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Organizational Designs for Multinational Companies

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Title: Organizational Designs for Multinational Companies


1
7
  • Organizational Designs for Multinational Companies

2
Learning Objectives
  • Understand the components of organizational
    design
  • Know the basic building blocks of organization
    structure
  • Understand the structural options for
    multinational companies
  • Know the choices multinationals have in the use
    of subsidiaries
  • See the links between multinational strategies
    and structures
  • Understand the basic mechanisms of organizational
    coordination and control
  • Know how coordination and control mechanisms are
    used by multinational companies

3
Organizational Design
  • How organizations structure subunits and
    implement coordination and control mechanisms to
    achieve strategic goals
  • In small organizations, there is little reason to
    divide work - Everyone does the same thing and
    everything
  • As organizations grow, there is a need to divide
    work and the organization
  • There is no one best organizational design

4
The Basic Functional Structure
  • Departments perform separate business functions
    such as marketing or manufacturing
  • Most smaller organizations have functional
    structures
  • Works best when organization has
  • Few products
  • Few locations
  • Few types of customers
  • A stable environment
  • Routine technology

5
The Basic Product and Geographic Structures
  • Product structure departments or subunits based
    on different product groups
  • Geographic structure departments or subunits
    based on geographic regions
  • Less efficient than functional but allows to
    serve various customer needs by region or product
  • Managers choose product structures when
  • Product or an area sufficiently unique to require
    focused functional efforts on one type of product
    or service
  • Hybrid structure mixes functional, geographic,
    and product units

6
Organizational Structures to Implement
Multinational Strategies
  • When company first goes international, it seldom
    changes structure.
  • Passive exporter and licensing has little impact
    on domestic structures.
  • When international sales become more central,
    structures need to be changed.

7
Export Department
  • Coordinates and controls a companys export
    operations
  • Export department
  • Is created when exports become significant
  • Deals with international sales of all products

8
Foreign Subsidiaries
  • Subunit of the multinational company that is
    located in another country
  • Types of foreign subsidiaries (Many subsidiaries
    may take different forms and functions and are
    neither minireplicas nor transnationals)
  • Minireplica subsidiary smaller version of the
    parent company
  • Uses the same technology and produces the same
    products as the parent company
  • Transnational subsidiary has no companywide form
    or function
  • Each subsidiary contributes what it does best
  • Multinationals choose the mix of functions based
    on
  • Firms multinational strategies,
  • Subsidiaries capabilities and resources,
  • Economic and political risk of building and
    managing a subunit

9
International Division
  • Usual step after export department
  • Responsible for managing exports, international
    sales, and foreign subsidiaries
  • Manages overseas sales force and manufacturing
    sites

10
Organizational Structures to Implement
Multinational Strategies
  • Reasons to abandon the international division and
    implement a more sophisticated structure
  • Diverse products overwhelm capacities of
    multinational
  • Not close enough to local markets
  • Cannot take advantage of global economies of
    scale or global sources of knowledge
  • Several options available to deal with these
    shortcomings such as Worldwide product, worldwide
    geographic, hybrids, Worldwide Matrix, and
    transnational network.

11
Worldwide Geographic Structure
  • Has geographical units representing regions of
    the world
  • Prime reason is to implement a multidomestic or
    regional strategy
  • Organizational design with maximum geographic
    flexibility
  • Separate divisions for large market countries

12
Worldwide Product Structure
  • Gives product divisions responsibility to produce
    and sell throughout the world
  • Implements strategies that emphasize global
    products
  • Provides an efficient way to organize and
    centralize the production and sales of similar
    products

13
Hybrids
  • Both worldwide product structure and worldwide
    geographic structure have advantages and
    disadvantages
  • Product structure supports global products
  • Geographic structure emphasizes local adaptation
  • Multinationals often want both abilities and use
    hybrids
  • Front-back Hybrid Structure
  • The front side has units based on geography to
    provide a multidomestic or regional focus
  • The backside has units based on product groups to
    capture global economies of scale in RD and
    production

14
Worldwide Matrix Structures
  • Symmetrical organization with equal emphasis on
    worldwide product groups and regional
    geographical divisions
  • Creates equal lines of authority for products and
    areas
  • Works best with near equal demands from both
    sides
  • Requires extensive resources for communication
    and coordination
  • Requires middle upper level managers with good
    human relations skills
  • Problems
  • Slow decision making process
  • Too bureaucratic
  • Too many meetings and too much conflict
  • Some companies have redesigned their matrix
    structures to be more flexible with speedier
    decision making
  • Other companies have abandoned their matrices and
    returned to product structures

15
The Transnational-Network Structure
  • Newest solution to the complex demand of being
    locally responsive and taking advantage of global
    economies of scale
  • Combines functional, product, and geographic
    subunits
  • Dispersed subunits
  • Specialized operations
  • Interdependent relationships
  • Has no symmetry or balance in its structural form
  • Resources, people, and ideas flow in all
    directions
  • Nodes or centers in the network coordinate
    product, functional, and geographic information

16
Components of the Transnational-Network Structure
  1. Dispersed subunits subsidiaries located anywhere
    where they can most benefit the company
  2. Specialized operations subunits specializing in
    particular product, research areas, or marketing
    areas
  3. Interdependent relationships continuous sharing
    of information and resources by dispersed and
    specialized subunits

17
Metanational Structure
  • Structure that develops extensive systems to
    encourage organizational learning and
    entrepreneurial activities
  • Large entrepreneurial multinationals can tap into
    pockets of innovation, technology, and markets
    located around the world
  • Look at emerging markets as sources of knowledge
    and ideas
  • Create a culture supporting global learning
  • Extensive use of strategic alliances to gain
    knowledge for varied sources
  • High levels of trust between partners to
    encourage knowledge sharing
  • Centerless organization that moves strategic
    functions away from headquarters to major markets
  • Decentralization of decision making to managers
    who serve key customers and strategic partners

18
Multinational Strategy and Structure An Overview
  • Most companies support early internationalization
    efforts with export department
  • Depending on globalization strategy, they evolve
    into product or geographic structure
  • Pressure for local adaptation and global
    efficiencies result into matrix or
    transnational-network
  • No company reaches any pure formuse hybrids

19
Control Systems
  • Control system helps link the organization
    vertically, up and down the organizational
    hierarchy
  • Measure and monitor the performances of subunits
  • Provide feedback to subunit managers regarding
    the effectiveness of their units
  • Four types of control systems 1) Output control
    system, 2) Bureaucratic control system, 3)
    Decision-making control, and 4) Cultural control
    system

20
Output Bureaucratic Control Systems
  • Output control - assesses the performance of a
    unit based on results, not on the processes used
    to achieve these results
  • Profit center unit controlled by its profit or
    loss performance
  • Bureaucratic control - Focuses on managing
    behaviors within the organization through
  • Budgets financial targets for expenditures
  • Statistical reports information to top
    management about nonfinancial outcomes
  • Standard operating procedures rules and
    regulations of appropriate behavior

21
Decision-Making and Cultural Control Systems
  • Decision-making control level in the
    organizational hierarchy where managers have the
    authority to make decisions
  • Cultural control - uses organizational culture to
    control behaviors and attitudes of employees

22
Design Options for Coordination Systems
  • Coordination system horizontal organizational
    links that provide information flows among
    subsidiaries
  • Textual communication e-mail, memos, and reports
  • Direct contact face-to-face interaction of
    employees
  • Liaison roles part of a persons job in one
    department to communicate with people in another
    department
  • Full-time integrators cross-unit coordination is
    the main job responsibility
  • Task forces temporary teams created to solve a
    particular organizational problem
  • Teams permanent unit of the organization
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