GLO-BUS YEAR 7: COMPLETE
DECISION & STRATEGY GUIDE
FOR FINAL DOMINANCE
PART 1: YEAR 7 STRATEGIC POSTURE &
COMPETITIVE ANALYSIS
A. Year 7 Competitive Landscape & Endgame Strategy
By Year 7, the competitive field has consolidated. You will typically face 1-2
market leaders, 2-3 aggressive discounters, and 1-2 niche players. The
simulation’s scoring algorithm heavily weights final-year financial metrics,
creating a **"Winner-Take-Most" dynamic**. To secure an "A" grade and a top
industry rank, your singular focus must be on maximizing **EPS (Earnings Per
Share), ROE (Return on Equity), Stock Price, and Credit Rating**. This requires
securing **#1 or #2 market share in both the Action-Capture Camera and
Drone markets** across all regions. Lagging in either segment will severely cap
your profit potential and final score.
B. Interpreting Year 6 Reports for Year 7 Decisions
Your Year 6 Financial and Operating Review (FIR) and the Competitive
Intelligence Report (CIR) are your strategic blueprints for Year 7. Conduct a
ruthless benchmarking analysis on the following key metrics:
● Your vs. Rival Image/Performance Ratings: Identify if your products
are under- or over-engineered relative to your pricing and market
position.
● Market Share & Pricing: Determine your price-to-value ratio and
identify who is leading in share.
● Cost Structure: Compare your COGS per unit and Operating Profit % to
rivals to find efficiency gaps.
● Brand Awareness & Retailer Support: Check for gaps that are leaving
sales on the table.
Use this analysis to pinpoint your own strategic weaknesses (e.g., high COGS,
low awareness) and predict competitor moves (e.g., an aggressive discounter
will likely slash prices again, a leader may focus on margins over share).
C. The Year 7 Decision Sequence - A Strategic Flowchart
, Decisions in GLO-BUS are highly interdependent. Making them in the wrong
order leads to suboptimal outcomes. The optimal sequence for Year 7 is:
1. R&D & Product Specifications: Set your product quality foundation
first, as it drives everything else (pricing, marketing costs, COGS via
production complexity).
2. Production & Worker Compensation: Plan your production capacity
and workforce strategy based on your desired product specs and sales
targets.
3. Marketing & Pricing: Set your price and marketing budget based on
your product's quality, your COGS, and your targeted market share.
4. CSR & Financing: Make your final financial levers (stock buybacks,
dividends) and CSR commitments last, as they are tactical adjustments to
fine-tune EPS and brand image based on your projected profitability.
PART 2: YEAR 7 DECISION-BY-DECISION
GUIDE
1. CAMERA & DRONE R&D DECISIONS (The Performance
Core)
Strategy: In Year 7, the goal is not to invent the future but to **optimize for
profit**. Shift from radical to **incremental, cost-effective innovation**. Your
R&D spending should be focused on attributes that deliver the highest marginal
return, as revealed by the benchmarking data in the CIR.
Action: For both product lines, increase **Performance and Image** ratings
just enough to be competitive in your target segment.
● Camera Target: Aim for Performance/Image scores in the 8.0 - 8.5
range.
● Drone Target: Aim for Performance/Image scores in the 7.5 - 8.2
range.
Rationale: The R&D cost curve is exponential. Moving from an 8.0 to an 8.5
rating might cost 2x more than moving from a 7.0 to an 8.0, but the market
rarely pays a 2x premium. In Year 7, that excess R&D spending is pure profit
destruction. Focus on delivering "good enough" quality at the lowest possible
cost.
2. PRODUCTION, WORKFORCE & COST CONTROL DECISIONS
Production Capacity/Schedules: Set your production schedule to be 10-15%
above your projected unit sales. This ensures you have ample inventory to
capture market share and fulfill all orders, avoiding the catastrophic sales and
DECISION & STRATEGY GUIDE
FOR FINAL DOMINANCE
PART 1: YEAR 7 STRATEGIC POSTURE &
COMPETITIVE ANALYSIS
A. Year 7 Competitive Landscape & Endgame Strategy
By Year 7, the competitive field has consolidated. You will typically face 1-2
market leaders, 2-3 aggressive discounters, and 1-2 niche players. The
simulation’s scoring algorithm heavily weights final-year financial metrics,
creating a **"Winner-Take-Most" dynamic**. To secure an "A" grade and a top
industry rank, your singular focus must be on maximizing **EPS (Earnings Per
Share), ROE (Return on Equity), Stock Price, and Credit Rating**. This requires
securing **#1 or #2 market share in both the Action-Capture Camera and
Drone markets** across all regions. Lagging in either segment will severely cap
your profit potential and final score.
B. Interpreting Year 6 Reports for Year 7 Decisions
Your Year 6 Financial and Operating Review (FIR) and the Competitive
Intelligence Report (CIR) are your strategic blueprints for Year 7. Conduct a
ruthless benchmarking analysis on the following key metrics:
● Your vs. Rival Image/Performance Ratings: Identify if your products
are under- or over-engineered relative to your pricing and market
position.
● Market Share & Pricing: Determine your price-to-value ratio and
identify who is leading in share.
● Cost Structure: Compare your COGS per unit and Operating Profit % to
rivals to find efficiency gaps.
● Brand Awareness & Retailer Support: Check for gaps that are leaving
sales on the table.
Use this analysis to pinpoint your own strategic weaknesses (e.g., high COGS,
low awareness) and predict competitor moves (e.g., an aggressive discounter
will likely slash prices again, a leader may focus on margins over share).
C. The Year 7 Decision Sequence - A Strategic Flowchart
, Decisions in GLO-BUS are highly interdependent. Making them in the wrong
order leads to suboptimal outcomes. The optimal sequence for Year 7 is:
1. R&D & Product Specifications: Set your product quality foundation
first, as it drives everything else (pricing, marketing costs, COGS via
production complexity).
2. Production & Worker Compensation: Plan your production capacity
and workforce strategy based on your desired product specs and sales
targets.
3. Marketing & Pricing: Set your price and marketing budget based on
your product's quality, your COGS, and your targeted market share.
4. CSR & Financing: Make your final financial levers (stock buybacks,
dividends) and CSR commitments last, as they are tactical adjustments to
fine-tune EPS and brand image based on your projected profitability.
PART 2: YEAR 7 DECISION-BY-DECISION
GUIDE
1. CAMERA & DRONE R&D DECISIONS (The Performance
Core)
Strategy: In Year 7, the goal is not to invent the future but to **optimize for
profit**. Shift from radical to **incremental, cost-effective innovation**. Your
R&D spending should be focused on attributes that deliver the highest marginal
return, as revealed by the benchmarking data in the CIR.
Action: For both product lines, increase **Performance and Image** ratings
just enough to be competitive in your target segment.
● Camera Target: Aim for Performance/Image scores in the 8.0 - 8.5
range.
● Drone Target: Aim for Performance/Image scores in the 7.5 - 8.2
range.
Rationale: The R&D cost curve is exponential. Moving from an 8.0 to an 8.5
rating might cost 2x more than moving from a 7.0 to an 8.0, but the market
rarely pays a 2x premium. In Year 7, that excess R&D spending is pure profit
destruction. Focus on delivering "good enough" quality at the lowest possible
cost.
2. PRODUCTION, WORKFORCE & COST CONTROL DECISIONS
Production Capacity/Schedules: Set your production schedule to be 10-15%
above your projected unit sales. This ensures you have ample inventory to
capture market share and fulfill all orders, avoiding the catastrophic sales and