Title: CMA Executive Program International Business Module
1CMA Executive Program- International Business
Module
2Agenda
- Overview of the Module
- International Business, International Strategy
Internationalization - Case Global Company
- International Market Expansion framework
- Case Cameron Auto Parts A B
- Case Global Enterprises
3International Business Perspectives
- World
- Regions
- Country
- Industry
- Company
- Individual
4External Drivers of Globalization
- Several forces are driving companies around the
world to globalize by expanding their
participation in foreign markets.
5Scope of International Business
- A. Outward Activities
- Exporting
- Licensing
- Joint Ventures
- Direct Investment
- B. Inward Activities
- Importing/Sourcing
- Licensee
- Domestic JV partner
- Subsidiary of Foreign Parent
6Global Strategy Levers
- Global Market Participation
- Global Products Services
- Global Location of Activities
- Global Marketing
- Global Competitive Moves
7- The Value Chain Upstream and Downstream
Activities
A firm that competes in the international market
must decide how to spread the activities among
countries. Central to this decision is the need
to distinguish upstream from downstream
activities.
Developed by Cool Pictures and MultiMedia
Presentations
8Is offshoring a good thing or not? For Canada?
9Canadian Industry Punching Out Stronger Dollar
and Low-cost Alternatives are sending Jobs
Offshore GM Jan23, 2004
- Nortel 1500 jobs
- Levis Strauss Company 1200 jobs
- Bauer Nike Hockey 321 jobs
- Camco (refrigerators stoves) 800 jobs
- Roots 200 jobs
- Swift Denim 600 jobs
- International - Multi-foods 135 jobs
- Canam Manac (truck trailers) 245 jobs
10Is Your Job Next?
- By 2015 roughly 3.3 million U.S. business
processing jobs will have moved offshore - U.S. service jobs lost to offshoring will
increase at a rate of 30 to 40 over next five
years - Software developers - 60/hr in U.S. vs 6/hr in
India
11(No Transcript)
12(No Transcript)
13Offshorings Value to India
- Benefit per 1 of U.S. off-shore Spending in 2002
- Offshoring Sector Labour 0.10
- Profits 0.10
- Local Suppliers 0.09
- Government Taxes Central 0.03
- State 0.01
- Net Benefit 0.33
14(No Transcript)
15(No Transcript)
16Global Organization
- Structure
- Management Processes
- People
- Culture
17Internationalization Company Exercise
- Which of the companies is a transnational
company? - Why?
18Characteristics of a Global Oriented Company
- Focus/vision - complexity of world differences
similarities - Orientation - Geocentric vs Poly or Ethno
- Mktg Strategy - extension,adaptation,creation
- RD Strategy - integrated across regions
- HR Policy - best people
- New Product Developt - global mkt needs
- Manufacturing - lowest cost for global needs
- Financial Policy - global sourcing
- Investment Policy - cross-subsidization
- Operating Style/Communications - integrated,
interactive across up - Partnerships - competencies for world leadership
- Score Keeping - share of world mkt
- Attitude/Mindset - Capabilities - Activities -
- Performance
19Stages of International Development
20A Transnational Company
- Links
- the markets of the world
- the resources of the world
- on a profitable basis
21Framework For Global Strategy
Build on the Foundation of a Unique Competitive
Position.
Emphasize a Consistent Positioning Strategy
across International Markets.
Establish a Clear Home Base for Each Distinct
Business.
Global Strategy
Leverage Product-Line Home Bases at Different
Locations.
Disperse Activities to Extend Home Base
Advantages.
Source Adapted from Michael E. Porter,
Competing Across Locations Enhancing
Competitive Advantage through a Global Strategy,
in Michael E. Porter (ed.), On Competition
(Boston Harvard Business School Press, 1998),
pp. 309-350.
Coordinate and Integrate Dispersed Activities.
22A Decision Making Perspective
- Grow domestically or internationally?
- If internationally, which markets?
- Which mode of entry?
- What kind of market entry strategy?
- How to manage international activity for superior
performance?
23Assessing Your Readiness For International Markets
- What do you look for? Why?
- Cameron Case
24Assessing Readiness For International Business
- Management Audit - attitude, commitment,
adaptiveness, experience - Product/Service Audit - unique/niche, strong fit
or potential, quality service - Financial Audit - cash flow, investment capital,
vulnerability/capacity - RD Audit - commitment willingness to adapt to
market - Intelligence System Audit - mkt
opportunities/reqts, partners, competition
25Choosing Markets Entry Modes
- Choosing Markets
- Alternative Modes of Entry
- Case - Cameron Deals
26Screening International Markets
- Macro Level - General Market Potential
- (Political, Economic, Social, Geography)
- General Market Relating to Product/Service
- (Mkt Size, Stage of Mkt Development, Cultural
acceptance, Grwth Trends of Similar products,
Taxes duties) - Micro Level Research
- (Ease of entry, Competition, Cost of entry,
Product acceptance, Sales Profit Projections,
Comfort - Feel) - Corporate Factors Influencing Implementation
27Country Risk Ratings
- GNP Per Capita - ()
- Propensity To Invest - ()
- Reserves to Import Ratio - ()
- Current Account Balance - ()
- Export Growth Rate - ()
- Export Variability - (mixed)
- Net Foreign Debt To Exports - (-)
- Debt Service Difficulty - (-)
- Political Instability - (-)
- Ratings Provided By - Euromoney, Institutional
investor
28Modes Of Entry
- Indirect Exporting
- Direct Exporting
- Licensing
- Joint Ventures
- Direct Investment
- Amount of commitment, risk, control, profit
potential increases as you move down the list
29Example Cameron Enters The UK
- Visited customer while on vacation in Scotland
- Customer offers to license the coupling product
technology with exclusive rights to the UK market - Terms - 100,000 transfer fee plus 3 on first
million of sales, 2 thereafter, technology
flowback clause - Would you accept the deal? What else would you
want to know?
30Scottish Company Profile
- Last Yrs Sales - 35 mil (lb), down from 44
- Assets - 11 mil, Equity 6.5 mil
- Net Profit - 1.5 mil
- Control - family
- MKT Coverage - 15 salesmen in UK, 2 -Europe, 1 -
Australia, 1 - NZ, 1 - India - Factory - old and larger than necessary, but seem
to have mfg knowhow - Reputation - excellent credit record, company 130
yrs old, good mkt contacts - Other - one of products recently took a beating
from competition - sales declined, replaced by
distributing other companies products - now 50
business, excess mfg capacity - Pricing - 100 index (price to dist in Canada)
15 (Import Duty) 10 (F Ins) 35 (markup)
160 vs 120 (Cdn Dist Price)
31Licensing Arrangement
- Camerons Return on Assets 42 (5/12)
- Normal Rate of Return (risk free) 12
- Excess Return (Value of Technology) 30
- Licensors Share (negotiable- 40) 12
- Sales to Asset Ratio (30/12) 2.5
- Royalty on sales (12/2.5) 4.8
32Current Relationship Is it working for Cameron?
For McTaggart?
- McTaggart paid Cameron 100,000lbs 3 on first
100k, 2 on rest Sales 4,950,000lbs _at_ .199
margin (35/176) 985,000lbs profit - Cameron 100,000lbs royalty fees upfront money
33Two More Deal Options Would you accept either?
- 1 - French Company - Europe Mkt
- Jt Venture (mfg)- 40 Cameron/60 French
- Cameron - 4mil, 4, supply until French mfg in
place - French Company Profile - currently a customer,
private company, no exp. mfg,high overhead, low
profits, good coverage in France but poor in
Germany Holland
- 2 - Scottish Company - Australia
- Jt Venture (finishing assembly)- 40 Cam/60
Scot - Cam - 1.6 mil, 2.5 royalty on sales
- Scot - used equipt, mgt, 4 on sales, supply
components
34Keys To Successful Partnering
- Complementary skills resources
- Mutual need
- Financial capability
- Relative size
- Compatible strategy objectives
- Complementary operating practices
- Compatible management teams
- Trustworthy committed
- Low risk of becoming a competitor
35Adapting Your Marketing Strategy
- Targeting Positioning -
- Product -
- Communications -
- Pricing -
- Distribution -
36Culture - learned norms based on attitudes,
values, beliefs
- Approaches - ethnocenric, polycentric, geocentric
- Areas Most Affected
- Business Protocol
- Communications
- Negotiations
- Marketing Mix
- Mgt of JVs Subs
3710 Most Common Mistakes
- No plan or strategy for intl business
- Insufficient Commitment
- Insufficient care in selecting reps, partners
- Opportunistic - chase orders vs systematic
- Neglect foreign market when domestic grows
- Failure to treat foreign distributors like
domestic reps - Unwillingness to modify products
- Cultural/language adjustment
- Failure to use outside expertise
- Failure to explore other entry options
38Summary - International Market Expansion
- Domestic - International emphasis?
- Assess your readiness to go international
- Proactive vs reactive approach
- Thorough market selection
- Flexibility wrt entry mode
- Willingness to adapt products practices
- Long term perspective
- Financial resources
- Human capital development
- Commitment
- Confidence - go for it!
39Managing Ongoing International Operations
- Commitment - time, people, investment
- Information - planning control
- Structure - separate, integrated
- Adaptive - mkts, activities
- Learning - ongoing
40Global Organizational Trade-offs
- Local Responsiveness - cultural differences
- Integration - efficiency, learning knowledge
transfer - Corporate culture
41Trade-off in Structuring International Activities
- Concentration VS Dispersion
- Efficiency
- Local Responsiveness
- Learning
42Examples
- ICI Paints
- Gillette
- Colgate Palmolive
- Volkswagen
- Best Foods
- Bayer
- Warner Lambert
43Warner Lambert Current Structure
- 3 lines of business Pharmaceutical, OTC,
Confectionary - Geographic structure 3 operating groups
responsible for 45 operating affiliates - Country managers are king
- Many country managers know only one line of
business - HQ staff is too large
- No interaction btwn HO line of business managers
and their international counterparts - Affiliate managers focus on their organization
rather than WL as a whole - Company is doing ok but missing opportunities
feel it could be better
44W-L Pharmaceuticals
- Globalization
- Product - chemical compounds
- High RD
- Easy Transport
- Global Diseases
- Knowledge sharing
- Global Competitors
- Regulatory EOS
- Supports OTC
- Localization
- Regulations by country
- Drug preferences
- Marketing practices
- Industry fragmentation
- incidence of diseases
45W-L OTC Business
- Globalization
- similar to pharma
- global consumer needs
- rationalize mfg
- brand-oriented business
- purchasing EOS
- global competitors
- advertising leverage
- global medication
- Localization
- health care a fashion
- local advertising reqt
- purchasing power varies
46W-L Confection Business
- Globalization
- gobal brands
- rationalize mfg
- advertising
- brand-oriented business
- purchasing EOS
- global competitors
- Localization
- food industry - regional
- iocal competitors can imitate
- pricing packaging must be local
- purchasing power differs across countries
47Globalization Issues
- Everything? Where? All businesses same structure?
What parts? Affiliates? - What happens to country heads? Buy-in?
- Career paths in company ?
- Support functions? Resource allocation?
- Compensation - business vs affiliate?
- Small countries?
- Decision making? globalization or americanization
48What Happened?
- Quickly moved to line of business model with HQ
in NJ - 2700 jobs eliminated over 5 years - Two businesses - Pharma Consumer
- Later split consumer into two - OTC Confection
- Outside triad - new division called Lamea (Latin
America, ME, Asia) - Europe - plants closed, new products introduced
(e.g., Listerine) - Each affiliate - line of business head, some
country managers assumed these roles - Host system or condominium rules for support
services - Results from 91 to 95 - Sales -5 B to 7B, NI -
35m to 740, EPS - .26 to 5.48
49Global Enterprises Case
- Issues Management? Strategy? Structure?
- Different perspectives levels corporate,
business, geography - Conflict is not necessarily bad it just needs
to be regulated channeled - Short term investment decisions need to consider
long term strategies - Management development succession
50Takeaways -
- Why globalization - competitive challenges
opportunities, goals, CEO - Evolving process - learning
- Communication - buy-in of key people
- Trade-offs will always exist