Title: MANAGING THE MULTINATIONAL CORPORATION
1MANAGING THE MULTINATIONAL CORPORATION
- Professor Stephen Young
- Strathclyde International Business Unit
- Strathclyde Business School
- 7th May 2004
2Foreign Direct Investment Worldwide, 2002
- World FDI Stock 7.1 trillion
- 10-fold increase since 1980
- 64,000 MNEs controlled 870,000 foreign affiliates
- Numbers employed by foreign affiliates 53
million - Value added of foreign affiliates 3.4 trillion,
about 10 of world GDP. - One third of world exports are intra-MNE.
- Source UNCTAD (2003)
3Definitions
- Multinational Enterprise
- Owns (in whole or in part), controls and manages
value-adding activities in more than one country.
-
- An orchestrator of a set of geographically
dispersed but interdependent assets. - Micromultinational (mMNE)
- SME that controls and manages value added
activities through constellations and investment
modes in more than one country.
4Whats Different about Multinational Management?
- Multiple operating environments
- Diverse pattern of consumer preferences,
channels, legal frameworks, etc. - Political demands and risks
- Need to mesh corporate strategy with host country
policies.
5Whats Different (Continued)?
- Global competitive game
- Multiple markets, new strategic options
- Currency fluctuation and exchange risk
- Economic performance measured in multiple
currencies - Organizational complexity and diversity
- Need to manage complex demands across barriers of
distance, time, language and culture.
6Transition from
International
Multinational
Global
Transnational
- Can involve major shifts in
- Marketing, manufacturing, distribution, RD
- strategies and location
- Financing
- Human resource policies and practices
- Management structures
- Management information systems
- Management compensation
7Evolving Mentality International to Transnational
- International Perspective Domestic company with
foreign appendages opportunistic FDI. - Multinational perspective Overseas markets
important managed as a federation of
quasi-autonomous subsidiaries. - Global Perspective World viewed as a single unit
of analysis. - Transnational Perspective Respond to global and
host country pressures simultaneously.
8International Corporate Strategy Model
Need for global integration
9Integration-Responsiveness Grid
10Wal-Mart Key to Global SuccessPresentation by
Vice-President, International Division, 16th
February 2000
- Benefits from globalization
- Global sourcing
- Knowledge transfer e.g. glazed donuts
- Global branding
- Strategy
- Learn globally, act locally.
11A Final Word Risk of Globalization Glaucoma
- Blindness to everything but global forces
- Short-sightedness to localizing forces
As the 1990s were drawing to a close, the
world had changed course, and Coca-Cola had not.
We were operating as a big, slow, insulated,
sometimes even insensitive global company and
we were doing it in an era when nimbleness,
speed, transparency and local sensitivity had
become absolutely essential. Douglas Daft, CEO,
Coca-Cola, March 2000
12Evolution of Multinational Organization Structures
- Hierarchical Structures
- Export Department
- International Division
- Global structures
- (Product / Geography / Function / Customer)
- Matrix structures
- Heterarchical Structures
13MultinationalMatrix Structure
14Multinational Hierarchy
Multinational Heterarchy
Hedlund Bartlett Ghoshal
15Multinational Expansion Strategies
(a) Host-market production
(b) Product-specialisation for a global or
regional market
(c) Production / process-specialisation for a
global or regional market
16The Determinants of Subsidiary Roles and Mandates
- What is a mandate?
- Full-scope and limited scope mandates
- Key success factors associated with attaining
mandates - Existence of champions
- Subsidiary competence
- Stage in product life cycle, etc.
- Are mandates allocated or earned?
17Early Model of Subsidiary Roles / Mandates(White
Poynter, 1984)
- Miniature Replica Subsidiaries produce and
market some of the parent product lines in the
host country. - Rationalized Manufacturer Subsidiaries produce
component parts or products for regional or
global markets (usually within the MNE). - Product Specialist Subsidiary develops,
produces and markets a limited product line for
regional / global markets World product
Mandate. - Strategic Independent Autonomous subsidiary.
18Organizing Framework for Subsidiary Development
Parent Company Devt
Internal Devt
Host Country Devt
19Unleash Innovation in Foreign Subsidiaries
- Four possible approaches
- Give seed money to subsidiaries
- Use formal requests for proposals
- Encourage subsidiaries to be incubators
- Build international networks
- Source Birkinshaw Hood, Harvard Business
Review, March 2001