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CDC Case Study - Obsidian
CDC Case Study - Obsidian
Assessment Centre
Case Study
- Obsidian Ltd -
Introduction
Welcome to the CDC Assessment Centre Case Study.
As Management Consultants, you are often tasked with analysing various types of information and data.
Within this pack you will find information relating to a new wearable tech company Obsidian Ltd. It
includes a summary of its business model, financial performance, operations, marketing and planned
future developments. Analyst and employee feedback gives some insight into how it is perceived in the
market and its company culture.
You are tasked with analysing this information and preparing for a 20 minute meeting with a Capgemini
Consulting Project Lead, who will subsequently be meeting with the senior leadership team from Obsidian.
In your meeting, the Project Lead will be particularly interested in the following:
What internal barriers does Obsidian have which might prevent them implementing your plan?
The venue for the meeting is not yet clear, but you can assume that there will at least be a flip-chart, but
not necessarily any computer or projection facilities. However, you must ensure that the Project Lead
leaves the meeting with all the materials necessary for the important meeting with Obsidian.
Copyright 2015 Capgemini. All rights reserved.
Page 2
Financial Performance
The table below shows a number of key Financial Performance Indicators for Obsidian, from the companys
inception to present day.
Financial Performance Indicators ( / thousands)
Financial Performance Indicator
Year 1
Year 2
Year 3
Year 4
Total Revenue
21,200
162,400
241,600
269,600
Onyx Sales
20,000
146,400
200,000
216,000
Mica Sales
1,200
16,000
41,600
53,600
R&D Costs
8,000
8,000
8,000
20,000
China Production Costs
300
3,840
9,200
10,200
Germany Production Costs
4,400
32,240
46,000
54,000
Staff & Facilities Costs
7,420
41,200
56,000
64,800
Recruitment Costs
800
1,200
4,000
9,000
Other Business Costs
2,720
21,100
38,700
45,800
(inc. marketing, distribution & customer support)
Total Costs
23,640
107,580
161,900
203,800
Gross Profit
-2,440
54,820
79,700
65,800
Copyright 2015 Capgemini. All rights reserved.
Page 3
/ thousands
250000
200000
150000
100000
50000
0
Year 1
Year 2
Year 3
Year 4
Year
Profit Performance ( / thousands)
90000
80000
70000
/ thousands
60000
50000
40000
30000
20000
10000
0
-10000
Year 1
Year 2
Year 3
Year 4
Year
Copyright 2015 Capgemini. All rights reserved.
Page 4
Hub Airport
(London)
Distribution Centre
(Manchester)
Mica Warehouse
(Buckinghamshire)
Onyx Warehouse
(Greater London)
Obsidian Headquarters
(Central London)
Copyright 2015 Capgemini. All rights reserved.
Page 5
The distribution centre in Manchester is currently capable of sorting 15,000 Obsidian product units (SKUs)
each day. However, both the smaller Onyx and Mica warehouses are only able to process 6,000 product
orders each day. Insufficient capacity during peak times has recently led to major delays in customer
deliveries, with some international customers complaining that their orders are taking over a month to
reach them.
Obsidian does not own any of the properties that it utilises. Both the China and Germany manufacturing is
sub-contracted to facilities that are owned and operated by third parties. Neither is currently at full
capacity.
Production costs vary by site of manufacture. German lead times are short, with both quality and
production flexibility being excellent. Tech reviewers have commented that the Onyx product has
exceptional build quality. Obsidian Ltd is not majorly exposed to currency movements; however, the
Chinese government remains under increasing pressure to allow the RMB to be freely traded on
international Forex markets.
The Manchester distribution centre is a large, state-of-the-art facility on the M56 motorway. Obsidian Ltd
rents a section of this facility and has recently been offered the chance to rent additional space if required.
The Onyx warehouse, which was leased shortly after Obsidian Ltd was founded, is an older facility in
Enfield (Greater London) near the M25 motorway. It was taken on a ten-year lease, with a five-year break
clause provision. The landlord has recently applied for planning permission to extend the Onyx warehouse,
which has been turned down by the local council.
The Mica warehouse is on an established mixed-use industrial park (warehouses and offices), near the M1
in Milton Keynes (Buckinghamshire). The Mica warehouse was leased on a fifteen-year term, with a break
clause at year seven.
Obsidian Ltds headquarters are in Old Street (London), where they rent office space in Tech City. Obsidian
was attracted to this location due to the start-up culture, ready availability of highly qualified young
graduates and office space flexibility.
People
Obsidian was founded by its current Chief Executive Officer (John Barfield) and current Chief Scientific
Officer (Martin Whitehead), who initially developed the technology that underpins both products. John
and Martin brought in a Finance Director (Gillian Wade), who completes this small senior management
team. These are the three Executive Directors of Obsidian Ltd, who together with representatives from the
two major private equity investors, hold the majority of the share capital. John and Martin have a strong
vision for the potential development of Obsidian. However, both come from an academic background and
neither has ever run their own company before, or had experience of commercial operations. Their
concentration on product development has led to people management and effective communications
being neglected.
In recent years, Obsidian Ltds staff turnover has increased exponentially from 4% (two years ago) to 20%,
which is the highest it has ever been.
Copyright 2015 Capgemini. All rights reserved.
Page 6
Staff turnover at Obsidian Ltds Central London Headquarters is almost non-existent, and many have
worked for the company since it was founded. However, turnover is particularly high amongst staff
located in the Onyx and Mica warehouses. Recently, company surveys have been conducted to try to
better understand employee concerns. Overall, this has indicated that employee dissatisfaction is due to
staff feeling disconnected from the company culture, combined with practical problems in distribution.
Employees feel that the energy and drive so evident at HQ, is sorely lacking at the warehouses and in the
Customer Service teams located there. In particular, the Customer Service teams aspire to develop expert
knowledge relating to the products, meaning that they would no longer have to refer questions to head
office experts, who often take weeks to reply.
Current Obsidian Employee Breakdown (by site)
Location
Total
R&D
Distribution Sales / Manufacturing Admin / Customer
Employees
Marketing Ops / Liaison Directors Services
Head Office
92
48
2
20
5
15
2
Manchester
57
0
40
0
5
10
2
Enfield
191
0
150
5
1
5
30
Milton
95
0
60
4
1
5
25
Keynes
Total
435
48
252
29
12
35
59
In the UK, the majority of employees working at Obsidian Ltds distribution centres and warehouses earn
the minimum wage and are paid by the hour. In addition to their basic salary, managers at the distribution
centres receive a significant performance related bonus that is affected by three main criteria the
number of customer complaints received, average distribution cost per item and feedback from within
their operations.
Additionally, outside of the Central London office, there appears to be no major training opportunities or
career development. Few senior figures appear to be interested in boring distribution and never seem to
venture outside of HQ.
Given the magnitude of the upcoming Onyx 2.0 launch opportunity, the Non-Executive directors have put
pressure on Obsidians founders to improve and optimise commercial operations. They have recently
hired Capgemini to assist with the transformation of the business into a lean and sustainably profitable
technology company for the future. As part of this process, consultants have begun to interview a number
of key staff members in order to gain initial insights into issues that have been negatively affecting recent
profitability.
Initial Feedback From Consultant Interviews
I have worked for Obsidian since its inception and was initially so excited about
becoming park of this innovating new start-up. My opinion has now changed we
are not listened to by the HQ management anymore. Our goals of increased
customer interaction are being ignored, and our aim to increase customer
satisfaction through better communications starting with internal improvements
are pushed to the side.
Edward Operations Manager (Milton Keynes)
Copyright 2015 Capgemini. All rights reserved.
Page 7
Marketing
I have worked here for the past four years. At the beginning, I was proud to be
associated with this leading edge British company. Now, I want to leave. The
company need to invest in new distribution systems to replace the old, mainly
manual processes we took over when we moved into this warehouse.
Tracey Warehouse Operations Manager (Enfield)
Founded four years ago, the Obsidian brand is perceived as young and trendy. Its two biggest customer
segments are adolescents and young professionals. The Obsidian brand is perceived as innovative and of
high quality by its target audience. However, it is not recognised by an older professional audience.
Obsidian Ltd. is hoping to improve its brand awareness by opening a three flagship stores in London, Paris
and Berlin. They have already established a number of concessions within larger department stores, such
as Selfridges, Galeries Lafayette and KaDeWe.
Obsidian is aware that it does not have a strong presence on social media. They hope to create a buzz
around their new Onyx 2.0 smart watch. They are evaluating all potential channels, including social media
such as Twitter and Facebook. This could also generate cost-effective early stage market research. In
particular, Obsidian are keen to understand what new features customers would like to see in future
models and how they would use the watch on a daily basis.
Ultimately, Obsidian aims to provide quality products at a lower price than many of their international
competitors. They hope that the open source nature of their platform will encourage third party
development of apps, to make their products even more attractive and useful to the consumer.
Above all, it is Obsidians vision for its brand to be associated with innovation, efficiency and great value.
Analyst Views & External Feedback
Some insight can be gained from recent financial analyst and specialist Tech website comments. There has
been some helpful feedback on social media recently, which could prove useful to Obsidians management.
These comments are shown on the following page.
Copyright 2015 Capgemini. All rights reserved.
Page 8
TechRadar Review
Onyx 2.0 could be a world-beater in the wearable tech space it could spell the start of Obsidians
transformation into a competitive global player. It all depends on whether the company can build on its
founders energetic and innovative culture and become good at the boring management stuff, such as
distribution, employee development and customer engagement.
VentureBeat
Copyright 2015 Capgemini. All rights reserved.
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