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The Global Environment

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Session 9 & 11 The Global Environment * Learning Objectives The importance of a company s decision to globalize The four main strategic orientations of global firms ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Global Environment


1
Session 9 11
  • The Global Environment

2
Learning Objectives
  1. The importance of a companys decision to
    globalize
  2. The four main strategic orientations of global
    firms
  3. The complexity of the global environment and the
    control problems that are faced by global firms
  4. Major issues in global strategic planning,
    including the differences for multinational and
    global firms
  5. The market requirements and product
    characteristics in global competition
  6. The competitive strategies for firms in foreign
    markets

3
Globalization
  • Globalization refers to the strategy of
    approaching worldwide markets with standardized
    products
  • Awareness of the strategic opportunities faced by
    global corporations and of the threats posed to
    them is important to planners in almost every
    domestic U.S. industry
  • Understanding the nuances
  • of competing in global markets
  • is rapidly becoming a required
  • competence of strategic managers

4
Why Firms Globalize
  • U.S. firms often can reap benefits from
    industries and technologies developed abroad
  • Direct penetration of foreign markets can drain
    vital cash flows from a foreign competitors
    domestic operations
  • The resulting lost opportunities, reduced income,
    and limited production can impair the
    competitors ability to invade U.S. markets
  • Question Should firms be proactive or reactive?

5
THE GROUP OF 8 NATIONS
  • These meetings of the leaders of the United
    States, Britain, Italy, Japan, France, Germany,
    Russia, and Canada are the way the powerful
    industrialized nations of the world seek to work
    out differences between themselves and arrive at
    policies that can reduce conflict and other
    problems elsewhere.

6
The European Economic Community
  • Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, the Czech Republic,
    Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany
    (originally West Germany), Great Britain, Greece,
    Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania,
    Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Poland,
    Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, and
    Swedenare full members of the EU.

7
Development of a Global Corporation
1. Export-import activity
2. Foreign licensing and technology transfer
3. Direct investment in overseas operations
(manufacturing plants and global management
skills)
4. Substantial increase in foreign investment
(foreign assets comprise significant portion of
total assets)
8
Differences Between Factors Environmental
Factors
9
Differences Between Factors Environmental
Factors (Concluded)
10
Comparative Management Framework
  • Compare and Contrast the Management Models,
    Practices, Principles, Strategies,
    PoliciesAcross Classes of Organizations
  • Could be Profit vs Not-For-Profit, Small vs Large
    , Private vs Public
  • Most Often Concerned with Comparative Analysis
    Among Different Regions of World

11
Increasing Profitability Through Global Expansion
  • Location economies
  • Economic benefits from performing a value
    creation activity in the optimal location
  • Effects
  • Can lower costs
  • Can enable differentiation
  • Caveats
  • Transportation costs and trade barriers
  • Political and economic risks

12
Increasing Profitability Through Global Expansion
(contd)
  • The experience curve
  • Serving a global market from one or a few plants
    is consistent with moving down the experience
    curve and establishing a low-cost position
  • Transferring distinctive competencies
  • Companies with distinctive competencies can
    realize large returns by expanding to global
    markets where competitors lack similar
    competencies and products

13
Globalization Strategy Options Two Key
Considerations
14
Pressures for Cost Reductions
  • When companies produce commodity products
  • Where differentiation on nonprice factors is
    difficult and price is the main competitive
    weapon
  • Where competitors are based in low-cost locations
  • Where there is persistent excess capacity
  • Where consumers are powerful and face low
    switching costs
  • The liberalization of the world trade and
    investment environment

15
Pressures for Local Responsiveness
  • Differences in customer tastes and preferences
  • Differences in infrastructure and traditional
    practices
  • Differences in distribution channels
  • Host government demands

16
Four Basic Strategies
17
Choosing a Global Strategy
  • International strategy
  • Creating value by transferring competencies and
    products to foreign markets where indigenous
    competitors lack those competencies and products
  • Makes sense if a company has a valuable
    competence that indigenous competitors in foreign
    markets lack and if it faces weak pressure for
    local responsiveness and cost reductions

18
Choosing a Global Strategy (contd)
  • Multidomestic strategy
  • Developing a business model that allows a company
    to achieve maximum local responsiveness
  • Makes sense when there are high pressures for
    local responsiveness and low pressures for cost
    reductions
  • Companies may become too decentralized and lose
    the ability to transfer skills and products

19
Choosing a Global Strategy (contd)
  • Global strategy
  • Focusing on increasing profitability by reaping
    cost reductions that come from experience curve
    effects and location economies pursuing a
    low-cost strategy on a global scale
  • Makes sense when there are strong pressures for
    cost reductions and demand for local
    responsiveness is minimal

20
True Global Strategy
The strategy of approaching worldwide markets
with standardized products.
21
Choosing a Global Strategy (contd)
  • Transnational strategy
  • Simultaneously seeking to lower costs, be locally
    responsive, and transfer competencies in a way
    consistent with global learning

22
Cost Pressures and Pressures for Local
Responsiveness Facing Caterpillar
23
Advantages and Disadvantages of Different
Strategies for Competing Globally
24
Multidomestic and Global Industries
A multidomestic industry is one in which
competition is essentially segmented from country
to country
A global industry is one in which competition
crosses national borders
25
Factors Contributing to Globalization of
Competition
Economies of scale in functional activities of
firms in industry
High level of RD expenditures on products
requiring more than one market to recover
development costs
Presence in industry of predominantly global
firms expecting consistency of products across
markets
Presence of homogeneous product needs across
markets, reducing requirement of customizing
product
Low level of trade regulation and regulations
regarding foreign direct investment
26
The Global Challenge
  • Few pure cases of either global or
    multidomestic industries exist
  • The challenge -- global firms must
  • Decide which activities will be performed in how
    many and which locations
  • Determine degree to which activities are
    coordinated across locations

27
Location and Coordination Issues of Functional
Activities
28
Globalization of the Company Mission
  • Different environmental opportunities,
    constraints, and risks confront a firm going
    global
  • Top management must reassess firms fundamental
    purpose, philosophy, and strategic intentions
  • Mission statement must be revised to accommodate
    changes in
  • Strategic decision making
  • Corporate direction
  • Strategic alternatives
  • Strategic capabilities
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