Title: The globalization of the temporary staffing industry
1The globalization of the temporary staffing
industry
Neil M. Coe School of Environment and
Development The University of Manchester, U.K.
- Seminar to the Department of Public
Administration - Korea University, 3rd February 2009
2Outline
- Introduction the industry and the wider project
- Theorising the embedded transnational
- Territorial embeddedness and the multinational
model in temporary staffing - Complexity and variability in firm strategies
- Transnational agencies and the production of
national staffing markets - Conclusions
3Geographies of Temporary Staffing Unit (GOTSU)
- Five researchers, four themes
- The globalization of temporary staffing
- National varieties of temporary staffing markets
- Temporary staffing agencies as mediators of
migration - Profiling the UK temporary staffing market
- New website
- http//www.sed.manchester.ac.uk/geography/research
/gotsu/index.htm
4Why temporary staffing?
- Large, fast growing, under-researched industry
exhibiting strong internationalisation dynamics - Complex and spatially variable expansion
strategies - Example of a particular kind of service sector
TNC - Economy-wide implications, as vectors of a
particular kind of labour market flexibility - Active agents of labour market change and
processes of neoliberalization
5Researching the Globalization of Temporary
Staffing
- Two year academic project (Sept. 2004 to Nov.
2006) funded by the ESRC - Research methodology
- The horizontal dimension identifying and
mapping the global temporary staffing industry
(top 20 transnationals) - The vertical dimension embedding the global
temporary staffing industry (Sweden, Australia,
Japan and Eastern Europe) - Semi-structured interviews conducted
- 25 interviews with 14 of the top 20 firms
(including all top 8) at headquarter level and
more since - 59 case study country interviews with
transnational firms, domestic agencies,
government, labour unions and trade bodies
6Top 20 Transnational Agencies, 2007
7Global presence of the top 20 in 2005
8The TNC as a network form
- Dicken (1994 106) TNCs as highly embedded
interacting networks involved in competitive
struggles in which a diversity of competitive
strategies is used. Such strategies are,
themselves, the outcome of contested power
relations both inside the firm and, externally,
with the constellation of institutions (including
the state) with which TNCs interact. - More broadly our approach is informed by a Global
Production Networks (GPN) perspective that
explores the power, value and embeddedness
characteristics of transnational economic systems
9The embedded firm, version 1
- Subsidiary embeddedness in host contexts (e.g.
the Scandinavian school, Birkinshaw, economic
geographers) - Focuses on depth and quality of relations
between inward investors and local
firms/organisations - The quality FDI debate enclaves and/or
upgrading potential - Corporate HQs and the limits to subsidiary
control - Weaknesses tends to focus on inter-firm
relations, and sees inward investors as driver of
firm-territory interface
10The embedded firm, version 2
- Societal embeddedness and home country effects
(e.g. Jacoby, Doremus et al., Yeung etc.) - Organisational forms and practices shaped by
regulatory environment of home country - Distinct national paths of internationalization
- Transfers of industrial models and processes of
convergence/divergence? - Weaknesses prioritises home country
institutional effects, and national over sectoral
variations
11The embedded firm, version 3
- Market-seeking FDI in service sectors
- Nature of host market (e.g. regulatory
conditions, local competitors etc.) drives
internationalisation strategies and shapes nature
of territorial embeddedness - 1. need to look at the far side of
international business (Hansen, 2008) - 2. need to look at internationalisation as a
relational rather than atomistic process
(Glückler, 2006) - 3. complexity and variability of
internationalisation strategies and processes
(Faulconbridge et al., 2008)
12The general model the multinational corporation
- In general terms, temporary staffing firms are a
relatively simple form of transnational
corporation conforming to the notion of a
multinational organizational model - Most key assets, responsibilities and decisions
are decentralised and HQ-subsidiary relationships
are concerned primarily with financial control
and reporting - Transnational agencies tend to run as
decentralised federations management hierarchies
tend to be fairly flat, and HQ operations
relatively small, with marketing, IT and HR the
key functions organised at a global scale
13Temporary staffing as highly territorially
embedded
- Shaped both by the inherent nature of the
business, and its geographically variable
regulation - Extensive office networks (especially general
staffing) - Candidate lists and local labour markets
- National patterns of labour market regulation and
welfare provision - National patterns of staffing industry regulation
- Strength and nature of local competition
- Strength and nature of local lobbying/resistance
activity
14Global contracts mixed messages?
- Yes we do operate global contracts and theyre
always a challengewhat you need to manage is
that you have different legal frameworks,
different cultures... and different cost
structures so with the global agreement weve
always got to be very careful in terms of
delivering the service, theres no compromise - Definitely it is growing global contract
business in some countries you would find that
the global agreements would account for more than
60 of their business, so its quite a growth area
and what were striving for is not to lose the
focus on ad hoc business where invariably the
margins are higher because ad hoc is when
somebody needs something urgently and then they
will pay a premium for that, whereas the global
agreement could be over three years - If youve got different employment laws in
different countries I dont see how it global
contracting works in practice
15Technological change slow to react?
- I think its something that were going have to
sort of look at quite seriously. Our business has
a lot to do with social trends as people become
more familiar with doing stuff online, with
having remote transactions, I think it will force
this industry tothere will be offices, but I
think it will be different You can start to see
that happening increasingly candidates are able
to pre-screening for jobs online and stuff, so
the productivity in the branches goes up because
weve got pre-screened candidates coming along,
so its beginning to change - If youd come into this industry 25 years ago
and were looking at it today and trying to spot
the difference I think youd actually find it
quite difficult. I think you would find that
there is more use of technology, though I dont
think thats as widespread as it potentially
could be and I think as an industry as a whole it
probably hasnt changed as much as the market
around us has changed - so what you start to seen
now is the emergence of different types of
competitors and you find an industry thats not
actually sure of what to do about it
16International placements a missed opportunity?
- Yes, Slovaks are willing to move, so that is
what we are now planning and looking into
bringing Slovak people into the Czech Republic,
even temps. That is only just starting. Other
companies have been doing that for some time
already. Slovaks are willing to come here, as
are some Polish people near the borders - Cross-border work always interferes with the
local market and there is always a dilemma.we
saw it in the past with other countriesa dilemma
between doing the cross-border which means you
lose on the internal business because there is a
risk of cannibalism as they call it. But if we
dont take it, the competition will - Issues regulatory/cultural barriers,
transferability of qualifications, variability by
segment
17Strategy dimension 1 scope
18Variations in office networks
19Strategy dimension 2 FDI policy
- Different modes of market entry and subsequent
growth greenfield/organic, acquisition,
franchise (e.g. CDI) and Internet-based (e.g.
Monster) - Shaped by both complex intersection of firm
strategy and host market conditions - Highly variable in both space and time (e.g.
timing of entry relative to competitors) - In some markets, firms are driving development
of the industry (e.g. Eastern Europe) - In others, same firms are responding to local
regulatory, institutional and competitive
conditions (e.g. Japan, Australia)
20Strategy dimension 3 varying degrees of central
coordination
- Federal
- Our decentralised management structure is
designed to enhance communication and minimise
corporate overheads. Local management retains a
high degree of autonomy in the day-to-day running
of their business including hiring, prices,
training and sales and marketing. This enables
them to respond quickly to market changes. The
organisational structure stimulates an
entrepreneurial working environment - vs more centralised models
- Its strategy at the top, execution driven down
and localized strategy, localize as it goes down.
And when you have global customers, were
different. We have to be different than other
companies because we have 100 client companies
and we do 70 of our business with them, and they
demand a consistency across our enterprise...
21Dynamic not static terms
- Increased centralisation, e.g. Adecco 2005-06
- All businesses under one name and moved to six
global professional business lines (e.g. human
resource solutions, finance and legal) and four
global functions (e.g. finance, HR) - Increased decentralisation, e.g. Kelly Services
2006 - Implemented a new business structure designed
around three regions the Americas, Asia-Pacific,
and EMEA. Business leadership, sales, and
marketing teams realigned to support this new
structure and accelerate worldwide expansion.
22Strategy dimension 4 varying degrees of
standardization
- Particularly in terms of branding and
sales/marketing strategies - We have an advantage, or disadvantage, our size
disadvantage is actually an advantage because I
can still execute a global sales strategy in a
very orchestrated manner, whereas my bigger
competitors struggle with that we are now being
frequently told that we appear far more global
than some of our much bigger competitors - The brand needs to be flexible enough so that it
can be relevant locally and needs to be able to
reflect whats important in the cultures of the
local market. But you need to have some
linkagea global brand
23Modes of national staffing regulation
- Mode 1 liberal industry regulation, liberal
labour market regulation (e.g. Ireland, UK, US) - Mode 2 liberal industry regulation, lightly
regulated labour market (e.g. Australia, Czech
Republic, Poland) - Mode 3 liberal industry regulation, highly
regulated labour market (e.g. Germany, Japan,
Sweden) - Mode 4 strict industry regulation, lightly
regulated labour market (e.g. Belgium, Italy) - Mode 5 strict industry regulation, strict labour
market regulation (e.g. France)
24Producing national temporary staffing markets
25Key parameters of five national markets
26(No Transcript)
27Modes of transnational activity in making of
markets
- Different types of transnational presence in
different national markets - Market-making involved in the opening up,
creation and institutionalising of national
staffing market - Market-mediating involved with other labour
market institutions in the expansion of market
size and scope - Market-responsive range of domestic labour
market institutions lead on the creation of the
market, with transnationals responding to
legalization/liberalisation - Transnational agencies role in market
construction is variable same firm can lead in
one market, respond in another
28Conclusions
- TNCs as the nodal points of and interface
between two realms that of internationalization
in global structures, and that of embeddedness in
the domestic structures of national/regional
political economies (Sally, 1994 162) - Extending notions of the embedded
transnational to look at market-seeking FDI
heavily shaped by host market extra-firm
connections range of labour market institutions - National staffing markets made through the
interaction of a range of actors and institutions - In different national staffing markets
transnational temporary staffing agencies play
different roles