1 / 40

Small Business as Multinational Companies: Overcoming Barriers and Finding Opportunities

Learn about the definitions of small businesses and entrepreneurship, the stages of internationalization, how to overcome barriers, and strategies for finding international customers, partners, and distributors.

Download Presentation

Small Business as Multinational Companies: Overcoming Barriers and Finding Opportunities

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 6 Small Business as Multinational Companies: Overcoming Barriers and Finding Opportunities

  2. Learning Objectives • Understand the basic definitions of small business and entrepreneurship • Explain how small businesses can begin as global start-ups or follow the stages of internationalization • Understand how small businesses can overcome barriers to internationalization

  3. Learning Objectives • Identify when a small business or entrepreneurs should consider going international • Understand how small businesses or entrepreneurs can find customers, partners, or distributors aboard • Understand how new venture wedge strategies can be used in foreign markets

  4. What Is a Small Business? • “Small” business – many definitions • UN: less than 500 employees • The popular press: less than 100 employees • U.S. small business administration has more complex definitions • Definition varies by industry, sales revenue, and the number of people

  5. What Is a Small Business? • “Small” businesses • Over 98% businesses in Europe, N. America, and Japan • Employ more than 50% of local populations • Produce nearly 50% of the countries’ GNPs • Create more than 2/3 of new jobs

  6. What Is an Entrepreneur? • Entrepreneur: person who creates new ventures that seek profit and growth • Faces risks and uncertainty of new and untested business • New ventures: entering a new market • Offer a new product or services • Introduce a new method technology or innovative use of raw materials

  7. Internationalization and the Small Business • Two models • Small business stage model: process of following incremental stages of internationalization • Global start-up: company that begins as a multinational company

  8. Small Business Stage Model: Six Stages • Stage 1: Passive exporting • Company fills international orders but does not seek export business • Stage 2: Export management • Specifically seeking exports—usually rely on indirect exporting • Stage 3. Export department • Significant resources dedicated to seek increased sales from exports

  9. Small Business Stage Model • Stage 4: Sales branches • High demand justifies setting up local sales office • Stage 5: Production abroad • Use licensing, joint ventures of direct investment • Difficult stage because of the risk of failure • Stage 6: The transnational • Develop global integrated network

  10. Small Business Global Start-up • Key elements favoring global start-ups • Dispersed human resources • International sources of venture capital • The existence of a global demand • The lack of a geographically protected market • The necessity of worldwide sales to support the venture • The potential to avoid later resistance to internationalization

  11. Small Business E-Commerce • Web sites offer a rapid way to go international • Web site configured for e-commerce is low cost • Quick way to sell across national borders

  12. Advantages of Small-Business E-Commerce • Ability of small firms to compete with other companies • Creates the possibility and opportunity for more diverse people to start a business • Convenient and easy way of doing business • Low cost to compete • Makes domestic products available in other countries

  13. Challenges of Small-Business E-Commerce • Managing upgrades • Language barriers • Shipping and returns • Assuring security for a Web site • Fraudulent activities online • Receiving international payments • Costs required to maintain the site • Finding and retraining qualified employees

  14. Overcoming Small-Business Barriers to Internationalization • Liabilities of newness: a large percentage of new businesses fail within a year • Liabilities of size: lack of scale to produce goods or services as efficiently as larger companies

  15. Overcoming Small-Business Barriers to Internationalization • Managers’ limited international experience • Managers’ negative attitudes • Belief that venture too risky and not profitable • Competition seen as domestic • Ignoring of international opportunities

  16. Developing a Small-Business Global Culture • Global culture: managerial and worker values that view strategic opportunities as global and not just domestic • Framework to understand international operations

  17. Small-Business Global Culture • Characteristics of decision makers affecting development of a global culture • Perceived psychic distance to foreign markets • International experience • Risk aversion • Overall attitudes toward international strategies

  18. Developing a Small-Business Global Culture • Changing attitudes of key decision makers • Being close in culture and geography • Overcome skepticism regarding the international markets • Positive attitudes more necessary for global start-ups

  19. Exhibit 6.1: Attitudinal Differences Concerning Internationalization

  20. Duties and the Personal Life of the Small-Business CEO • For small firm, opening new markets is CEO’s responsibility. • CEO must bear social and business costs • Increased travel and stress from undertaking a new venture • Can adversely affect family life • Takes away from the daily management

  21. Exhibit 6.2: Training and Knowledge Needs of Small Firm CEOs Entering Internationalization

  22. Size and Small Business Internationalization • Size barrier to internationalization • Larger firms have more resources to support international operations • Size is an issue only in the internationalization decision, however. • Eventually, international sales intensity of small firms exceed that of big firms. • International sales intensity: amount of international sales divided by total sales of the company

  23. Small Business Advantage • Speed becomes the small business advantage • Faster innovation • Can change products and internal operations faster • Speed can overcome size disadvantages • Larger firms must often overcome bureaucratic procedures

  24. Falling Barriers for Small Businesses • Barriers are becoming easier to overcome • Government support programs for small businesses are increasing • Trade agreements are making trade easier • Increase in small businesses engaged in international operations also makes it easier

  25. When Should a Small Business Go International? • If the following questions are answered positively, small business is ready. • Do we have a global product or service? • Do we have the managerial, organizational, and financial resources to internationalize? • Is there willingness to commit resources to face the risks of internationalization? • Is there a country in which the company feels comfortable doing business?

  26. When Should a Small Business Go International? (cont.) • Is there a profitable market for product or service? • Which country should be entered? • Do we have a unique product/service that is not easily copied by multinationals or local entrepreneurs? • Do location advantages exist upstream in the value chain? • Can we afford not to be a multinational?

  27. Exhibit 6.3: Questions to Consider in the Small Business Decision to Go International

  28. Exhibit 6.4 Steps in Picking a Foreign Market

  29. Country Ratings on Entrepreneurial Activity

  30. Getting Connected to the International Market • Participation strategies • Same participation options as larger firms • Exporting, licensing, joint ventures, and foreign direct investment • Most small businesses often emphasize exporting

  31. Finding Customers and Partners: Customer Contact Techniques • Trade shows • Catalog expositions • International advertising agencies and consulting firms • Government-sponsored trade missions • Direct contact

  32. Exhibit 6.5: Selected U.S. Government Programs for Making International Contacts

  33. Exhibit 6.6: International Trade Leads: A Web Sampler

  34. Exhibit 6.6: International Trade Leads: A Web Sampler

  35. Exhibit 6.6: International Trade Leads: A Web Sampler

  36. Ready to Go and Connected: A Synopsis • Finding the right overseas partner: the most important step • Find a good wedge to break into a new market

  37. New-Venture Strategies for Small Multinational Companies • Entry wedge: company’s competitive advantages for breaking into the established pattern of commercial activity

  38. First-Mover Advantage • Being the first to introduce a product or service • Must be innovative • Must be comprehensive • Must meet customer expectations in areas such as warranty and expected components • Technological leadership—most common source • Being first to use or introduce a new technology

  39. Copycat Business • Copycat Business • The “me too” strategy • Adopt existing products or services • Find a niche or slight innovation to attract customers

  40. Successful Copycat Moves • Be the first to a new standard • Go after the toughest customers • Play to different customer needs • Transfer the location • Become a dedicated supplier or distributor • Seek abandoned or ignored markets • Acquire existing business

More Related