last modified: 02/04/2004
Course code: mtp305 |
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Course name: Maritime
Industry & Operation 2 |
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ECTS credit points: 5.0 |
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Faculty
of Mechanical Engineering and Marine Technology |
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Lecturer(s):
Ir. C. Dirkse,
Ir. J.W. Frouws, |
Tel.: 015-27 8 5306 |
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Catalogue data: Business plan development, market
assessment, cost & revenue calculation, operational cost, voyage cost,
capital cost, freight rates, exchange rates, financing, management structure,
balance sheet, P/L-statement, strategy, environmental and sustainability
considerations, public responsibilities. |
Course year: |
BSc 3rd year |
Period: |
2B |
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Class hours per week: |
Variable: 2-4 |
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Other hours: |
Project work in groups
of 2 to 4 students |
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Assessment: |
Report + presentation
+ participation |
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Assessm.period:
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May 14th |
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(see academic
calendar) |
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Prerequisites:
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Follow up: |
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Detailed description of topics: Classes/instructions: Classes are planned on
strategy, shipping economics, business plan, financial analysis,
organisational, environmental and sustainability considerations on shipping. Details of dates and
times will be given in the course schedule on Blackboard. PROJECT WORKThe participants are
split into teams of two to four students and assigned a specific case. Each
team is required to develop a business plan. Alternatively a team may suggest
their own idea for a new shipping business. In that case they must put their
proposal forward prior to the beginning of the course. Each team will develop the business plan from information gained from literature or possibly from contacts in the industry. For the financial analysis the participants will receive an EXCEL-application with summary documentation. This enables students to focus on the analysis of the business, not on the sometimes tedious financial calculations. |
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Course material: Hand-outs to be
distributed where appropriate and digital copies of presentations. |
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References from literature: To be supplied during
classes. |
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Assessment: On the basis of: Business Plan
Report & Presentation Each group will draw up a business plan according to the exact table
of contents as supplied during class. The work will be presented through a
PowerPoint presentation to the lecturers who will act as potential investors
in the proposed company. All students will be present during all
presentations. While the course will
be given in Dutch, the business plan must be written in English. |
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Learning goals: The following learning goals are
pursued. Upon completion of the course the student must be able to:
1.
To model the
exploitation of a ship owner in terms of income (tariffs, contract type),
cost (fuel, wages, maintenance, overhead, taxes, interest), currency and
exchange rates, investments.
2.
To apply,
interpret and model financial instruments to monitor the finance of a ship
owner and to evaluate the results
3.
To judge the
performance of a company on the basis of a P/L statement, balance sheet and
secondary information.
4.
To interpret
the financial structure pertaining to the operation of a ship or maritime
platform.
5.
To define,
explore, analyse and interpret new business ideas in the maritime sector.
6.
To understand
and apply the fundamentals of organisational forms (matrix, project, team,
BU, hierarchy, etc.; organisation along functional, geographic, market
segment lines)
7.
To develop,
implement, analyse and interpret market research questionnaires (types of
questions, analysis techniques, scoring, conceptual issues)
8.
To understand
fundamental marketing issues (marketing mix, customer retention,
satisfaction, value chain, market research, unique selling proposition, etc.)
9.
To understand
company positioning (strategy, mission, vision, uniqueness,
core-competencies, outsourcing, balanced score card, etc.)
10.
To understand
various management policies and change management techniques (TQM, BPR,
self-steering teams, empowerment, etc.)
11.
To understand
legal aspects (joint ventures, BV, Inc, Holding, SA, NV, Co KG, employee
board, ARBO, CAO, etc.)
12.
To understand
and explain the impact of marine exploitation on its environment (socially,
legally) and apply sustainability considerations on same.
13.
To interpret
the strength and weaknesses in maritime transport chains and devise solutions
for improvements
14. To interpret international differences as drivers
for business decisions |
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Computer use: Excel, Word,
PowerPoint, possibly basic maritime technology software (stability, R&P,
etc) |
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Laboratory project(s): None |
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Design content: Concept exploration
from functional requirements. |
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Percentage of design: 20% |