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25. Let someone else read and critique your presentation several days before you<br />

present it.<br />

26. Make special efforts to get to know your group members. This leads to more openness<br />

in the group and allows for more interchange of ideas. Put in the time and<br />

effort necessary to develop these relationships.<br />

27. Be constructively critical of your group members’ work. Do not dominate group<br />

discussions. Be a good listener and contributor.<br />

28. Learn from past mistakes and deficiencies. Improve upon weak aspects of other<br />

case presentations.<br />

29. Learn from the positive approaches and accomplishments of classmates.<br />

Sample Case Analysis Outline<br />

There are musicians who play wonderfully without notes and there are chefs who cook<br />

wonderfully without recipes, but most of us prefer a more orderly cookbook approach, at<br />

least in the first attempt at doing something new. Therefore the following eight steps may<br />

serve as a basic outline for you in presenting a <strong>strategic</strong> plan for your firm’s future. This<br />

outline is not the only approach used in business and industry for communicating a <strong>strategic</strong><br />

plan, but this approach is time-tested, it does work, and it does cover all of the basics.<br />

You may amend the content, tools, and concepts given to suit your own company, audience,<br />

assignment, and circumstances, but it helps to know and understand the rules before<br />

you start breaking them.<br />

Depending on whether your class is 50 minutes or 75 minutes and how much time<br />

your professor allows for your case presentation, the following outlines what generally<br />

needs to be covered. A recommended time (in minutes) as part of the presentation is given<br />

for an overall 50-minute event. Of course, all cases are different, some being about<br />

for-profit and some about not-for-profit organizations, for example, so the scope and content<br />

of your analysis may vary. Even if you do not have time to cover all areas in your oral<br />

presentation, you may be asked to prepare these areas and give them to your professor as a<br />

“written case analysis.” Be sure in an oral presentation to manage time knowing that your<br />

recommendations and associated costs are the most important part. You should go to<br />

www.strategyclub.com and utilize that information and software in preparing your case<br />

analysis. Good luck.<br />

Current Readings<br />

Kearney, Eric, Diether Gebert, and Sven Voelpel. “When<br />

Diversity Benefits Teams: The Importance of Team<br />

HOW TO PREPARE AND PRESENT A CASE ANALYSIS 355<br />

Members’ Need for Cognition.” Academy of Management<br />

Journal (June 2009): 581–598.

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