1 / 16

Global Strategy

Global Strategy. Global Strategy. Strategy: “the action managers take to attain the goals of a firm” General purpose: maximize/make profit Differentiate products, increase price: add value, features, quality, service Achieve low cost Key means: allocation of scarce resources to attain goals.

tad
Download Presentation

Global Strategy

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. Global Strategy

  2. Global Strategy • Strategy: “the action managers take to attain the goals of a firm” • General purpose: maximize/make profit • Differentiate products, increase price: add value, features, quality, service • Achieve low cost • Key means: allocation of scarce resources to attain goals

  3. Activity Value Chain • Firm as a chain of discrete value creating activities • Primary • upstream activities, manufacturing • downstream activities: marketing, sales, after sales service • Support • infrastructure (general and administrative) • human resources • research and development

  4. Global Expansion Benefits • Earn greater return from distinctive skills, core competences • Inimitable or difficult to imitate skills in value chain • Realize location economies • Choice of FDI location • Create multinational network of activities (global web) • Realize greater experience curve economies, which reduce the cost of value creation • Learning effects, economies of scale Unit costs Experience curve B A Accumulated output

  5. Pressures forGlobal Integration & Local Responsiveness High Ball bearings, wheat Cost Reduction (Global Integration) Pressures Cosmetics, food, household goods Low Low High Local Responsiveness Pressures Differences in - consumer tastes/preferences - infrastructure/practices - distribution channels - host government needs/requirements

  6. Strategic Choice “Transnational” Strategy High “Global” Strategy Cost Reduction (Global Integration) Pressures “International” Strategy “Multidomestic” Strategy Low Low High Local Responsiveness Pressures

  7. Multidomestic MNC HK UK Chile USA India Japan Mexico Decentralized Federation - Many key assets, responsibilities and decisions localized Personal Control - Informal HQ-Sub relationship, simple financial controls Multidomestic Mentality - Management sees overseas operations as portfolio of independent businesses

  8. International MNC HK UK Chile USA India Japan Mexico Coordinated Federation - Key assets, responsibilities decisions localized Administrative Control - Centralized HQ control, formal planning and control, tight HQ-Sub linkage International Mentality - Management sees overseas operations as appendages to a domestic operation

  9. Global MNC HK Chile UK USA India Japan Mexico Centralized Hub - Most strategic assets, resources, responsibilities and decisions centralized Operational Control - Tight HQ control of decisions, resources, information Global Mentality - Management sees overseas operations as delivery pipelines to a unified global market

  10. Transnational MNC HK Chile UK USA Japan India Mexico Networked Organization - Distributed, specialized resources and capabilities Interdependent Units - large flows of components, products, resources, people, and information Transnational Mentality - Complex process of coordination and cooperation in an environment of shared decision making

  11. International Strategic Alliances • Cooperative agreements between competitors from different countries • Advantages • Facilitate entry into a foreign country • Allow fixed costs of new products and processes to be shared • Bring together complementary skills and assets • Help establish industry standards in technology • Allow reduction of operating costs,e.g., shared training, purchasing • Disadvantages • Give competitors a low cost route to new technology / markets • Disproportional benefit accrual to partners

  12. Making alliances work which partner? • A suitable partner • Helps achieve strategic goals • Adds needed, valuable capabilities • Shares the firm’s vision for purpose of the alliance • Is not likely to exploit the alliance to its own ends • Steps to select a partner • Thorough background check via public sources • Advice from third parties who have personal experience with likely partner(s) • A lot of face-to-face time with likely partner(s) in their environment

  13. Making alliances work - What Structure? • Protect technology/know-how that is not intended to be transferred • Draw a solid contract with safeguards against opportunism • Achieve equitable gain through agreed swaps of technology the other wants • Seek creditable, clearly articulated commitment to partner “behavior” a-priori

  14. Making alliances work - How to manage? • Show sensitivity to cultural differences that explain different managerial styles • Build trust • Set up framework for formal and informal face-to-face meetings to create a common value system • Build informal network of personal relationships • Learn from partners • Apply the knowledge within your own organization • Brief your employees on partner strengths

More Related