Title: International strategy
1International strategy
- Creating value in global markets
2International strategy Overview
- International diversification as strategy
- Sources of national industry advantage
- Motivations and risks of expanding abroad
- Two opposing strategic forces cost reduction and
local adaptation - Four basic strategies
- Four basic types of entry modes
3International diversification as strategy
- International diversification presents
opportunities for performance enhancement - Trade across nations to exceed trade within
nations by 2015 - Markets often dispersed across the globe
- Investment in developing nations
4Economic inequities across globe persist
- Latin American incomes grew by 6 in two decades
- Average income declines in Eastern Europe and
sub-Saharan Africa - 1.3 billion people live on less than 1 per day
5Economic inequities present opportunities
- Such populations also have unsatisfied needs
- 2006 Nobel peace prize awarded to Grameen Bank
- Offers micro loans as low as 20
- Supports investment in such capital expenditures
such as buying a cow - Why do economies develop at different rates?
6Factors affecting national competitiveness
- Four attributes affect a nations competitiveness
in a particular industry - Factor conditions
- Demand conditions
- Related and supporting industries
- Firm strategy, structure, and rivalry
7Factor conditions
- Factors of production that are industry and firm
specific - Labor
- Skill level, education
- Infrastructure
- Transportation systems
- Telecommunications systems
- Banking system
8Demand conditions
- Customer expectations set performance standards
for local firms - Higher local demand leads local firms to develop
national advantage - Strong, trend-setting local market helps local
firms anticipate global trends
9Related and supporting industries
- Supplying industries
- Enables efficient management of production inputs
- Strong supplier base adds downstream efficiency
- Related industries
- Enables coordination within industry
- High probability of new entrants forces existing
firms to become more competitive
10Firm strategy, structure, and rivalry
- Rivalry puts pressure on local firms to innovate
and improve - Local conditions affect firm strategy
- German companies tend to be hierarchical
- Italian companies tend to be smaller and run more
like extended families - Strategy and structure help to determine in which
types of industries a nation's firms will excel
11Factors affecting national competitiveness Final
word
- Firms successful in global markets usually first
succeeded in intensely competitive home markets
12Diamond of national advantage
13Factors to consider in going abroad
Foreign market
Home market
Foreign competition
Existing producers
Existing producers
Overseas expansion
Economies of scale Reduced home market
dependence Customers expanding abroad
14International expansion motivations
- Motivations
- Increased market size enhances economies of scale
- Increased revenue and asset base
- Extending life cycle of product when home market
cycle in maturity - Optimizing physical location of value chain
activities
15International expansion motivations
- Optimizing physical location of value chain
activities - Performance enhancement through location
resources - Cost reductions through lower labor and operating
costs - Downside risks of exploitation
- Risk reduction management of currency
fluctuations
16Outsourcing and offshoring
- Outsourcing farming out value chain activities
to other firms - Offshoring shifting value chain activity from
domestic to foreign location - Both increasing due to several factors
- Decrease in transportation and coordination costs
- Homogenization of customer needs
- Growth of market philosophy and decline of
command economies
17International expansion risks
- Political risk
- Terrorism (e.g. 9/11, kidnappings of 1970s and
1980s) - Unresolved conflicts (Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, Kashmir, former Soviet republics,
Yugoslavia, Latin American drug wars, the war on
terror) - Political integration of divided nations
(Germany, Koreas, Chinas)
18International expansion risks
- Economic risks
- National fiscal and monetary systems
- Currency fluctuations
- Growth of WTO and trade blocs
- Trade barriers
- Privatization in Eastern Europe and China
19International expansion risks
- Organizational and management risks
- Coordination costs
- Logistics
- Cultural diversity and other country differences
- Marketing and product modifications
20International expansion risks
- Cultural risks variations in culture across the
globe
21Opposing forces in international strategy
- Pressure to lower costs
- Competitive pressures drive firms toward
increased efficiency - Pressure for local adaptation
- National and cultural differences drive firms to
tailor products to local preferences - Relative strength of opposing forces leads to
four basic strategic choices
22Strategic choices
23International strategic choices
- International
- Multidomestic
- Global level
- Transnational
24International strategy
- Pressures for cost reduction and local adaptation
are low - Standardized product extending into foreign
markets - Local adaptation very limited
- Centralization of some value chain activities
- E.g., McDonalds and Kellogg centralize RD and
product development but decentralize production
and marketing
25International strategy risks
- Centralization may fail to take full advantage of
optimally distributed value chain - Lack of local adaptation risks customer alienation
26Global strategy
- High emphasis on cost reduction and control and
little on local adaptation - Economies of scale
- Corporate office provides central coordination
27Global strategy risks
- Concentration of activities in one location
- Output must be exported
- Isolated from target markets
- Makes rest of company dependent one or few
locations - Mistakes multiplied across international
operations
28Multidomestic strategy
- High emphasis on local adaptation with low
emphasis on cost efficiencies - Decentralized subsidiaries operate independently
from each other - Adaptation may not be limited only to product but
may extend to other activities (e.g., personnel
practices) - Array of potential adaptation options
29Multidomestic strategy risks
- Local adaptation
- Cost
- Specific needs often difficult to identify
- Increased complexity difficult to manage
30Transnational Strategy
- Tradeoffs of efficiency, local adaptation,
learning - High levels of decentralization
- Downstream activities more likely to be
decentralized - Upstream activities more likely to be centralized
- Interdependent divisions may produce components
and products for one another
31International strategic choices
32Modes of entry into international markets
- Exporting
- Licensing
- Franchising
- Strategic alliance
- Joint venture
- Wholly owned subsidiary
33Exporting
- Standardized product extending into foreign
markets - Domestic-based export department, overseas sales
branch, traveling sales representative,
foreign-based distributors or export agents
34Exporting
- Advantage avoids expense of establishing
operations in host country - Disadvantages
- High costs of transportation and possible tariffs
- Low control over handling of products in foreign
market
35Licensing
- Firm sells rights to foreign firm to manufacture
and market products in host country in exchange
for royalty - Advantage licensee assumes risks (fixed and
variable costs of mfg., and mktg.) - Disadvantages little control, limited returns,
risk that licensee will learn how to develop
product on its own
36Franchising
- Special case of licensing
- Broader range of factors and longer term of
license - Often involves complete business model (e.g.,
fast food franchises)
37Strategic alliances and joint ventures
- Shares risk and resources with firm in host
country - Host country firm knows the market
- Risks of failure from partner incompatibility and
conflict - Often an intermediate step towards wholly owned
subsidiary
38Wholly owned subsidiary
- Direct investments in other countries
- Foreign direct investment (FDI/DFI)
- Home firm puts up 100 of equity
- Virtually complete control within legal and
regulatory constraints - Decentralized subsidiaries operate independently
from each other
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40International strategy summary
- International business another form of
diversification - National advantage in specific industries a
product of four factors diamond of national
advantage (Exhibit 7.1, p. 233) - Motivations and risks
41International strategy summary
- Four basic strategies
- International
- Global
- Multidomestic
- Transnational
- Four basic modes of entry
- Exporting, licensing and franchising, strategic
alliances and joint ventures, wholly owned
subsidiaries