Study Guides are currently available for $5.95 each from the moviesforbusiness.com Website. You must REGISTER (it's free!) or LOG IN to make a purchase. After reading the description below, if you wish to order this study guide, just click on the view full guide link under the title, log in, and follow the simple instructions. And don't worry - if you change your mind mid-order, simply exit the program.
Guide opening:
Imagine yourself as a 13-year-old boy who wakes up one morning in a 30-something body.
Suddenly you have to deal with the world as an adult, which means you have to find some
way to support yourself. You're a smart kid and play to your strengths, eventually landing
a job in the computer department of a toy manufacturing company. You wind up thriving in
this environment because you have an asset the real adults around you lack: you can think
like the company's customers. Tom Hanks stars in this charming film which is filled with
business lessons that focus on marketing and creativity.
An excerpt from the plot
summary:
The next day, a Saturday, finds Josh at the giant Fifth Avenue toy store, F.A.O. Schwarz,
where he is trying out toys, playing with each "demo" model and carrying on just
like the 13-year-old boy he is. Of course, this appears as very strange behavior to the
store's employees and customers, who see a 30-something man rolling around on the floor
and playing hide-and-seek games around toy counters. But Josh isn't the only "child
at heart" in the store. He bumps into Mac, the boss, who says he comes to the store
every Saturday just to watch kids play with toys. "You can't see that in a marketing
report," he notes. "What's a marketing report?" asks Josh, who truly
doesn't know. "Exactly," answers Mac, thinking that Josh was making an astute
comment on the limited capabilities of formal research. Josh and Mac talk about toys as
Josh notes the strengths and weaknesses of several new items in the store. His in-depth
and hands-on knowledge of each of the toys impresses Mac. At one point, in the film's most
memorable scene, the two men play a duet on a gigantic keyboard that fills a large portion
of the display room floor. Together they tap out "Heart and Soul" and then
"Chopsticks," drawing a crowd of appreciative customers who cheer and applaud
when they finish.
A winded, but stimulated and delighted Mac, then turns to Josh and asks him what
department he works in. "Computers," says Josh. "Computers!" says Mac,
astonished. It is clear that Josh will soon be moving.
On Monday, we learn that Josh has been named vice-president in charge of market
development. He will have his own office - a big one - and a secretary. This sets the office
gossip grapevine in motion and rouses the jealousy of Paul. Josh has risen, overnight,
from a cubicle to an office larger than Paul's.
Summary of the commentary:
The commentary deals with the concept of learning to think like one's customer. Examples
of how this concept is realized at real companies (PARADE magazine, Denny's,
Print Marketing Concepts and others) are presented to illustrate the points raised in Big.
The commentary explains the research techniques used by Macmillan toys and their real-life
counterparts. Secondary topics include pricing strategies, personnel selection and office
politics.

The commentary is supplemented by BREAKOUT BOXES dealing with these topics:
 |
Market Research: The Basics
|
 |
Staying Close to the Customer
|
 |
Pricing
Strategies and Techniques
|
 |
The
Toy Business: It's Not Kid's Stuff
|

THE GUIDE also includes an essay that looks at business as depicted in
the movies. For an introductory section on how to use the Management Goes to
the Movies program, click through to Using The MGTTM Training Program.
TOP