadline will be deemed to be the final decisions. The system will then close and start processing all the decisions made by companies in your industry. The result will be known in about 12 to 15 minutes time. The result will show your company's performance viz-a-viz the other companies in your industry. The best company with the highest score will be ranked at the top, while the worst performing company will be at the bottom of the list. This is arguably the most exciting moment because you will very much want to know the outcome of your decisions.

There is much joy and satisfaction when you see your company at the top of the pile, and a lot of despair when your company is at the pit. I had experienced both feelings. Important thing is to rise from the depth and continue fighting. To me, it is better to have fought and lost, compared to calling it quits and not knowing if I could have won. You may not perform well in the initial years because maybe you are on the learning curve. But, if you put in the time to analyse the game, you will recover. That is why the game is played over a period of 10 Years so that you will have sufficient time to remedy your errors and to bring your company to a satisfactory score.

When I played the game, I only wanted to win. It was all or nothing for me. There were Years when my company was in deep sh*t, but the word "quit" was never in my dictionary - not then, not now. I think I'm the type who thrive on challenges and adversities. The more obstacles there are, the faster my adrenalin flows. This spirit carried me through the Years. I won the game, crowned the Industry Champion and got an A for my course. Satisfaction.

I hope you guys will possess the same spirit as I did. Play the game to the best of your ability. Be competitive because competition breeds efficiency. The more competitive it is, the more efficient you will become. You will find that if you fight to win, most likely you will end up with very high points even if you don't win the game. Fight well and you will get your A for this part of the coursework.

Cheers and have a good weekend.

Tuesday 19 May 2015

Business Strategy Game - A Short Intro

The Business Strategy Game (BSG) was introduced to the Bachelor of Corporate Administration (Honours) Third Year students as part of their coursework for the course BBDM3023 Business Strategy in Practice. Due to the nature of the course, the BSG came in nicely for the students to practice and see the outcomes of their strategies.

BSG is an online exercise where class members are divided into teams and assigned the task of running an athletic footwear company in head-to-head competition against companies managed by other class members. Company operations parallel those of actual athletic footwear companies. Just as in the real-world, companies compete in a global market arena, selling branded and private-label athletic footwear in four geographic regions – Europe-Africa, North America, Asia-Pacific, and Latin America. All aspects of BSG parallel the functioning of the real-world athletic footwear market, thus allowing students to (1) think rationally and logically in deciding what to do and (2) get valuable practice in making a variety of different business decisions under circumstances that mirror real-world competitive conditions.

In the game, students craft out strategies in the areas of corporate social responsibility, production, sales, marketing, distribution and finance. They are awarded points based on (1) earnings per share (2) return on equity (3) market value of share (4) credit rating and (5) image rating. The game draws together the information and lessons of prior courses, consolidates students’ knowledge about the different aspects of running a company, builds their confidence in analysing the revenue-cost-profit economics of a business, helps students understand how the functional pieces of a business fit together, provides valuable practice in crafting profitable growth strategies, and sharpens the students’ business judgment. Students will gain some useful experience and practice in assessing business risk, analysing industry and competitive conditions, making decisions from a companywide perspective, thinking strategically about a company's market position and the kinds of actions it will take to improve it, developing strategies and revising them in light of changing conditions, and applying what they have learned in business school.

Throughout the duration of the game, where student teams competed with each other for the title of Industry Champion, we observed that there were genuine interest and enthusiasm among the students. The discussions and arguments were of an intensity not normally observed in normal tutorial classes.


Some comments from students on their Facebook group are listed below:

Kyo HuAt good experience in playing this.learn alot from this game.quite stressful but worth it.
Hong Sheng Loh Good experience , not only can apply your marketing knowledge in the game, but also learnt human behavior in business environment and develop your analysis skill . Exploit your mind to learn from mistake and draft the better strategy for next round to keep your competitors out
Elijah Ng Worth the price we pay for since it allow us to run a virtual company at a reasonable price. In the virtual business world we have to make decisions. Each decisions you made, it must be justified and it will affect other departments' decision too, so try to make as minimal mistakes as possible and take corrective actions whenever possible. Everyone definitely will make mistakes so when we made mistakes, asked yourself where does it go wrong? 

You must find out A.S.A.P otherwise you will go down very soon and even when you became one of the top performer companies, understand that it will not last forever. You need to have a clear goals of how is your company is heading through and setting strategies that can align to your goals (or concept). Most of all, you should share your experience with other experts so you get to learn more and win the game.

After ten rounds of decision-making, the Industry Champion is determined. Being the Industry Champion, the student team has won the right to be invited to compete in the Best-Strategy Invitational (BSI) hosted by the BSG’s author team. This invitational is held three times a year in May, August and September. It is in the BSI that our students can benchmark themselves against the best student teams from around the world. In the just concluded invitational, a total of 216 high-performing student teams from colleges and universities worldwide took part. Five students from TARUC participated, with FOUR of them winning in their respective industries and thus were declared Grand Champions. In winning the BSI, our students have demonstrated excellent strategic decision-making skills as well as having the right attitude and temperament to withstand the intensity of the competition over a period of two weeks. Oh yes, one last thing, our students used something extra which no other team applied – psychological warfare which put their competitors in sixes and sevens. What a great experience for the students!!



Saturday 16 May 2015

Business Strategy Game - You will get hooked on it!!!

First time I played this game was way back in 2009. Then was taking a course in Strategic Management and the game was part of our coursework. Was totally blurred at the beginning but I was one who just didn't know how to quit. Started googling for articles on the game and got quite a lot of useful tips. Soon learnt that whatever winning strategy they advise you may not work because the dynamics in your industry is so very different. What works for one company in one industry may not work for a company in another industry. Like the Chinese game of mahjong, the probabilities are endless. You just have to depend on your own analytical skill. Following blindly someone else's strategy may just end up in your company getting a monstrous kick on the backside.

You will tend to make a lot of wrong decisions at the beginning, don't worry, there is time for you to recover. I made a lot of mistakes, recovered quickly, took some risks, and ended up as industry champion. Proud to brag that my sales and profit graphs hit through the roof. LOL!!!! Maybe my competitors that time were too lembik!!!

Most exciting times were waiting for the results of each round of competition - that happened at 11.59 pm - one minute before midnight. And then your heart dropped when you looked at the result and you were way down at the bottom. OMG!! What happened?? And then you realised that you had made a stupid error. Oh well, fortunately still a few more rounds to go, so there was time for remedies. Because the game is being played over 10 rounds, you can consider the first few rounds as being part of the learning curve. Making errors are common. Being at the bottom of the standings is acceptable. Staying there is not. Persevere - that is one of the characteristics of being an entrepreneur.

BSG is a "live" case study of your company. It's different from those "dead" cases that you have to do in your tutorials. In dead cases, you make recommendations but you do not know whether those decisions have been effective or not. You do not know the outcome of your recommendations. You just make decisions based on the assumption that all things remain unchanged. But, the real world is not constant. What is constant in the real world? Change is constant. The environment changes. Your competitors react. What you hope to happen as a result of your decisions do not happen. In BSG, you will be able to see the results of your decisions.

The game will require you to possess many skills - which will stand you in good stead, whether you so decide to become an entrepreneur, accountant, or manager. Accounting students will be quite comfortable with financial statements analysis. Let's see you putting your knowledge into good use!! Marketing students will tend to focus on marketing efforts. Let's see how good you are. Business Administration students will apply a combination of knowledge garnered from various disciplines - social responsibility, logistics, production, foreign exchange, marketing, and finance. Don't worry, your counterparts, the RCA students did very well in this simulation.

There will be more about the game in my future blogs. Meantime, remember to divide yourselves into small groups of 4 - 5 students. Each small group will be called a "company". Nominate a leader (the CEO) of your company. Each company collect RM100 for the BSG playing rights and submit the collection to me ASAP. The distributor will require 2 weeks to deliver the rights. My calculations - if you submit the payment to me next week, it will be Week 5 before we can start the simulation. The sooner we get the payments and registrations done, the sooner we can start. Cheers!!! Tune in for more postings on the BSG!!!