International Business Strategy
International Business Strategy
International Business Strategy
Multinational: a product or product line that are vastly differentiated but have no or little
cost pressure
International: a company that doesn’t have to make its products different on different
environment, very heavy added value products (high tech)
Core Competence Skills within a firm not easily imitable by competitors, to do it the
competitors would have to use more resources, time, effort, money...
Competitive advantage: adding value and reducing cost
Experience Curve Systematic reduction in production costs that have been observed
to occur over the life of a product (e.g., discovered in the aircraft industry: production
costs of the 4th aircraft would be 20% lower than the costs for the 2nd and
successively (because you get better at doing what you are doing))
Learning Effects Cost savings that come from learning by doing (e.g., labor
productivity)
Location Economies Economies that arise from performing a value-creation activity in
the optimal location for that activity (national differences).
E.g., China may be the optimal location for low cost manufacturing activities whereas
France or Italy have location economies in high design
But: a) transportation costs; b) trade barriers and c) political risks (location
“diseconomies”)
International
Advantages Disadvantages
Transfer distinctive competencies. Lack of local responsiveness.
Inability to exploit experience curve
effects.
Inability to realize location economies.
Multinational (MNC)
Advantages Disadvantages
Customize produces and marketing to Impossibility of Economies of Scale
local responsiveness.
No experience curve effects
Limited transfer of distinctive
competencies: every country has a set of
value-creation activities.
Global
Advantages Disadvantages
Exploit experience curve effects. Lack of local responsiveness.
Exploit location economies.
Transnational
Advantages Disadvantages
Experience curve effects. Difficult to implement
Exploit location economies.
Customize products and marketing.
Global learning (knowledge produced not
only in the home country).
Economies of scope
With the rise of the Internet and network computing the company experienced another
dramatic shift in the industry. But this time IBM was better prepared. All the hard work
IBM had done to catch up in the client/server field served the company well in the
network computing era.
Once again, customers were focused on integrated business solutions - a key IBM
strength that combined the company's expertise in solutions, services, products and
technologies.
In the fall of 1995, delivering the keynote address at the COMDEX computer industry
trade show in Las Vegas, Gerstner articulated IBM's new vision - that network
computing would drive the next phase of industry growth and would be the company's
overarching strategy. That year, IBM acquired Lotus Development Corp., and the
next year acquired Tivoli Systems Inc. Services became the fastest growing segment
of the company, with growth at more than 20 percent per year.
In May 1997, IBM dramatically demonstrated computing's potential with Deep Blue, a
32-node IBM RS/6000 SP computer programmed to play chess on a world class level.
In a six-game match in New York, Deep Blue defeated World Chess Champion Garry
Kasparov. It was the first time a computer had beaten a top-ranked chess player in
tournament play, and it ignited a public debate on how close computers could come to
approximating human intelligence. The scientists behind Deep Blue, however,
preferred to stress more practical concerns. Deep Blue's calculating power - it could
assess 200 million chess moves per second - had a wide range of applications in fields
calling for the systematic exploration of a vast number of variables, among them
forecasting weather, modeling financial data and developing new drug therapies.
As the decade drew to a close, IBM stood on the threshold of the new century having
reestablished itself as a leading information technology innovator. Its leadership helped
create the e-business revolution. And it had successfully transformed itself, achieving
an impressive business turnaround. As the new century opened, IBM moved
confidently into a future it helped create, one that is linked to the ubiquitous and
surging presence of the global networks that are connecting every computer, and soon
perhaps, every electronic device in the world.
Vertical differentiation
Concerned with where decisions are made: Where is decision making power
concentrated?
Two Approaches
- Centralization
- Decentralization
Strategy and organization structure
Major strategic decisions are centralized at the firm’s headquarters while operating
decisions are decentralized
Functional structure
The structure that evolves in a company’s early stages. Coordination and control rests
with top management
Product division structure
Probable next stage of development. Reflects company growth into new products.
Each unit responsible for a product. Semiautonomous and accountable for its
performance.
Eases coordination and control problems.
International division
Widely used
1. Can create conflict between domestic and foreign operations.
2. Implied lack of coordination between domestic and foreign operations.
Growth can lead to worldwide structure.
Organized on geography
Initially export goods to foreign subsidiary but later outsource production
Problems:
- Heads of foreign subsidiaries relegated to second-tier position
- Lack of coordination between domestic and foreign operations
Therefore firms begin adopting worldwide structures
Depending on how much we sell or how diverse we are in terms of product offering, it
determines our path on organizational structure.
Integrating mechanisms
Need for coordination follows the following order on an ascending basis (from high to
low)
- Transnational companies
- Global companies
- International companies
- Multidomestic companies
Impediments to coordination
- Differing goals and lack of respect
- Different orientations due to different tasks
- Differences in nationality, time zone & distance
- Particularly problematic in multinational enterprises with its many subunits both
home and abroad
Performance ambiguity: you can’t put your finger on what’s the problem in the
company
Key to understanding the relationship between international strategy, control systems
and incentive systems
Caused due to high degree of interdependence between subunits within the
organization
Control systems:
- Multinations: output/bureaucratic
- Global/transnationsl: cultural
Processes
Manner in which decisions are made and work is performed
- Cut across national boundaries as well as organizational boundaries
- Can be developed anywhere within the firms global operations network
Organization culture
Values and norms shared among people
Sources:
- Founders and important leaders
- National social culture
- History of the enterprise
- Decisions that result in high performance
Cultural maintenance:
- Hiring and promotional practices
- Reward strategies
- Socialization processes
- Communication strategy
Decomposing the economic engine: it helps us decide where we make our dollar
The ‘Profit Engine’ is different form a value chain: it encompasses deep seated beliefs
about:
- What business we’re in
- What we’re delivering to customers
- How money is made in this business
- What assets and skills are critical
- Who our competitors are
Strategic architecture is worth little if we can’t turn talent into market leadership
Getting to the future first allows firms to establish an ‘installed base’ (infrastructure) not
easily duplicated by latecomers (core competence), infrastructure for future success
Almost every large company has a ‘Spaghetti Bowl’ of alliances, but there is seldom an
overall logic to the set of partnerships, thus although many companies have a wide
variety of partnerships, the individual partnerships are often disconnected, each
serving an independent and unrelated purpose.
Sega’s partners (AT&T, Time Warner, TCI, Pioneer, Yamaha, Hitachi and Matsushita)
give the company access to the technologies that will be needed to download
computer games over a cable television network.
Over time, the relative importance of a company’s different competencies or
capabilities may shift, provoking power realignments within the coalition...
Walter Kumerth –VP at Siemans
“The future shape of our industry will be much more complex, the same companies will
compete in one field and cooperate in another. This is only possible if you have mutual
trust and common business ethics. If you’ve been hitting someone over the head for
many years, cooperation is very difficult.”
Setting Standards:
It’s impossible to ‘go it alone’ Vertical integration and a concern for keeping all core
competencies inside no longer makes sense, ‘Virtual Integration’ is replacing ‘vertical
integration’
Competing Stands confuse customers and make them less apt to buy many will prefer
to wait until a clear winner emerges, companies competing for the future are therefore
keen for standards to emerge as early as possible.
PHILIPS VS MATSUSHITA
Neither of them had the capacity for organizational change
Outsourcing: we want to decrease costs and increase profits. We are looking for
location economies, where I can perform the same task at a lower price without
compromising quality or critical aspects of the manufacturing process.
The part of the manufacturing we would outsource are those that don’t compromise the
core competences of the company.
If we can reduce costs and increase performance = competitive advantage
Production: Activities involved in the creation of a product. Can be tangible and also
non tangible such as ‘services’.
Logistics: The transmission of physical activities through the chain, from procurement
to production to distribution.
Strategic objectives of these functions:
To lower costs; Dispersing production activities around the globe to locations where
each activity can be performed at a lower cost
Increase quality by eliminating defective products from the supply chain and the
manufacturing process (quality here means reliability and performance) Tool used by
mangers SIX SIGMA METHODOLGY which is a direct of descendant of TQM (Total
Quality Management)
- Advantages of buy
Gives you strategic flexibility (i.e., political risks, trade barriers changes,…).
Costs associated with doing everything yourself (i.e., coordination costs, higher
transfer prices….)
Offsets.
Identify opportunities (3), identify resources necessary to exploit it (1) and mobilise
the resources to the new opportunity (2)
1. Multinational strategy
Transfer products developed at home to foreign markets.
To achieve maximum local responsiveness
Customize products and marketing strategies to different national conditions
- Lower performance ambiguity
- High level of authonomy
- Innovation
Negative points:
- No economies of scale
- No standarization
- Decentralized structure: low control at the centre
2. International strategy
Transfer skills to foreign markets.
Where local competitors lack those skills and products
- Low cost pressure
- Low responsiveness
- You go to a market place that doesn’t have the technology, there’s no adaption
of the product, is the market that adapts to your product (high-tech, medical
machinery)
3. Global strategy
To increase profitability by reducing costs
Cost reduction derives from experience curve and location economies
Market standardized products (only a slight adaptation to national differences)
4. Transnational strategy
The transnational centralizes some resources at home, some abroad, and distributes
yet others among its many national operations.
To exploit experience-based cost economies and location economies
At the same time, it pays attention to local responsiveness
The result is a complex configuration of assets and capabilities that are distributed, yet
specialized
Atributes
Some resources are centralized to realize scale economies, to protect core
competences, provide supervision… (i.e., basic research, treasury function…)
Centralization does not mean “at home”.
Other resources are decentralized because there are small economies of scale, there’s
a need for flexibility and avoidance of dependence on a single facility.
Units may be dispersed, interdependent, and specialized (i.e., specific subsidiary has
proved to be good at research…).
Interdependence may be reciprocal rather than sequential.
The transnational varies the roles of its subsidiaries operations:
Some national markets adopt standard global product, while others are encouraged to
differentiate.
(i.e., not the same entering in a mature market than in an emerging market…).
Government regulations, subsidiaries´ internal resources, customer tastes, the
position of competitors…, are all considered in determining subsidiary roles in the
transnational.
Sharp competition has historically erased firms’ emphasis in worldwide learning.
Managers of transnational organizations are sensitive to dispersed knowledge creation:
innovations are created by subsidiaries as well.
Knowledge is developed jointly and shared worldwide in a reciprocal manner.
Most influential:
- Impact of leadership
- Influence of home country culture
- Influence of organizational history
“For more than 50 years, many institutions have fought the good fight but have not
eradicated poverty, the adoption of the MDG (Millennium Development Goals) by the
UN only underscores that reality as we enter the 21st century poverty-and the
disenfranchisement that accompanies it – remains one of the world’s most daunting
problems.”
There are companies fighting disease with educational campaigns and innovative
products, organisations helping the handicapped walk, helping subsistence farmers
check commodity prices and connect with the rest of the world.
There are banks adapting to the financial needs of the poor, power companies
reaching out to meet energy needs and construction companies doing what they can to
house the poor in affordable ways that allow for pride.
We may find many examples of MNC’s that have undermined the efforts of the poor,
the greatest harm they might have done to the poor is to ignore them altogether. The
poor cannot participate in the benefits of globalisation without an active engagement
and without access to the products and services that represent global quality
standards.
The dominant assumption is that the poor have no purchasing power and therefore, do
not represent a viable market..”
We cannot compare buying powers of someone who earns 2 usd per day with that of
individuals in developed nations, however, by virtue of their numbers, the poor
represent a significant latent purchasing power that must be unlocked.
The poor pay a significantly higher price for everything, as they reside in high cost
ecosystems, even within developing countries. Let’s compare the shanty town of
Dharavi, just outside Mumbai with Desai Road, Maharashtra (suburb of Mumbai) the
‘poverty penalty can be as high as 5-25 times, this is the result of local monopolies,
inadequate access, poor distribution and strong traditional intermediaries. Large scale
private sector business can unlock this poverty penalty.
1. Shareholder theory
Advance capital to Company Managers who are supposed to spend funds only in ways
that have been authorized by the shareholders
MILTON FRIEDMANN: “There is only one social responsibility of business – to use its
resources and engage in activities designed to increase its profits so long as it
engages in open and free competition without deception or fraud.”
2. Stakeholder theory
Managers have a duty to both the corporation’s shareholders and individuals and
constituencies that contribute, either voluntarily or involuntarily to a company’s wealth
creating capacity and activities, and who are therefore its potential beneficiaries and/or
risk bearers. (Customers employees, suppliers and the local community.)
Conflicting Interests:
Society norms clearly align with the shareholder theory, most US economists + those
associated with financial markets accept the shareholders theory.
Business schools have unanimously embraced the shareholders theory.
However, it is startling to note that there is evidence that public perceptions do not
comport with those of economists and the financial community.
Theories at odds:
The fact remains that the theories demand very different things.
….lay off the workers or lower the dividend?
Perceptions of norms across society are more suggestive of a stakeholder than a
shareholder orientation and that neither legal nor market place mechanisms can be
relied on to enforce the shareholder theory in a uniform fashion.
So the dispute is with us for some time and the recent financial scandals prove the
failure of the shareholder theory deserves careful scrutiny before they can be
accepted.
Mintzberg’s view
“We are certainly seeing some of the trend toward shareholder value in Europe. I don‘t
know whether they‘ll wake up and realize what nonsense shareholder value really is, or
whether they will keep pursuing it until people are out in the streets protesting.
It is a philosophy of greed, not a philosophy of large institutions serving society as well
as their own particular needs.
It’s anti societal, and the only advantage to it sweeping through Europe and Japan is
that it will decrease the damage of our own nonsense in North America. So if others
are stupid enough to do it that will only help North American business”
2. Ecological Sustainability:
Perhaps the most obvious and most talked about of the drivers, concerns over
pollution, waste, natural resource depletion, climate change and the like continue to
fuel the CSR discussion and heighten expectations for proactive corporate action.
After all, it is in the best interest of firms to protect for the sustainable future the long-
term availability of the resources on which they depend.
Activist organisations of all kinds have grown much more aggressive and effective in
bringing public pressure to bear on corporations, activists may target the most visible
or successful companies merely to draw attention to an issue:
According to Porter & Kramer (Strategy & Society. The link between Competitive
Advantage and CSR)
Four Prevailing Justifications for CSR:
1. Moral Obligation
2. Sustainability
3. License to Operate
4. Reputation.
Porter and Kramer make the point that all four schools of thought focus on the tension
between business and society rather than on interdependence.
1. The Moral appeal – Achieve commercial success in ways that honour ethical
values and respect people, communities and the natural environment.
2. Sustainability Justification - To balance long term objectives against short term
costs they incur, without a strategic understanding of CSR managers are prone to
postpone costs which can lead to far greater costs when the company is later judged to
have violated its social obligation.
3. The Licence to Operate – More pragmatic, it fosters constructive dialogue with
regulators, local citizens and activists. One reason that it is prevalent among
companies that depend on government consent such as mining and forestry, also at
companies that rely on the forbearance of their neighbours, such as chemical
manufacturing.
4. The Reputation Argument - focus on satisfying external audiences, in consumer
oriented companies, it often leads to high profile, cause related marketing campaigns
in stigmatized industries, such as chemical and energy, CSR initiatives as a form of
insurance, in a hope that its reputation for social consciousness will temper public
criticism in the event of a crisis.
All 4 schools of thought share the same weakness, they focus on the tension between
business and society rather than on their interdependence.
Each one creates a generic rationale that is not tied to the strategy of operations of any
specific company or the places in which it operates, consequently none of them is
sufficient to help a company identify, prioritize and address the social issue that matter
most or the ones on which it can make the biggest impact.