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Organization Structure and Control Systems

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Title: Organization Structure and Control Systems


1
Organization Structure and Control Systems
Chapter 8
2
Chapter 8 - Overview
  • Organization structure
  • Evolution and change in MNC organizational
    structures
  • Organizing for globalization
  • Emergent structural forms
  • Choice of organizational form
  • Control systems for global operations
  • Managing effective monitoring systems

3
Internationalization
  • Internationalization is the process by which a
    firm gradually changes in response to
    international competition, domestic market
    saturation, and the desire for expansion, new
    markets, and diversification.

4
Structuring International Activities
  • Domestic structure plus export department
  • Domestic structure plus foreign subsidiary
  • International division
  • Global functional structure
  • Global product structure

5
Domestic Structure Plus Foreign
Subsidiary(Exhibit 8-1)
Chief Executive Officer
HQ Departments Finance Production Marketing HRM
VP Intl Operations
Overseas Japan Germany Mexico Subsidiaries
6
Global Functional Structure
  • The global functional structure is designed on
    the basis of the companys functions
    production, marketing, finance, and so forth.
    Foreign operations are integrated into the
    activities and responsibilities of each
    department to gain functional specialization and
    economies of scale.

7
Global Product (Divisional) Structure
  • In the global product (divisional) structure, a
    single product (or product line) is represented
    by a separate division. Each division is headed
    by its own general manager, and each is
    responsible for its own production and sales
    functions.

8
Global Product (Divisional) Structure(Exhibit
8-2)
CEO
Corporate Functional Staff
Area Specialists North America Latin
America Europe Far East
Product 1 Product 2 Product 3 Division Division
Division
Country A Country B
Finance Production Marketing
9
Global Geographic (Area) Structure
  • In the global geographic (area) structure the
    most common form of organizing foreign operations
    divisions are created to cover geographic
    regions. Each regional manager is then
    responsible for the operations and performance of
    the countries within a given region.

10
Global Geographic Structure(Exhibit 8-3)
Board of Directors
Chair CEO
VP Group VP VP Finance N. America
VP S. America
VP Europe
VP Pacific
VP Plastics
VP Agriculture
France UK
Finance Production Marketing
11
Opposing Forces in Structural Choices
  • The need for differentiation (focusing on and
    specializing in specific markets)
  • The need for integration (coordinating those same
    markets)

12
Emergent Structural Forms
  • Interorganizational networks
  • The global e-corporation network structure
  • The transnational corporation (TNC) network
    structure

13
Information Technologys Impact on Organizational
Forms
  • Competitive companies in the future will be
    elaborate networks of people and information,
    each exerting an influence on the other. These
    networks will comprise a small hub of staff
    connected to each other by their physical
    proximity, which is electronically connected to
    global associates who help control assets and
    negotiate agreements to extend the companys
    business influence.
  • Kilmann

14
The Global E-Corporation Network
Structure(Exhibit 8-6)
Supply Chain Network
Suppliers
Wholesale distributors
Manufacturers
Logistics providers
Supplier exchanges
Logistics exchanges
Customers
Customer exchanges
Virtual manufacturers
Contract manufacturers
Logistics providers
Information flow
Goods flow
15
Choice of Organizational Form
  • Two major variables in choosing the structure and
    design of an organization are the opportunities
    and need for
  • globalization and
  • localization

16
Organizational Alternatives and Development for
Global Competition(Exhibit 8-7)
TNC
Global product structure
Horizontal organization, alliances and networks
Global company
Transnational structure
Opportunities and Need for Globalization
MNC Matrix structure
International company
Geographic area structure
Domestic functional with intl division
Opportunities and Need for Localization
17
Locus of Decision Making in an International
Organization(Exhibit 8-10
Headquarters authority
Subsidiary/local unit authority
Area of control by headquarters
Centralized
Decentralized
Area of control at local level
HQ management makes decision and informs local
managers
HQ management makes decision and recommends to
local managers
Local managers present problem and solution to HQ
for decision
Local managers make decision and inform HQ
HQ management makes decision and sells
to subsidiary managers
HQ and local managers consult on decisions
Local managers make decision and sell to HQ
18
When is Change Needed?(Exhibit 8-9)
  • A change in the size of the corporation due to
    growth, consolidation, or reduction
  • A change in key individuals which may alter
    management objectives, interests, and abilities
  • A failure to meet goals, capitalize on
    opportunities, or be innovative
  • An inability to get things done on time
  • A consistently overworked top management that
    spends excessive hours on the job
  • A belief that costs are extravagant or that
    budgets are not being met
  • Morale problems
  • Lengthy hierarchies that inhibit the exercise of
    strategic control

19
When is Change Needed?(contd.)
  • Planning that has become increasingly
    staff-driven and is thus divorced from line
    management
  • Innovation that is stifled by too much
    administration and monitoring of details
  • Uniform solutions that are applied to nonuniform
    situations. The extreme opposite of this
    condition when things that should or could
    function in a routine manner do not should also
    be heeded as a warning. In other words,
    management by exception has replaced standard
    operating procedures

20
When is Change Needed?(contd.)
  • The following are a few specific indicators of
    international organizational malaise
  • A shift in the operational scope perhaps from
    directing export activities to controlling
    overseas manufacturing and marketing units, a
    change in the size of operations on a country,
    regional, or worldwide basis, or failure of
    foreign operations to grow in accordance with
    plans and expectations
  • Clashes among divisions, subsidiaries, or
    individuals over territories or customers in the
    field
  • Divisive conflicts between overseas units and
    domestic division staff or corporate staff

21
When is Change Needed?(contd.)
  • Instances wherein centralization leads to a flood
    of detailed data that is neither fully understood
    nor properly used by headquarters
  • Duplication of administrative personnel and
    services
  • Underutilization of overseas manufacturing or
    distribution facilities
  • Duplication of sales offices and specialized
    sales account executives
  • Proliferation of relatively small legal entities
    or operating units within a country or geographic
    area
  • An increase in overseas customer service
    complaints
  • Breakdowns in communications within and between
    organizations
  • Unclear lines of reporting and dotted-line
    relationships, and ill-defined executive
    responsibilities

22
Coordinating Mechanisms
  • Direct coordinating mechanisms
  • Examples
  • Design of appropriate structures
  • Use of effective staffing practices
  • Visits by head-office personnel
  • Regular meetings

23
Coordinating Mechanisms(contd.)
  • Indirect coordinating mechanisms
  • Examples
  • Sales quotas
  • Budgets
  • Other financial tools
  • Feedback reports

24
Managing Effective Monitoring Systems
  • Factors likely to affect the appropriateness of
    monitoring systems include
  • Management practices
  • Local constraints
  • Expectations regarding
  • Authority
  • Time
  • Communication

25
Managing Effective Monitoring Systems
  • In deciding on appropriate monitoring and
    reporting systems, additional factors to be
    considered include
  • The role of information systems (adequacy of
    management information systems in foreign
    affiliates, noncomparability of performance data
    across countries)
  • Evaluation variables across countries
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