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BN926 Strategy and Management of Change

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BN926 Strategy and Management of Change Globalisation, Global and International Strategy Professor Julian Lowe Examples Steel, ICT, Auto, Banking, Retailing ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: BN926 Strategy and Management of Change


1
BN926 Strategy and Management of Change
  • Globalisation, Global and International
    Strategy
  • Professor Julian Lowe

2
Focus Questions
What is globalization? What are the recent
trends in globalization? Compare the different
influences of local responsiveness, global
integration, worldwide learning? What markets
does it affect most? How does it influence
competitive strategy? Do global strategies
require new forms of global organization?
3
Examples
  • Steel, ICT, Auto, Banking,Retailing, (fast) food
  • Early drivers
  • Changes over the past decade in their patterns of
    globalisation

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The big stories
  • Emerging economies their increasing impact
  • Globalization of production
  • Global strategies
  • Global organization

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Some recent data
  • From the McKinsey Quarterly no 3 2006, the
    Economist September 14 2006

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Globalisation
  • Traditional Reasoning
  • Market Access
  • Technology Sharing
  • Specialisation of Assets
  • Low Cost / Efficient Inputs
  • Serve Homogeneous Markets
  • Trends in World Trade
  • ..Facilitation through Information Age

25
What Does It Mean?
  • Strategic interdependence
  • Global sourcing
  • Converging tastes and technologies

26
Analyzing Competitive Advantage within an
International Context The Basic Framework
THE INDUSTRY ENVIRONMENT Key Success Factors
FIRM RESOURCES CAPABILITIES -- Financial
resources -- Physical resources -- Technology --
Reputation -- Functional capabilities -- General
management capabilities
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
THE NATIONAL ENVIRONMENT -- National resources
and capabilities (raw materials national
culture human resources transportation,
communication legal infrastructure --
Domestic market conditions -- Government
policies -- Exchange rates -- Related and
supporting industries
27
Changing Patterns of Globalisation
28
Changing Patterns of Globalisation (Continued)
29
The new millennium
  • Increasingly borderless world but not as global
    as we might think. Of the top 25 largest US
    multinationals, 22 have over 50 of their sales
    in North America
  • Flight from manufacturing
  • Growth of alliances although not as marked in
    China where the growth has been in wholly owned
    foreign enterprises
  • FDI from developing countries resources,
    Oil/Gas, electronics
  • Cultural convergence in some markets
  • Growth of regional agglomerations clusters.
    But sometime through a double cluster MNEs get
    advantage from a home AND an overseas cluster.

30
Different types of Internationalisation
The Process of Internationalization
International Global Industries
Industries --aerospace --automobiles
--military hardware --oil --diamond mining
--semiconductors --agriculture --consumer
electronics Domestic Multinational/
Industries Multidomestic --railroads
Industries --laundries/dry cleaning
--retail banking --hairdressing --hotels
-milk --consulting
HIGH
International Trade
LO W
LOW
HIGH
Foreign Direct Investment
31
Industry Drivers (Yip)
  • Market
  • Homogenous customer needsGlobal (B2B) customers
    / middlemen Transferable marketing
  • Cost
  • Scale and scopeLearning and experienceCountry
    costsSourcing efficienciesProduct development
  • Government
  • Trade policies Regulations
    Technical standard
  • Competitive
  • Interdependence by country Global
    competitors Changes over time
  • .So what are the levers to align with drivers?

32
International Location of Production
  • 3 considerations
  • National resource conditions What are the major
    resources which the product requires? Where are
    these available at low cost?
  • Firm-specific advantages to what extent is the
    companys competitive advantage based upon
    firm-specific resources and capabilities, and are
    these transferable?
  • Tradability issues Can the product be
    transported at economic cost? If not, or if trade
    restrictions exist, then production must be close
    to the market.

33
Drivers of Global Strategy in a Knowledge Economy
Global Integration
Organisational Learning
National Responsiveness
34
Limits to Globalisation
Change Readiness
Lo Govt. / Societal Involvement Hi
Tendency to Globalise
Hi
dynamic
Lo
Stakeholders interest
Industry Scope
Hi Scale Benefits Lo
static
local transnational
Lo
Hi
Similarity of Demand
35
How global is Unilever?
Businesses
Functions
Tasks
Chemicals Packaged Foods
Research Product Development
Manufacturing Sales
Product Policy Advertising
Pricing Distribution Promotion
Need for Global Coordination and Integration
Detergents
Low High
Personal Products
Marketing
Low High
Low High
Low High
Need for National Differentiation and
Responsiveness
36
Other frameworks
  • Stages of development Ohmae,
  • The small firm perspective - Oviatt and McDougall
  • Porter competitive diamond

37
Five Stages of Globalisation (Ohmae)
  • The Five Stages of Globalisation
  • Export-Orientated Company
  • Overseas Branches
  • Relocating Production
  • Insiderisation
  • The Global Company

38
The Five Stages of Globalisation
Kenichi Ohmae explains his theory of the five
stages of globalisation Stage one
Export-Orientated Company A company which expands
from its home production base to export markets
using dealers, distributors or agents. Stage two
Overseas Branches The company starts to set up
its own sales, marketing and, perhaps,
after-sales services in foreign markets. Stage
three Relocating Production The company
relocates production to key markets
39
The Five Stages of Globalisation
Kenichi Ohmae explains his theory of the five
stages of globalisation (cont..) Stage four
Insiderisation The company creates complete
clone models of the parent in overseas markets,
enabling a complete local response to local
consumers by being able both to analyse consumers
and tailor local products to their needs. Stage
five The Global Company Ohmae says that at this
stage some common core functions consolidate
back to the centre to provide the business with
common shard values the global aspect
whilst maintaining the ability to provide a
specific local service. Operation remains
dedicated to local management, but there is
global control of areas such as RD, brand
development and so on.
40
Global Success Factors
  • Ohmae Vision and values
  • Strategy breadth, scope, focus, cost,
    differentiation
  • People Training and Development
  • Location, Delegation, Control
  • Government

41
Oviatt and McDougall (Journal of International
Business Studies,1994 and 2003)
  • Challenge the Process Theory of
    Internationalization (PTI) (Johanson and Vahlne,
    1977) which states that young or small firms
    start internationalizing by going through a
    process whereby they start with activities in
    countries that are psychically close and then
    move outwards.
  • Instead Oviatt and McDougal suggest that
    increasingly SMEs and INVs (international new
    ventures), more or less start international from
    the beginning. These firms are typified by
    ownership of
  • A scarce and difficult to imitate resource that
    is transferable internationally
  • A network to help manage and monitor the
    relationship
  • A initial client who provides them with some
    immediate experience

42
International New Ventures
  • The whole process is facilitated by
  • The internet and better communications
  • Available information and converging economies
    and tastes
  • More managers and entrepreneurs with some
    international experience
  • Improved mechanisms for managing networks

43
Porters Competitive Advantage of Nations
  • Extends and modifies traditional theory of
    comparative advantage to take account of the
    following factors
  • Competitive advantage is about companies --- the
    importance of the national environment is
    providing a home base for the company
  • Sustained competitive advantage depends upon
    dynamic factors-- innovation and the upgrading of
    firms resources and capabilities
  • The critical role of the national environment is
    its influence upon the dynamics of innovation and
    upgrading

44
Porters National Diamond Framework
  • 1. FACTOR CONDITIONS. Home grown resources and
    capabilities more important than natural
    endowments
  • 2. RELATED AND SUPPORTING INDUSTRIES.
    Competitive advantage occurs in industry
    clusters (e.g. semiconductors-computers-software
    in the U.S.)
  • 3. DEMAND CONDITIONS. Discerning domestic
    customers drive quality and innovation (e.g.
    Japanese camera industry)
  • 4. STRATEGY, STRUCTURE, RIVALRY. E.g. domestic
    rivalry drives innovation and upgrading

FACTOR CONDITIONS
RELATING AND SUPPORTING INDUSTRIES
DEMAND CONDITIONS
STRATEGY, STRUCTURE, AND RIVALRY
45
Who manages global organizations?
  • Matrix organizations (structural)
  • Matrix managers
  • Development of managers (training
  • Deployment of managers (providing managers with
    international experience)
  • Recruitment of managers (with experience)

46
Analysing Management Roles
Considering each of the capabilities and roles in
order, who currently carries out these roles in
your organisation? What specific things are they
doing to address the key capability with which
they are matched?
Global Integration and Efficiency National
Responsiveness Global Integration and Efficiency
Worldwide Business Managers Country /Regional
Managers WorldwideFunctional Managers
Where are they constrained from performing their
roles? What barriers or impediments limit their
effectiveness?
47
Overseas Market Entry Alternative Modes
  • TRANSACTIONS DIRECT INVESTMENT
  • Exporting Exporting Exporting Licensing
    Franchising Joint
    Wholly owned
  • Spot Long-term with foreign
    technology venture
    subsidiary
  • trans- contract distributor/
    and Marketing
    Fully Marketing Fully
  • actions agent trademarks
    distribution integral- sales
    integral-
  • only ted only
    ted
  • Key issues
  • Is the firms competitive advantages based upon
    firm-specific or country-specific resources and
    capabilities?
  • Is the product tradable and what are the barriers
    to/ costs of trade?
  • Does the firm possess the full range of resources
    and capabilities needed to serve the overseas
    market?

48
Entry modes
  • These entry modes depend on transaction costs,
    and the need for risk reduction and control
  • These factors also help explain the different
    MNE/Transnational structures that follow

49
Strategy and Organization of the MNCThe
Evolution of Multinational Strategies and
Structures (1) Pre 2nd WW Era of the Europeans
  • The European MNC as Decentralized Federation
  • National subsidiaries self-sufficient and
    autonomous
  • Parent control through appointment of
    subsidiaries senior management
  • Organization and management systems reflect
    conditions of transport and communications at the
    time e.g. Unilever, Phillips, Courtaulds, Royal
    Dutch/Shell

50
Strategy and Organization of the MNC The
Evolution of Multinational Strategies and
Structures (2) Post 2nd WW U.S. Dominance
  • American MNCs as Coordinated Federations
  • National subsidiaries fairly autonomous
  • Dominant role as U.S. parent-- especially in
    developing new technology and products
  • Parent-subsidiary relations involved flows of
    technology and finance, and appointment of top
    management.e.g. Ford, GM, Coca Cola, IBM

51
Strategy and Organization of the MNC The
Evolution of Multinational Strategies and
Structures (3) 1970s and 1980s The Japanese
Challenge
  • The Japanese MNC as Centralized Hub
  • Pursuit of global strategy from home base
  • Strategy, technology development, and manufacture
    concentrated at home
  • National subsidiaries primarily sales and
    distribution companies with limited autonomy.
    e.g. Toyota, NEC, Matsushita

52
Reconciling Global Integration with National
Differentiation The Transnational Corporation
Tight complex controls and coordination and a
shared strategic decision process.
Heavy flows of technology, finances, people, and
materials between interdependent units.
  • The Transnational an integrated network of
    distributed interdependent resources and
    capabilities.
  • Each national unit and source of ideas, skills
    and capabilities that can be harnessed to
    benefit whole corporation.
  • National units become world sources for
    particular products, components, and activities.
  • Corporate center involved in orchestrating
    collaboration through creating the right
    organizational context.

53
Questions
  • Outline Porters, Ohmaes, Oviatt and
    McDougalls, and Yips theories of globalisation
    and strategy
  • How would you design a global strategy and
    organisation in
  • Healthcare?
  • IT?
  • Mining and primary production?
  • Software?
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