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Ch 1 Expanding Abroad: Motivations, means

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Title: Ch 1 Expanding Abroad: Motivations, means


1
Ch 1Expanding Abroad Motivations, means
Mentalities
Part 1 The Strategic Imperatives
  • INB / MGT 352
  • International Management
  • Spring 2008

Transnational Management, Text, Cases, and
Readings in Cross-Border Management, Christopher
Barlett, Sumantra Ghoshal Palu Beamish, 5th
Edition, 2008
2
Definition of a Multinational Enterprise (MNE)
  • MNE have substantial direct investment in
    foreign countries (1) and actively (not
    passively) manage and coordinate these offshore
    assets, and their operations as integral parts of
    the company, both strategically an
    organizationally.
  • MNEs include ExxonMobil, Royal Dutch Shell, BP,
    Toyota, Ford, DaimlerChrysler, GE, Wal-Mart, GM,
    ChevronTexaco
  • In addition, definition of MNEs includes Intel,
    Unilever, Samsung, Singapore Airlines, McKinsey
    Co., and Starbucks

Note 1 These are not simply trading
relationships of an import/export business.
3
Explosive Growth (MNE)
  • Number of International Companies
  • UNCTAD - United Nations agency in charge of all
    matters relating to FDI and international
    corporations.
  • 1995 45,000 parent companies with 280,000
    foreign affiliates (7 trillion in sales)
  • 2004 70,000 parent companies with 690,000
    foreign affiliates (19 trillion in sales)

4
Economic Importance of MNEs
  • MNEs are equivalent in economic importance to
    medium-sized economies of Chile, Hungary, or
    Pakistan
  • MNEs have considerable influence
  • Employ high percentage of business graduates
  • Pose the most complex strategic and
    organizational challenges for their managers

5
Top 500 MNEs
  • 70 of world trade
  • 85 of world automobiles
  • 70 of computers
  • 35 of toothpaste
  • 65 of soft drinks

6
Largest 100 MNE
  • In 2003, excluding banking and finance, the
    largest 100 MNEs accounted for over
  • 8 Trillion in worldwide assets, of which
  • 4.0 trillion was located outside there
    respective home countries.

7
Motivations (the Why) of MNE Intl Expansion
  • Traditional Motivations
  • Securing key supplies (aluminum, rubber, oil,
    etc.)
  • Market-seeking behavior (Nestle, Bayer, Ford)
  • Access to low-cost factors of production
    (clothing, electronics, household appliances,
    watches,
  • Emerging Motivations
  • Scale economies
  • Economies of scale and scope
  • Economies of scope
  • Ballooning RD investments
  • Shortening product life cycles
  • Scanning and learning capability
  • Competitive positioning

8
Motives to Go International
Market-Seeking Motives
The Historically Indigenous Firm
Cost-Reduction Motives
Strategic Motives
9
Global Strategy An Organizing Framework
10
What Forces Drive MNEs Toward Global Integration
Coordination?
  • Economies of scale
  • Economies of scope
  • National differences in the availability cost
    of productive resources

11
Economies of scale
  • How do new technologies make an economy of scale
    possible?
  • Why are capital-intensive industries susceptible
    to economies of scale?
  • How do I quantify an economy of scale?
  • What might threaten the benefits sought under an
    economy of scale?

12
Economies of scope
  • What is an economy of scope?
  • What factors or changes might enable an economy
    of scope to develop?
  • What threats to an economy of scope could exist?

13
MNE Advantages Intl Operations
  • Ensuring critical supplies
  • Entering new markets
  • Tapping low-cost factors of production
  • Leveraging their global information access
  • Capitalizing on competitive advantage of multiple
    market positions
  • Use strength to play strategic game of global
    chess

14
Means (the How?) of Internationalization
Prerequisites and Processes
  • Prerequisites for Internationization

15
Scale Economies Use of Scale for Competitive
Advantage Higher Volume Inhibits
Flexibility Political Risks Resource
Risks Competitive Risks Scope Economies Cost
of Joint Production For Two or More
Products Provides Sharing of Physical
Resources Provides for Shared External
Relationships Provides for Shared Knowledge
16
Tremendous Growth in International Trade
Commerce
17
Foreign Market Entry Modes
Foreign Market Entry Modes
Wholly-owned subsidiaries
Joint Venture (e.g., w/local partner)
Franchising
Level of control over foreign services
Licensing
Export (e.g., through agent or distributor)
Indirect export
  • Amount of resources committed to foreign market

18
International Mindsets
  • Specific pressures will affect competition in
    industries and firms that cross national
    boundaries causing
  • a global orientation that relies on
    coordination of worldwide activities to maximize
    the collective organization, and
  • a multidomestic orientation that responds to
    individual country opportunities and constraints.
  • Increasingly, there are pressures for
    international companies to be both globally
    efficient and locally responsive.
  • These pressures derive from environmental
    changes such as new technologies, unanticipated
    competition, and the convergence of industry
    boundaries.
  • In such situations, firms exhibit a
    transnational mindset to simultaneously gain
    efficiency and local market benefits.

19
International Mindsets
Multinational Systems
International Systems
Businesses that follow an international strategy
tend to have distributed GIS in which systems in
the central headquarters are connected to those
in the foreign operations.
Businesses that follow a multinational strategy
tend to have decentralized, or independent,
information systems for their central
headquarters and different foreign operations.
Transnational Systems
Global Systems
Business that follow the transnational strategy
require complex, integrated GIS in which the
central headquarters and all the foreign
operations participate equally
Businesses that follow a global strategy ten to
have highly centralized GIS determined by the
central headquarters.
20
Foreign Market Entry Modes
  • Exporting
  • Countertrade
  • Contract manufacturing
  • Licensing
  • Franchising
  • Turnkey projects
  • Non-equity strategic alliances
  • Equity-based ventures such as wholly-owned
    subsidiaries and equity joint ventures

21
Motives to Go International
Market-Seeking Motives
The Historically Indigenous Firm
Cost-Reduction Motives
Strategic Motives
22
Evolutionary Stages
1-22
  • Stage 1 Foreign Inquiry
  • Stage 2 Export Manager
  • Stage 3 Export Department and Direct Sales
  • Stage 4 Sales Branches and Subsidiaries
  • Stage 5 Assembly Abroad
  • Stage 6 Production Abroad
  • Stage 7 Integration of Foreign Affiliates

23
International Strategy
Assets, responsibilities decentralized
Formal control systems
HQ
International mentality
4-23
24
International Strategy
  • Main role is to support the domestic parent
    company in different ways, such as contributing
    incremental sales to domestic manufacturing
    operations
  • Products developed for domestic market sold
    abroad
  • Technology and other knowledge are transferred
    from parent company to overseas operators
  • Offshore manufacturing represents a means to
    protect companys home market
  • Companies with this mentality regard themselves
    fundamentally as domestic with some foreign
    appendages
  • Managers assigned to overseas operations are
    often domestic misfits who happen to know a
    foreign language or have previously lived abroad
  • Decisions related to foreign operations tend to
    be made in an opportunistic or ad hoc manner

4-24
25
An International Business Strategy Deploying
Global Information Systems (GIS)
International Strategy
International Diagram
Assets, responsibilities decentralized
Involves transferring knowledge and skills from
the central headquarters to the foreign
operations.
Formal control systems
International mentality
International Strategy
GIS Deployment Strategy
Businesses that follow an international strategy
tend to have distributed GIS in which systems in
the central headquarters are connected to those
in the foreign operations.
4-25
4-25
26
Multinational Strategy
Loose controls strategic decisions remote
HQ
Financial reporting flows
27
Multinational Strategy
  • A multinational strategic mentality develops as
    managers begin to recognize and emphasize the
    differences among national markets and operating
    environments
  • Companies adopt a more flexible approach to their
    intl operations by modifying their products,
    strategies, and even management practices country
    by country
  • As they develop national companies that are
    increasingly sensitive and responsive to their
    local environments, these companies undertake a
    strategic approach that is literally
    multinational Their worldwide strategy is built
    on a foundation of the multiple, nationally
    responsive strategies of the companys worldwide
    subsidiaries.
  • Managers tend to be highly independent
    entrepreneurs, often nationals of the host
    country
  • Using their local market knowledge and the parent
    companys willingness to invest in these growing
    opportunities, these entrepreneurial country
    managers often can build significant local growth
    and considerable independence from headquarters
  • Results in a very responsive marketing approaches
    in the different national markets, it also gives
    rise to an inefficient manufacturing
    infrastructure within the company
  • Plants are built more to provide local marketing
    advantages or improve political relations than to
    maximize production efficiency
  • Similarly, the proliferation of products designed
    to meet local needs contributes to a general loss
    of efficiency in design, production, logistics,
    distribution, and other functional tasks

28
An Multinational Strategy
Multinational Strategy
Multinational Diagram
Central home base decentralized production,
sales, marketing in other countries. The business
allows its foreign operations to function largely
independently.
Multinational Strategy
GIS Deployment Strategy
Businesses that follow a multinational strategy
tend to have decentralized, or independent,
information systems for their central
headquarters and different foreign operations.
29
Global Strategy
Tight controls centrally driven strategy
HQ
One-way flows, goods, information, and resources
4-29
30
Global Business Strategies
  • In an operating environment of improving
    transportation and communication facilities and
    falling trade barriers, some companies adopt a
    very different strategic approach for their intl
    operations
  • These companies think in terms of creating
    products for a world market and manufacturing
    them on a global scale in a few highly efficient
    plants, often at the corporate center
  • Subscribe to Professor Levitts to make and sell
    the same thing, the same way, everywhere
  • In an operating environment of improving
    transportation and communication facilities and
    falling trade barriers, some companies adopt a
    very different strategic approach for their intl
    operations
  • These companies think in terms of creating
    products for a world market and manufacturing
    them on a global scale in a few highly efficient
    plants, often at the corporate center
  • The underlying assumption is that national tastes
    and preferences are more similar than different
    or that they can be made similar by providing
    customers with standardized products at adequate
    cost and with quality advantages over those
    national varieties they know
  • Strategic approach requires considerably more
    central coordination and control than the others
    and is typically associated with an
    organizational structure in which various product
    or business managers have worldwide
    responsibility
  • RD and manufacturing activities are typically
    managed from headquarters, and most strategic
    decisions also take place at the center

31
Global Strategy Example
32
Global Business Strategies
All use global information systems (GISs) in
various ways
Multinational Strategy
International Strategy
Transnational Strategy
4-32
4-32
33
A MNE Business Strategy Deploying Global
Business Systems
All use global information systems (GISs) in
various ways
Global Strategy
  • The central headquarters coordinates the
    activities of the foreign operations closely.

Transnational Strategy
GIS Deployment Strategy
Business that follow the transnational strategy
require complex, integrated GIS in which the
central headquarters and all the foreign
operations participate equally
4-33
4-33
34
Transnational Strategy
Complex controls high coordination skills,
coordinated strategic decision process
Heavy flows materials, people information,
technology
Distributed capabilities, resources decision
making

4-34
35
Transnational Strategy
  • The emerging requirement is for companies to
    become more responsive to local markets and
    political needs and pressures to develop
    global-scale competitive efficiency
  • Key activities and resources are neither
    centralized in the parent company nor so
    decentralized that each subsidiary can carry out
    its own tasks on a local-for-local basis
  • Instead, the resources and activities are
    dispersed but specialized, to achieve efficiency
    and flexibility at the same time
  • These dispersed resources are integrated into an
    interdependent network of worldwide operations
  • Transnational mentality recognizes the importance
    of flexible and responsive country-level
    operations hence a return of national into
    the terminology
  • Compared to multinational approach, it provides
    for means to link and coordinate those operations
    to retain competitive efficetiveness and economic
    efficiency, as is indicated by the prefix trans
  • The resulting need for intensive,
    organization-wide coordination and shared
    decision-making implies that this is a much more
    sophisticated and subtle approach to MNE
    management

36
A Transnational Business Strategy Deploying
Global Business Systems
All use global information systems (GISs) in
various ways
Transnational Strategy
Transnational Diagram
  • Truly global firm no national headquarters
    value-added activities managed from global
    perspective optimizes supply demand, taking
    advantage of local competitive strengths

Transnational Strategy
GIS Deployment Strategy
Business that follow the transnational strategy
require complex, integrated GIS in which the
central headquarters and all the foreign
operations participate equally
4-36
4-36
37
Global Chess Between Large MNEs
  • Customers demand differentiation along with the
    level of cost quality typical of global
    products
  • Host governments have more aggressive development
    tax agendas
  • MNEs fight for flexibility to continuously change
    product designs, sourcing, and pricing

38
Multidomestic Strategy Example
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