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HBS Working Knowledge May 4, 2009 John Quelch |
What's Next for the Big Financial Brands Turmoil and distrust in the financial services sector is an open invitation to non-financial companies to exploit the brand vacuum created by the demise of the likes of Merrill Lynch and the Royal Bank of Scotland. |
BusinessWeek February 18, 2010 Kerry Capell |
Retailer Tesco Dives into British Banking Britain's Tesco figures it can persuade the 20 million customers who visit its U.K. stores each week to add banking to their shopping lists. |
HBS Working Knowledge October 25, 2010 Sean Silverthorne |
HBS Cases: Tesco's Stumble into the US Market UK retailer Tesco was very successful penetrating foreign markets -- until it set its sights on the United States. |
Knowledge@Wharton February 26, 2003 |
Why Big-box Retailers Often Fumble in Their Global Growth Strategies How good are these companies at reaching beyond their borders, and how successful will they be in the future? Experts from Wharton are cautiously optimistic, noting that retail depends heavily on such disparate factors as consumer whims and the cost of real estate. |
Bank Technology News December 2005 John Engen |
Web Banking: Europe's ING Direct Bucks U.s. Tradition ING Direct is one of the fastest-growing institutions in the U.S., with a strategy that treats banking as a price-sensitive commodity and other banks' customers as easy pickings. |
Bank Systems & Technology October 27, 2009 Nathan Conz |
ING to Divest ING Direct ING has announced that it will divest its Internet bank, ING Direct USA, as part of a restructuring plan to separate its banking and insurance businesses required by regulators. |
Bank Systems & Technology August 26, 2009 Nathan Conz |
New UK Entrants Take Different Approaches to Core Banking New entrants in the U.K.'s retail banking market, such as Tesco and MetroBank, are taking different approaches to their core banking systems, depending on their size and strategic models. |
BusinessWeek March 14, 2005 |
ING Direct: "A Rebel With Cause" CEO Arkadi Kuhlman discusses how the online bank keeps costs down and handles high-maintenance customers and a flattening yield curve. |
BusinessWeek March 15, 2004 Laura Cohn |
The Best Of Times For British Banks Strength in the economy and savvy management are adding up to fat profits |
BusinessWeek March 14, 2005 Amey Stone |
ING Direct: Bare Bones, Plump Profits ING Direct is now the largest online bank, and competitors are starting to pile in. |
BusinessWeek July 25, 2005 Gene G. Marcial |
Looking A-O.K. At ING ING's global reach and recent success in America make it an attractive option for shareholders. |
The Motley Fool February 12, 2008 Dan Caplinger |
Where You'll Find the Best Rates As customers have moved to the Internet for financial solutions, banks have paid attention. |
The Motley Fool January 16, 2008 Alyce Lomax |
Can Wal-Mart Be Nimble? Who's afraid of the British invasion represented by retail giant Tesco? Maybe Wal-Mart is, judging by its plan to test out some smaller-format stores in Arizona. |
The Motley Fool August 28, 2007 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Will You Marry Wal-Mart? The world's leading retailer may be ready to nibble at smaller concepts. Investors, take note. |
The Motley Fool January 18, 2007 Todd Wenning |
Great Stocks You've Never Heard Of The success of international markets in the past years show that there a lot of great stocks to be found overseas. It's not always easy, however, to spot them early in their growth stages. |
The Motley Fool June 6, 2006 Alyce Lomax |
A British Invasion The U.K.'s Tesco sets its sights on Wal-Mart -- and even American shores. Anybody who's interested in stocks of grocers, discounters, and the like ought to keep a close eye on what Tesco's up to. |
Bank Systems & Technology January 27, 2009 Orla O'Sullivan |
Troubled RBS Cuts Irish Bank, Mortgage Units Reportedly facing up to $41 billion in subprime losses, and almost 70 percent government owned, Royal Bank of Scotland continued to cut back this week, announcing cuts at its Irish subsidiaries. |
BusinessWeek September 23, 2010 MacAskill & Menon |
No End in Sight for Britain's Bank Rescue By holding its shares in RBS and Lloyds, the U.K. may earn a profit. Meanwhile, the cost of carrying the stakes continues to rise. |
Fast Company Jul/Aug 2012 Seth Porges |
In Dyson's New Vacuum, A Rolling Ball Mechanism Doubles As The Engine In the new Dyson DC40 Multi Floor vacuum, the ball is now also the engine -- more than 110 pieces of machinery, circuitry, and filters are stuffed inside. |
BusinessWeek July 2, 2007 Steve Hamm |
The Vacuum Man Takes On Wet Hands James Dyson moves beyond cyclonic vacuums to bring the world a better hand dryer. |
The Motley Fool August 13, 2008 Todd Wenning |
Royal Bank of Scotland's Right Royal Mess Royal Bank of Scotland is making headlines for all the wrong reasons. Its 12 billion rights issue was the biggest in U.K. corporate history, and now, it reveals its first loss in 40 years. |
BusinessWeek May 26, 2011 Sarah Shannon |
Tesco's Still California Dreamin' The British retailer's U.S. food chain, Fresh & Easy, hasn't gained traction yet. |
BusinessWeek November 14, 2005 Kerry Capell et al. |
Ikea Ikea is the quintessential global cult brand. Here's how the Swedish retailer became to be so. |
BusinessWeek January 29, 2009 Mark Scott |
Pressure Mounts to Nationalize British Banks As Royal Bank of Scotland piles up colossal losses, Gordon Brown ushers in a new bailout to stave off nationalization. |
Wall Street & Technology February 27, 2005 Chris Murphy |
Blend It In - But Not Too Much Forgive IT workers at ING U.S. Financial Services, part of the Dutch banking giant ING Group N.V., if they had their worries when chief operating officer Catherine Smith took over leadership of the IT group a year ago. |
Registered Rep. January 1, 2005 Namita Devidayal |
The Not-So-Quiet Company In grammatical terms, a word with the letters ING at the end is a gerund, a verb masquerading as a noun. Fitting, then, that the Dutch financial services firm that goes by those letters would have a mysterious side. |
Fast Company March 2003 Scott Kirsner |
Would You Like a Mortgage With Your Mocha? Who says banking has to be dull? Not the executives at ING Direct, who are banking on powerful technology and clever marketing to make a radical change in an industry that needs it. In less than three years, they've attracted more than a million customers. And they serve a pretty mean cappuccino. |
The Motley Fool July 13, 2010 Cliff D'Arcy |
Anyone Want to Buy a Used Bank? Banking heats up as several investors get set to snap up surplus banks. |
U.S. Banker September 2007 John Adams |
Payments: U.S. Targeted by RBS In e-Payments Business Royal Bank of Scotland is a huge payments player in Europe, and it expects its global multi-payments expertise will help it win online business accounts in the United States. It has a good head start. |
Bank Technology News June 2007 John Adams |
Payments: RBS Targets U.S. for e-Payments Business It's a huge payments player in Europe, and RBS hopes its multinational payments expertise can help it win business accounts in the United States. |
BusinessWeek October 28, 2010 Michael Wei |
In Ikea's China Stores, Loitering Is Encouraged By letting visitors linger, Ikea hopes they will buy as their incomes rise. |