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Disney Company . Justin Holmes DeSha Jefferies Reggie Green Jazmine Whitting . http ://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sHrYDL9LkIQ. Company Overview . Who is Disney? The largest media corporation in the world in terms of revenue. Ranked #14 out of 50 for Most Admired Companies
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Disney Company Justin Holmes DeSha Jefferies Reggie Green Jazmine Whitting
Company Overview • Who is Disney? • The largest media corporation in the world in terms of revenue. • Ranked #14 out of 50 for Most Admired Companies • Ranked #67 on Fortune 500 (previously was 57 in 2010) • Net Income increased by 21% to $4.8 Billion • When was Disney Establish? • Founded on October 16, 1923, by Walt and Roy Disney as the Disney Brothers Cartoon Studio • Disney's stock went public on November 12, 1957, at $13.88. Previously, the stock had been closely held by the Disney family and other partners. • Disney's stock trades on the NYSE under the ticker DIS • As of December 2, the last trade was closed at $36.61
Company Overview • Where do they operate? The Walt Disney Company (Walt Disney or ‘the company’), together with its subsidiaries, is a diversified entertainment company. The company primarily operates in the North America, Europe, Asia Pacific and Latin America. It is headquartered in Burbank, California and employs about 149,000people. • Walt Disney CEORobert Iger He recently joined the board of the technology giant following the death of Steve Jobs.
Four Main Areas • Media Network= $ 18.7 Billion • Parks and Resorts=$11.8 Billion • Studio Entertainment=$6.4 Billion • Consumer Products=$ $3.0 Billion
Company Overview • Mission StatementThe mission of The Walt Disney Company is to be one of the world's leading producers and providers of entertainment and information. Using our portfolio of brands to differentiate our content, services and consumer products, we seek to develop the most creative, innovative and profitable entertainment experiences and related products in the world.
Company Overview Why do people like Disney? Three Core competencies, • Storytelling, Story Creation and Themed Atmospheric Attractions • Animatronics and Show Design • Efficient operation of theme parks
Company Overview • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q284kEpv8jg&feature=related
Important Events 1901: Walt Disney, the company's founder, is born. 1919: With Ub Iwerks, Disney forms Iwerks-Disney Commercial Artists. 1923: The distributor M.J. Winkler purchases Disney's Alice Comedies for $1,500 per reel; Disney creates Disney Bros. Studios with his brother Roy. 1924: M.J. Winkler Productions debuts the Alice Comedy Series, with the film Alice's Day at Sea, in theaters. 1928: Mickey Mouse is "born"; Disney releases Steamboat Willie, its first film with sound. 1937:Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Disney's first full-length animated film, debuts. 1940:Pinocchio and Fantasia are released. 1955: The Mickey Mouse Club debuts; Disneyland opens in Anaheim, California. 1966: Walt Disney dies of lung cancer. 1971: Walt Disney World opens near Orlando, Florida; Roy O. Disney dies. 1982: EPCOT Center opens on the grounds of Walt Disney World. 1983: The first foreign Disneyland, Tokyo Disneyland, opens. 1984: Michael Eisner is named Disney's new CEO; Disney releases Splash under its new label, Touchstone Pictures. 1989: Disney-MGM Studios Theme Park opens near Orlando, Florida. 1992: Euro Disney (later named Disneyland Paris) opens. 1996: Disney acquires television station Capital Cities/ABC for $19 billion; Radio Disney debuts. 1998: Animal Kingdom opens in Walt Disney World, Florida. 1999: Disney Cruise Line begins operations with the Disney Magic.2001: Disney's California Adventure opens next to Disneyland; Disney acquires Fox Family Worldwide for $5.3 billion. 2003: Roy E. Disney--son of Roy O. Disney, last of the founding family associated with the company--and Stanley Gold quit the Disney board and start Save Disney.com in an attempt to oust CEO Michael Eisner.
Disney Corporate Stragies Walt Disney said, “It all started with a mouse.”
Human Resources and training • Two major core topics includes safety and training at Disney • Safety is the most important at Disney • The inventors who ran an efficient modern theme park through cleanliness, safety and productivity. • Also give a uniformly high-quality entertainment experience to very large numbers of people
Human Resources and training When evaluating Disney's SWOT Analysis (Strengths, Weakness, Opportunities, Threats)the one strength that stands out is the ability to make people HAPPY!! Disney make sure safety is the number one priority.
Human Resources and training • Disney's core values extend into its employees and customers Disney University • The University is a training center will keep staff motivated in learning necessary skills and concepts, which in turn, would increase Disney's departments and the company's profitability.
Competitive advantage related to HR • heart of Disney idea of Performance Excellence is the cultivation of great leaders • Leaders motivate people, develop their talents, and provide proper resources and rewards to them to succeed. • Most importantly, leaders view all levels of employees as capable of taking a leadership role in coming up with and implementing creative ideas and solutions
Human Resources and training • At Disney Institute, everything is related to: • Learning from the professional development programs on such topics as: • Leadership, people management, and customer service • To vacation-type courses on gourmet cooking, clay animation, bird watching, and even relationships. • There's a sports and fitness center, a theater with perfect acoustics, guest bungalows, and a day camp for kids
Culture Core Companies • No other entertainment company – perhaps no other company period – evokes the feeling of wholesome family goodness that does Disney • Founder Walt Disney in 1928 to ensure that its image is fun, imaginative, clean, and appeals to people of all ages
Corporate Stragies Disney bolsters this image by encouraging creativity and innovation among employees. It further reinforces its unique culture by training employees at Disney University, by maintaining company archives to preserve its history, and by promoting from within
Corporate Plan • Disney’s strong legal protection makes it nearly impossible for competitors to copy or imitate Disney’s characters • Even if a competitor succeeded in hiring away key talent, the competitor would still lack the tradition, culture, and complementary assets that make up Disney.
Corporate Plan • Disney has mastered the art of the cross-sell. It has done so by leveraging its characters • and carefully controlling its image, driving toward a unified, highly valued customer • experience. Ex. Going to the park fun/food/entertainment • All ties toward Disney fun food and entertainment • This complex but carefully orchestrated web of • complementary businesses is the ‘Magic of Disney’. It’s what drives major advertisers such as • Delta Airlines and Coca-Cola to pay for the right to feature Disney World in their own promotions.
HR Benefits • 2011 82000 employees 40 counties • Full Health/Dental/Vision • Employee Assistance Program (Disney Guideline) • Wellness (Disney Healthy Pursuits) • Childcare • Disney Scholarship Program • Labor Relations (42 countries 36000 employees are in contract) • Tuition Assistance 700$ per credit hr 100% books and materials
Disney Company 30 Autonomous Operating Companies Marketing/ Finance HR Technology International Marketing Disney Structure
Human Resources Jayne ParkerExecutive Vice President and Chief Human Resources Officer
Board of Directors CEO – Robert A. Iger VP – President, Walt Disney International SEVP & CFO SEVP-General Counsel and Secretary Chairman- Parks and Resorts EVP- Chief Human Resources Officer EVP-Corporate Strategy, Business Development and Technology EVP-Corporate Communication SVP -Planning and Controls EVP- Business Development and Operation SVP- Corporate Alliance Organizational Structure
HR Structure Jayne Parker VP - HR General Counsel and Secretary Alan Braverman Corp HR EEO Staffing Nick Van Dky Corporate Strategic* Planning Security Preston Padden EVP Government Relation Compensation & Benefits Employee Relations Safety Diversity
Financial Statistics http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/dis/historical 12/31/2010* 12/31/2009**
Comparative Financial Statistics http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/dis/financials
HR Benefits • The Disney Company has multiple areas which are related to Employee Benefits as discussed in the Text Book. • The Disney Company’s benefits are • Employee Assistance plans, Health and wellness programs, Retirement and savings, Scholarship program, labor relations and unions, training and development, career planning and tuition assistance. • Disney has operations in 42 countries which are covered by collective bargaining agreements with more than 40 labor unions (corporation Disney company, para 15).
HR Benefits • According to the text book The Disney Company followed the practices in the text book by using benefits as employee retention. • The Disney Company promotes health and wellness of their employees, not only with programs but, incentives. • Also in the book it states that some employers use educational assistance to measure internal promotions, increased employee satisfaction and others (Mathis and Jackson, pg 442). • The retirement options involve pension plans and 401K plans. These options that The Walt Disney Company use are important to employee retention
HR Benefits • The retirement options involve pension plans and 401K plans. These options that The Walt Disney Company use are important to employee retention. It also promotes a productive workplace. • “One of Disney’s foundational values is to respect, appreciate and value everyone” (corporate Disney Company, para. 10). • All of these benefits that the Disney Company provides are to increase retention through formal career planning efforts (Mathis and Jackson, pg 79.). • HR metrics are used to track wellness programs, tuition aid etc. These metrics help the Disney Company foster an workplace environment that engage employees into great leadership.
Safety and Health • The Disney Company being such a huge entity with more than 149,000 employees (lexis nexis) has to incorporate a safe environment for its employees. • Referring to the text book Safety is described as the physical aspect of the workplace. Health is the general state of physical, mental and emotional well-being (Mathis &Jackson, chp. 15)
Workplace Safety • Disney corporation provides a professional technical staff that foster the safest environment. This team also trains employees in areas of health and safety. • Disney employs thousands of members in security operations.
HR Safety and Health • Disney company realize the risk of all there employees. They have implemented a special segment of risk management employees to manage their risk. • Risk management incorporates workplace safety and health, Employee health and wellness, worker security, and disaster planning and recovery. • Not only that, the Disney corporation has also developed safety in motion. This program focuses on reducing body-motion and musculoskeletal injuries. This program provides follow-up training for employees. • As the result of this program Disney has saw a 38% decrease in injuries at their theme parks. • Walt Disney Company was also cited for the death of an actor on their Monorail ride at their theme park.
OSHA • In a news release dated 12/23/2009 OSHA cites Walt Disney company following a n actors death in a monorail collision. • OSHA proposed a total of 44,000 in penalties against the company. They were also cited the maximum penalty allowed for a serious citation.(US. Department of labor, 2009). • Referring to the text book a “serious” citation is when a condition could probably cause death or serious physical harm. (Mathis &Jackson, 2008. pg.468)
References • Safety Inspection data from the department of labor. Retrieved from http://www.osha.gov/pls/oshaweb/searchresults.relevance?p_text=disney%20osha%20data&p_status=CURRENT&p_title • LexisNexis Academic http://www.lexisnexis.com/hottopics/lnacademic/?verb=sf&sfi=AC02NBCmpDosSrch • United States Department of labor. Retrieved from http://www.dol.gov/opa/media/press/osha/osha20091554.htm. December 23,2009. • Organizational Chart and HR Structure. Retrieved from http://www.cogmap.com/chart/walt-disney-corporation. November 20, 2011 • Important Dates. Retrieved from http://marciodisney.blogspot.com/2010/08/important-dates-in-history-of-walt.html • DATAMONITOR: The Walt Disney Company. (2011). Walt Disney Company SWOT Analysis, 1-9. Retrieved from EBSCOhost • http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/dis/historical
References Allerton, Haidee Training & Development; May97, Vol.51 Issue 5 p50, 7p Article Field, Karen Auguston 2003 4/24/2003, vol.48 issue 9, p26 Article Mathis, R.L. & Jackson, J.H. (2008) Human Resources Management (12th Ed.) Thomson Southwestern. Mason: OH. Kirkman, Christopher National Amusement Historical Association, “Amusement Park History” 1999. Porter, Michael, The Walt Disney Company, “A Corporate Strategy” 1988.