Strategy and Structure in Developing Countries: Business ...
Strategy and Structure
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Transcript of Strategy and Structure
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
After studying this chapter, you should be able to:
1. Articulate the relationship between multinational strategy and structure
2. Understand how institutions and resources affect structure, learning, and innovation
3. Outline the challenges associated with learning, innovation, and knowledge management
4. Participate in two leading debates on multinational structure, learning, and innovation
5. Draw implications for action
PRESSURES FOR COST REDUCTIONSAND LOCAL RESPONSIVENESS
integration-responsiveness framework - means by which MNEs primarily confront two sets of pressures: cost reductions local responsiveness
local responsiveness - unique consumer preferences and host country demands on cost reductions
STRATEGIC CHOICES
home replication strategy – emphasizes international replication of home country-based competencies such as production scales, distribution efficiencies, and brand power
localization (multidomestic) strategy – focuses on a number of foreign countries/regions, each of which is regarded as a stand-alone “local” market worthy of significant attention and adaptationglobal standardization strategy - relies on development and distribution of standardized products worldwide to reap maximum benefits from low-cost advantages
STRATEGIC CHOICES
center of excellence - MNE subsidiary explicitly recognized as a source of important capabilities, with the intention that these capabilities be leveraged by and/or disseminated to other subsidiaries
worldwide (or global) mandate - charter to be responsible for one MNE function throughout the world
transnational strategy - attempt by an MNE tobe cost efficient and locally responsive
ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURES
international division - typically set up when firms initially expand abroad, often engaging in a home replication strategy
geographic area structure - organizing according to different geographic areas (countries and regions)
country or regional manager - business leader of a specific geographic area or region
global product division - treats each productdivision as a stand-alone entity with full worldwide—as opposed to domestic—responsibilities
FORMAL AND INFORMAL EXTERNAL INSTITUTIONS
formal institutional frameworks erected by various home and host country governments:to protect domestic employment, the British government taxes British MNEs’ foreign earnings at a higher rate than their domestic earningspolitical reasons discourage or ban MNEs from structuring certain operations in “sensitive” countrieshost country governments often attract, encourage, or coerce MNEs into undertaking activities that they may otherwise abdicate
FORMAL AND INFORMAL EXTERNAL INSTITUTIONS
informal institutional frameworks erected by various home and host country governments:managers contemplating such moves have to weigh the vocal backlash against such activities that often result in domestic job lossessourcing decisions are guided by the informal norm of reciprocity, i.e. one country’s suppliers are involved with Boeing, airlines based in that country are more likely to buy Boeing aircraft
Formal and Informal INTERNAL Institutions
MNEs are governed internally by various formal and informal rules of the game:systems of evaluation, reward, and punishment in place based on formal ruleshome country national as the head of a subsidiary (such as an American for a subsidiary of a US-headquartered MNE in India)host country national (such as an Indian for the same subsidiary)third country national (such as an Australian for the same subsidiary)
Formal and informal INTERNAL Institutions
Staffing approaches may reflect strategic differences:home country nationals, especially long-time employees of the same MNE at home, are more likely to have developed a better understanding of the informal workings of the firmappointing host and third country nationals is indicative of an MNEs’ preference for a localization strategyformal internal rules on how the MNE is governed may reflect conscientious strategic choicesinformal internal rules are often taken for granted and are deeply embedded in administrative heritages, thus making them difficult to change
RESOURCE BASED CONSIDERATIONSVRIO framework
value - does the new structure (such as matrix) adds concrete value?
innovation – crucial difference between an innovator and a profitable innovator
rarity - to improve global coordination, many MNEs spend millions to equip themselves with enterprise resource planning (ERP) packages
imitability - formal structures are easier to observe and imitate than informal structures
organization - building an informal, flexible, invisible matrix) is more likely to outperform
rivals
KNOWLEDGE MANAGMENT
explicit knowledge - codifiable (that is, can be written down and transferred with little loss of its richness)
tacit knowledge - noncodifiable and its acquisition and transfer require hands-on practice
R&D - an especially crucial arena for knowledge management
global virtual teams - do not meet face to face to transfer knowledge
decentralized R&D - performed by different locations and teams around the world virtually guarantees persistent heterogeneity in the solutions generated
KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS
many MNEs prefer to invent everything internally“open innovation” relies on more collaborative research among various internal units, external firms, and university labs“not invented here” syndrome - causes some managers to resist accepting ideas from other unitslimited absorptive capacity - ability to recognize value of new information, assimilate, and apply it