Title: Global Marketing Management A European Perspective
1Global MarketingManagementA European Perspective
GLOBAL ORGANISATIONAL STRUCTURES
- Warren J. Keegan
- Bodo B. Schlegelmilch
2Overview
- Organisation
- Organisational Networking and Virtual
Organisations - Summary
3Learning Objectives
- Learn how organisational structures need to
respond to differences in global market
environments - Know the relationship between structure, foreign
product diversification and size - Realise that outsourcing becomes very important
because corporations seek to leverage their
value-chain strengths - Recognise the importance of core competencies
within organisational networks
4Organisation I
- The goal in organising for global marketing is to
find a structure that enables the company to
respond to relevant market environment
differences - Pull between
- the value of centralised knowledge and
co-ordination - the need for individualised response to the local
situation
5Organisation II
- No single correct organisational structure
- Leading-edge global competitors corporate
structure is simple and flat, rather than tall
and complex - Simple structures
- increase the speed and clarity of communication
- allow the concentration of organisational energy
and valuable resources on learning, rather than
on controlling, monitoring, and reporting
6Patterns of International Organisational
Development I
Functional Corporate Structure, Domestic
Corporate Staff Orientation, Pre-international
Division
7Patterns of International Organisational
Development II
Divisional Corporate Structure, Domestically
Oriented Product Division Staff,
Pre-international Division
8International Division Structure I
Functional Corporate Structure, Domestic
Corporate Staff Orientation, International
Division
9International Division Structure II
Divisional Corporate Structure, Domestically
Oriented Corporate Staff, Domestically Oriented
Product Divisions, International Division
10Regional Management Centres I
Functional Corporate Structure, Domestic
Corporate Staff Orientation, International
Division
11Regional Management Centres II
Divisional Corporate Structure, Domestically
Oriented Corporate Staff, International Division
12Geographic Structure
Geographic Corporate Structure, World Corporate
Staff Orientation, Area Divisions World-wide
13Global Product Division Structure
Geographic Corporate Structure, World Corporate
Staff Orientation, Product Divisions
14Matrix Structure I
15Matrix Structure II
- Four basic competencies
- Geographic knowledge
- Product knowledge and know-how
- Functional competence in such fields as finance,
production, and especially marketing - Knowledge of the customer or industry and its
needs
16Relationship between Structure, Foreign Product
Diversification, Size
Source John M. Stopford and Louis T. Wells, Jr.,
Managing the Multinational Enterprise (New
York Basic Books, 1972) adapted by author.
17Core Competencies
- Core competencies
- must provide potential access to a wide variety
of markets - make a significant contribution to the perceived
customer benefits of the end product - be difficult for competitors to imitate
- become the resources and capabilities that give a
company advantage over its rivals - Popularised by global strategy experts C. K.
Prahalad and Gary Hamel
18Outsourcing and Partnership
- Outsourcing has become increasingly popular as
corporations seek to leverage their value-chain
strengths - Six determinants of partnership
- Mutual benefits
- Commitment
- Predisposition
- Shared knowledge
- Unique resources
- Linkage
19Organisational Networking and Horizontal
Organisation
- Organisational networking is a general strategy
which sets a style and culture for an
organisation - it breaks down boundaries
- it enables quick and open person-to-person
communications - Horizontal organisation
- organised around cross-functional core processes
- tasks managers to take the responsibility for
such processes in its entirety
20Virtual Organisations
- Virtual organisation
- a temporary network or loose coalition of
manufacturing and administrative services - assembled for a specific business purpose
- disassembled when the purpose has been met
21Virtual Organisations
- A virtual organisation makes use of virtual teams
- team membership in a virtual organisation is seen
as dynamic and constantly changing - role of team members may change from support in
one team to leader in another - a team of the same people only has a finite life
span in which it can be truly productive
22Summary
- An organisational structure for global marketing
should enable the company to respond to relevant
differences in international market environments
and and to extend valuable corporate knowledge - Firms must establish core competencies to be
competitive - Global companies can respond to opportunities and
threats in the global marketing environment by
enabling organisational networking and virtual
organisations