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如何评价「美枪械巨头雷明顿面临破产」? 第1页

  

user avatar   smartiejl 网友的相关建议: 
      

雷明顿这些年砸自己牌子的事做得太多了,产品质量下滑太厉害,以至于在枪友群中得到了“渣雷”的称呼。而现在老外买个雷明顿700,通常会马上换枪管、换扳机、换枪托,只留下一个枪机。而市场上已经有了单卖的R700枪机,还有必要买整枪么?

其实雷明顿品牌危机的起源都在2012年,那一年Robert Nardelli被指派成为Freedom Group的CEO,其麾下的主要枪械制造厂家就包括大毒蛇、雷明顿和马林。Nardelli是什么人?濒临破产的克莱斯勒的前总裁,当年坐着豪华私人飞机到华盛顿找奥巴马高调要钱救市的几个汽车总裁里就有他一个。Nardelli直接插手Freedom Group的运作只有几个月时间,但是这个人治理公司一直有两个特点,一是特别独断专行(他在通用电器为了争权上位曾打得不亦乐乎,当家得宝总裁时只允许持股人在年度董事会上发言一分钟),二就是爱砍开销(他在家得宝和克莱斯勒时都是如此)。他主政Freedom Group时的一些决定,严重影响了雷明顿的运作模式和品牌名誉。

本来减少开销是“开源节流”改善企业财政状况的一部分,本身并不是问题,但必须要有选择有节度。枪械这东西是商品不假,但不是必需品,而且市面上远不止雷明顿一家的产品。消费者买枪时对质量的关注远比买车还要高,特别是栓动步枪(雷明顿的主要产品),能否首发就命中并打倒目标非常重要,因为一旦打偏就可能决定了许多屁民的农田牲畜会被野兽糟蹋并且餐桌上没肉。Nardelli这个人对美国枪械行业基本上毫无了解,根本就不知道哪些环节可以削减投入、哪些环节千万不能。他首先开刀的就是质量控制和原料成本,并且将许多部件生产外包给开价最低的代理厂商。同时就像当年在家得宝一样,大量经验丰富的老员工被辞退或调离,人员素质下降的同时还严重打击了团队士气。Nardelli走后,这些运作模式上的改变也很难逆转。结果自然是产品质量随着成本降低严重下滑,各种质量问题层出不穷。最明显的就是2014年雷明顿不得不召回500万件扳机,还有就是870 Tactical霰弹枪打20发弹就能震掉机瞄的尴尬事件。

现在普通美国人买栓动步枪,如果不想费心思换部件,通常会先考虑Savage、Ruger、Browning甚至Tikka等牌子,这与过去首选R700的情况大相径庭。雷明顿这个二百年老店(1816年建厂)在Nardelli这个“美国历史上最糟糕的CEO之一”(康泰纳仕《Portfolio》杂志的评论)的操作下,就像当年被曝光泡了敌敌畏的金华火腿一样,一旦名声变臭了要想挽回人心和市场是非常困难的,特别是在现今新技术新产品不断上市、竞争对手步步紧逼抢市场的情况下。


资料参考:


user avatar   karl-ma-41 网友的相关建议: 
      

全面地,从宏观介绍差异的一篇文章:

12 Differences Between Chinese Education and American Education

Posted on June 1, 2007

This analysis is being prepared for a presentation I am going to make at the International Conference on Intercultural Education in Harbin, China on June 22-24. I would be interested in receiving your observations, comments, questions about the differences between Chinese and American educational practices.

  1. Class Size is the first noticeable difference at the middle school and high school level. Teachers typically teach two classes (in an 8 period day) with from 55 to 65 students. American secondary teachers typically teach five or six classes with class sizes ranging from 25 to 30. The Chinese teachers use their non-teaching time to grade papers and to prepare for their classes, except for the head teachers (banzhuren) which will be explained later.
  2. While Americans think the "cohort" concept is innovative, China has been using it for decades. Throughout China, students beginning in a school are put into classes and they stay in those classes with one another for the entire time they are in that school unless higher test scores permit them to move to a more advanced grouping. Understood in the Chinese system is that this group of students will learn each of their subjects together. In America, students are not grouped into such classes. Instead, the 30 students who are together for English class will be randomly split up into any of the other subjects for the next period and the period after that, and so on. The next year, the students are totally mixed up again into different classes. Occasionally, the same class of students will take two courses together, such as English and history, but that is rare. The Chinese carry the cohort concept into the university level as well. My four classes of students stay together for all of their required courses the whole time they are at university.
  3. Chinese students stay in the same classroom for their main classes and their teachers come to them while American students change rooms every period and the room belongs to the teacher. Thus, Chinese students don’t have hallway lockers. Students sit in the same seats for each subject and keep their materials in a shelf under their desk top. Many students have cloth covers for their desk and other means of making it "homey".
  4. Chinese education is built on what Americans call "looping". The teachers of the students in the entering class will also follow their same students to the next grade level and the next. In America, it is very unusual for teachers to move with their students from one grade level to the next at the middle school or high school level let alone to loop for the entire period of time the student is in that school. At the primary school level, students begin in grade one with a teacher and stay with that teacher every year they are in primary school. My university students reflect on that teacher as being so very important to them that they really didn’t want to leave them when it was time to go to middle school. American teachers, on the other hand, tend to specialize in the curriculum and content for a particular grade level and then stay at that level. Sometimes, teachers who want to teach older students will ask to move to a higher grade, but then that teacher would typically stay at that level until retirement. That practice means that in America, subject matter and teacher preference might be valued more highly than student needs or student learning.
  5. Another significant structural difference between American and Chinese schools is the concept of head teacher or "banzhuren". The banzhuren takes additional responsibility in delivering instruction, supervising their specific class of students, and in knowing their students and the families of the students and in communicating with those families. For less than 200 yuan per month more, the banzhuren will arrive at school prior to 7:00 a.m. to prepare for the day and to work with early arriving students. The student day at the middle school ends at 4:55 and the teachers leave shortly after that. The banzhuren will not only teach her specific class that she is in charge of but will also sit in on many other subjects throughout the day so she can monitor the progress of her students with other teachers, counsel her students, and contact the parents of those students if necessary. The banzhuren will monitor her class during lunch and nap with them after lunch. One banzhuren told me that she is like a mother to those students who don’t have the parental support they need. In addition, at Liaoning Normal University Junior Middle School (LNUJMS) thebanzhurens are expected to visit the homes and families of half their students sometime during the first term and the other half during the second term. These visitations would take place on Saturdays or Sundays or on holidays. The banzhurenwill, after three years, receive a bonus based on the academic improvement of her class. In America, the individual teacher is expected to make parent contact when a student misbehaves or is not performing at a satisfactory level. In American secondary schools there is also a person called a guidance counsellor who will assist with parent contact. However, the guidance counsellor will have a case load of 350 to 500 students and she often must resort to group counselling sessions.
  6. The Chinese believe in merit pay and in using student test scores for teacher evaluation. For example, when the 9th graders leave middle school they are tested to see which high school they are qualified to attend. Since the same teachers have had those students for three years, they compare their entry score to their exit score. The classes that showed the most academic gain resulted in that banzhurenreceiving a bonus that might range from 3000 yuan to 6000 yuan (one month or two months pay). The same is true at the high school level. On the other hand, a teacher whose students did not show growth will be evaluated accordingly. At LNUJMS, the math team won first place in the District math contest. As a reward, the four math teachers split a 2000 yuan bonus. The teachers I have talked with like the bonus system. So for years the Chinese have been doing what the American conservatives have been advocating and our teacher unions have been fighting.
  7. Discipline in Chinese schools easier than in American schools. For example, at LNUJMS, I was surprised to find minimal student supervision during lunch and between classes. One administrator and one teacher were in the hallway and no teachers were in their classrooms. The other teachers had gone to their offices to meet with students for academic or disciplinary reasons or for a rest between classes. In America, the time between classes is as short as possible, three, four, or perhaps five, minutes. Students are expected to move from their classroom, go to their lockers to get materials for their next class, and then move to that class. The American teachers are expected to be in the hallways during passing periods because that is when fighting and other misbehaviors occur. It is nearly impossible to even imagine a 10 minute passing period in an American school.
  8. Chinese students are very respectful. When Chinese students recite, they stand; when students hand in a paper, they use both hands as if they were making a presentation of the paper to the teacher; when students refer to their teacher in writing, they often use terminology such as , “Our dear teacher.” In interviewing thebanzhurens, they commented that is their duty to teach students how to do well in life and how to be a man. University students, when asked to recall their middle school and high school years often speak of their teachers in very exalted ways telling how much their teachers meant to them.
  9. Chinese students play active and important roles (zhirisheng) in sweeping the classrooms, scrubbing the steps, serving meals, being class monitors, and helping teachers. Student monitors can be seen wearing special armbands in the hallway, watching to make certain students are doing their twice-daily eye exercises properly, providing leadership on the marching field, watering plants, empty bins, cleaning windows, helping to distribute the daily lunch, and so on. Students always seemed to be carrying out their tasks very seriously and in good humor. The student monitor system is utilized at the university level as well with these appointed students helping the teacher in making copies, distributing and collecting papers, contacting classmates and so on. Like the concept of banzhuren, the concept of zhirishengcannot find its English equivalent due to the different Sino-American educational systems. Most Chinese schools are operated on the zhirisheng system for the purpose of maintaining clean classrooms and schools.
  10. Chinese students buy their textbooks each year and the textbooks are soft cover and relatively thin. The textbooks I looked at had a 2006 copyright and I understand that they all have recently undergone revision. The cost is about $1 for a textbook and $2 for a workbook that accompanies the textbook. Students make heavy use of highlighters and annotations in their books. In addition, the textbooks often have moral lessons built into them. For instance, when a particular scientist is highlighted, aspects of his/her life that are exemplary are extolled, such as hard work, protecting the environment, overcoming obstacles, etc. On the other hand, American textbooks are hard cover, updated every six years (at least in Indiana), and are rented to students. Students are not allowed to mark in their textbooks in America.
  11. It almost goes without saying that the curriculum in China is standard nation-wide and that students have few elective choices. National goals, national curriculum, national expectations, national exercises, and even a national class schedule are all built around the Chinese Education Schema that is based on centuries of tradition. In America, education is primarily the responsibility of the state governments. Counting Washington D.C., there are 51 separate governments that give direction to public schools. Further, except for Hawaii, states are divided into school districts that also have certain autonomies. Indiana, for example, has 292 school districts, 292 different teacher contracts, salary schedules, and sets of working conditions.
  12. Deeply embedded in the Chinese culture is the examination system. Since the Song Dynasty (960 AD), the Chinese have relied on the examination process to identify their governmental leaders. Now the examination system is used to determine which university students are able to attend. These national exams were given on June 7 and 8. Local middle schools were used as test sites and those middle school students had a two day holliday. The test is of such great significance that parents rent hotel rooms nearby so their student can have a quiet lunch and take a nap. I saw one hotel with a big banner wishing students luck on the exam. Students will take either the liberal arts test or the science test. For liberal arts students, the first test, Chinese, was from 9:00-11:30. Students were dismissed and came back for the math test from 3:00-5:00. On Friday, the schedule was the same, with the morning session being geography, politics, and history and the afternoon session being English. The parents filled the street in front of the school and anxiously awaited students coming from the test sites and wanted to know how their child did. Taxi cabs even offer free service to these students to help them get home or to the testing site. My friend Kevin’s uncle took time off work to drive Kevin to the test site, pick him up at noon to take him home, then bring him back. It is huge deal!
    (原文:slkchina.wordpress.com/

user avatar   submoa 网友的相关建议: 
      

不少回答提到强制生育,说说强制生育的问题吧。

现在生育率低的导致的问题,不是人口数量下降,而是劳动力(廉价劳动力)下降。如果现在瞬间消失掉一亿老人,导致人口数量减少一亿,会有人讨论人口数量下降的问题吗?

强制生育,特别是高压政策下的强制生育,比如说个别答主提出的不生育者每年上交30%(也有回答说40%,75%)的总收入作为罚款,这种政策下出生的人口,能转化成劳动力吗?强制生容易,如何强制育?假设真的实施上述高压强制生育政策,必然会引起以规避处罚为目的的生育。那么,生,是生了,至于怎么养,那就是我说了算了,只要保证成年前饿不死,依法参加义务教育,这样“养”的成本其实很低。其他的,不好意思,与我无关,学好学不好,犯罪不犯罪(犯罪更好,抓进去连饭都不用管了),什么早教、幼儿园、学区房、吃好的穿好的、高中、大学?不存在的,从怀上那一刻起,这个根本就不是人,不是子女,只是一个工具(没错,连工具人都算不上),规避处罚的工具,没有感情,只有怨恨。而在这种环境成长起来的人,心理有多么扭曲变态,可想而知,因为童年不幸而报复社会的案例还少吗?一个高中都没上过,心理扭曲变态的人,能成为一个合格的劳动力吗?搞不好三天两头上街砍人,报复社会,成为社会的不稳定因素。因为强制生育政策的打击面极广,上述现像绝不会是个别现像,实施强制生育前,不妨先提高监狱建设用地及预算。

当然啦,肯定又有人会提出强制“育”的配套政策,比如说子女犯罪父母连坐,子女在多少岁前死亡按未生育进行处罚,子女成年后劳动产出不达标的部分对父母进行罚款等等。如果真的能这么搞的,只能说,辣真的牛逼,辣真的牛逼,但同时,也准备好灭亡吧。




  

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