Greg Merkley

Lecturer of Global Initiatives in Management at Kellogg School of Management

Schools

  • Kellogg School of Management

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Biography

Kellogg School of Management

Greg Merkley works for the Kellogg School of Management as an associate director of case publishing. In that role he collaborates with Kellogg faculty to develop and publish case studies that are used in courses at Kellogg and other business schools around the world.

A 1984 graduate of Kellogg, Greg previously was part of the leadership team at Verio, a Japanese-owned provider of web hosting services, where he was responsible for the commercial relationship between the company and its parent company and largest strategic partner and customer, NTT Communications.

Greg also spent nearly a decade at United Airlines and Galileo International building their online travel business in the Asia-Pacific region. The following decade was spent in a startup that built online travel publications and a discount hotel website.

Greg has lived in Japan and worked extensively throughout the Asia-Pacific region. He earned a B.A. in Japanese at University of California, Los Angeles.

Education MBA, 1984, Marketing and Strategy, Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University

BA, 1982, Japanese, University of California, Los Angeles

Academic Positions Adjunct Professor, College of Business, Concordia University Chicago-present

Other Professional Experience Associate, Booz Allen & Hamilton

General Manager Asia/Pacific, Galileo International

President, TT&M Ltd.

Vice President Product Management, TravelCLICK, Inc.

Vice President, Verio, Inc.

Principal, TT&M Consulting

Manager of Case Writing, Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University

Education Academic Positions Other Professional Experience

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Cases

Brown, Jennifer, Craig Garthwaite, Susan Crowe, Charlotte Snyder and Greg Merkley. 2016. Global Aircraft Manufacturing, 2002–2011. Case 5-312-505 (KEL938).

At the dawn of the twenty-first century, Boeing and Airbus, the leading manufacturers of large aircraft, were locked in a battle for market share that drove down prices for their new planes. At about the same time, the two industry heavyweights began developing new aircraft families to address the future market needs they each projected.

Aircraft take many years to develop, so by the time the new planes made their inaugural flights, significant changes had occurred in the global environment. First, emerging economies in the Asia-Pacific region and elsewhere were growing rapidly, spawning immediate and long-term demand for more aircraft. At the same time, changes to the market for air travel had created opportunities for new products. These opportunities had not gone unnoticed by potential new entrants, which were positioning themselves to compete against the market leaders.

In October 2007, the Airbus superjumbo A380 made its first flight. The A380 carried more passengers than any other plane in history and had been touted as a solution to increased congestion at global mega-hub airports. Four years later the Boeing 787, a smaller long-range aircraft, was launched to service secondary cities in a point-to-point network.

The case provides students with an opportunity to analyze the profit potential of the global aircraft manufacturing industry in 2002 and in 2011. Students can also identify the actions of participants that weakened or intensified the pressure on profits within the industry.

Zettelmeyer, Florian and Greg Merkley. 2015. CDK Digital Marketing: Addressing Channel Conflict with Data Analytics. Case 5-314-504 (KEL894).

Four years into a five-year contract with General Motors to be the exclusive website vendor to its U.S. network of more than 4,000 dealers, CDK Digital faced a crucial contract renewal at the end of 2012. The case follows Melissa McCann, director of strategic marketing, and Chris Reed, CMO, as they prepared for a critical meeting in July 2011: a presentation to the customer relationship management (CRM) subcommittee of the Chevrolet dealer council. Although GM dealers, like all auto dealers in the United States, were independent franchisees, GM saw the renewal of CDK Digital’s exclusive contract as a collaborative decision between dealers and GM. According to Ed Vogt, GM’s executive in charge of the renewal, if the dealer councils said no, the contract would not be renewed.

This case challenges students to use CDK’s big data and analytics capabilities to address the inherent conflict between dealers and manufacturers: when marketing to potential customers, manufacturers wanted consistency across dealer websites to maximize sales of their targeted brands, while dealers wanted flexibility to sell what they had in inventory.

Walker, Russell and Greg Merkley. 2017. Chipotle Mexican Grill: Food with Integrity?. Case 5-316-501 (KEL979).

By any measure, Chipotle Mexican Grill was a success story in the restaurant business. It grew from one location in 1993 to over 2,000 locations by 2016 and essentially created the fast casual dining category. Its stock appreciated more than 1,000% in the ten years following its 2006 IPO.

However, after more than 20 years without a major reported food safety incident, Chipotle was revealed as the source of multiple outbreaks of illness from norovirus, salmonella, and E. coli that sickened nearly 600 people in 13 states in 2015. The company closed stores, spent several months under investigation by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and other health organizations, and faced a criminal investigation in connection with the incidents.

After a much-publicized closing of all of its stores on February 8, 2016, and numerous changes to its food sourcing and preparation practices, Chipotle tried to win back customers with dramatically increased advertising and free food promotions.

However, on April 26, the chain announced its first-ever quarterly loss as a public company. Same-store sales for the first quarter were 29.7% lower than in the previous year. Operating margins fell from 27.5% to 6.8% over the same period, and the company’s share price was down 41% from its summer 2015 high.

Lee, Angela Y., Greg Merkley and Bob Bailey. 2015. Wrigley’s Eclipse Gum: Managing Brand Adolescence. Case 5-414-752 (KEL885).

Wrigley launched Eclipse gum in August 1999. In early 2000, Paul Chibe became senior marketing manager for Wrigley’s breath freshening portfolio, which included Eclipse. With the disappointing first-year performance of the brand, Chibe needed to take action to turn Eclipse around. His task was to use the opinions from other Wrigley executives and from marketing research data to decide if Eclipse could be turned around or if it should be abandoned.

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