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Management in other Chinese Enterprises

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Deng Xiaoping's market socialism with Chinese characteristics ... Basis of Chinese familism is reinforced by the moral values and obligations ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Management in other Chinese Enterprises


1
Management in other Chinese Enterprises
  • Week 3

2
Converging management?
  • Deng Xiaopings market socialism with Chinese
    characteristics
  • Management structures in SOEs follow traditional
    lines
  • Impacts on management practice
  • Listed SOEs
  • Rise of private firms (SME sector)
  • International Joint Ventures
  • Is convergence occurring? impact of
    globalisation international best practice
    causes management practices to converge

3
Chinese Management
  • Wah (2001) Cultural Values suggests
  • The influence of Chinese cultural values on
    managerial practices is so significant that it
    has created the distinguishing characteristics of
    the Chinese managerial system
  • The unique characteristics of Chinese
    organisations include
  • highly centralised decision-making
  • low structuring of activities
  • paternalistic style of leadership
  • strong emphasis on collectivism and group
    behaviour
  • strong family management and ownership

4
The Characteristics - 1
  • The influence of Chinese cultural values on
    organisational and managerial practices can be
    classified into
  • People Management
  • Seniority and internal promotion commonly
    practised
  • In larger enterprises use of performance criteria
    evaluation
  • Organisational Structure
  • Family oriented
  • Common to mix family business
  • Very hierarchical
  • do not have a formal or explicit organisation
    chart
  • implies that the management position is based on
    the individual position and seniority in the
    family hierarchy

5
The Characteristics - 2
  • Leadership Style
  • Paternalistic style of leadership is particularly
    dominant
  • Paternalism and nepotism are noted as dominant
    characteristics
  • Basis of Chinese familism is reinforced by the
    moral values and obligations demonstrated by the
    paternalistic leader
  • As long as the subordinates do not commit any
    major faults, the Chinese leader does not
    normally discharge subordinates merely based on
    unsatisfactory performance

6
The Characteristics - 3
  • Business Orientation and Strategy
  • A Chinese business leader keeps an eye on the
    distant horizon while always paying close
    attention to the past and present
  • The ability to view future events is critical
    because it provides the organisation with a broad
    perspective
  • Emphasis on the virtue of thrift means that one
    has to be frugal in the use of limited resources
    (material, capital, and human resources)
  • This has resulted in improving productivity and
    overall profitability

7
Weaknesses
  • Wah suggests that this style has inherent
    weaknesses
  • As the Chinese family business organisations
    grow, the weaknesses of Chinese family business
    management will start to override the strengths
  • In order to ensure continuity of the family
    business, it is essential for the management to
    change from being family managed to
    professionally-managed
  • The real challenge is to maintain its
    entrepreneurship and flexibility while still
    being professionally managed

8
Adaptations needed
  • Key issues to consider
  • Separate family matters from business matters by
    practising a comprehensive and reliable
    accounting system
  • Redefine the business direction, corporate vision
    and mission statement as well as developing a set
    of corporate core values
  • Create a comprehensive organisation structure
    with clear line of responsibility for each
    position in the hierarchy
  • Develop an effective and equitable performance
    appraisal and reward system
  • Use proper channel of communication (open and
    two-way communications) and upgrade meeting
    effectiveness
  • Create a learning organisation by continuously
    develop management capabilities and upgrading of
    skills
  • Adopt a more participative or democratic
    leadership style

9
Special IngredientGuanxi
  • Constructed on personal relations and exchange of
    favours
  • Brings obligations (renqing) to beneficiaries
  • Guanxi is reciprocal
  • Breaking reciprocal rules affect on social
    status or face
  • Luos Guanxi and Business (2001)
  • Cites 1996 survey of 11 business determinants
  • Guanxi was only item consistently chosen by
    business managers as key success factor

10
Guanxi
  • Guanxi
  • Inter-organizational network
  • Strategic factor to overcome shortages
  • Gain advantages
  • Large firms (SOEs) lack competitive mindsets
  • Therefore little motivation to cultivate Guanxi
  • Luos minicases --
  • Shanghai VW success due to Guanxi

11
Pervasive influence
  • Guanxi is external
  • Chen at al studied internal management effects of
    Guanxi on trust
  • Basic experiment.
  • General Manager promotes a middle manager
    (several scenarios)
  • Then revealed promoted executive was..
  • Personally related
  • From same town
  • Mere colleague
  • Trust in GMs decision decreases higher up the
    scale the extent of Guanxi
  • Decision making INSIDE company should be Guanxi
    neutral

12
Guanxi Career Progression
  • Wong Slater (2002)
  • Interviewed Chinese executives in private
    companies in Beijing Shanghai
  • Strong effect of Guanxi on career development
  • Can see some parallels in western knowledge
    economy
  • Individuals need to shape their future through
    continually acquiring new knowledge and
    transferable skill

13
Convergence at the top?
  • Typically Chinese business leadership is passed
    through the family
  • Luke Ng (2004) argues that the most successful
    companies (Mainland off) are developing western
    management structures around family succession
  • Mainly because children of business leaders are
    receiving western educations

14
Further Dimensions
  • Superstition in decision making
  • Superstition is widespread in all communities
  • Can be seen as an asset in decision making
  • Tsang (2004)
  • The outcome of conflict is often indecision
    because of the difficulty of
  • Choosing between equally attractive or
    unattractive alternatives
  • Superstition breaks the deadlock by indicating a
    superior alternative

15
Ding Akhtars Matrix
16
Ding Akhtar
  • Quadrant 1
  • enterprises that are caught up in organizational
    inertia through the iron rice-bowl tradition of
    lifelong employment accompanied by an
    undifferentiated competitive strategy
  • these enterprises exemplify the hard divergence
    cases
  • Quadrant 2
  • enterprises with a dominant cost strategy that
    positively affects a
  • limited number of HRM practices aimed at
    developing human capital
  • they represent a case of soft divergence from a
    past dominated by iron rice-bowl practices

17
Ding Akhtar
  • Quadrant 3
  • enterprises that emphasize the quality strategy,
    which influences HRM practices extensively but
    indirectly through the strategic role of the
    human resource function
  • this group of enterprises respects a
    discontinuity from the traditional HRM practices
    and a soft convergence with the strategic role
    of the human resources function
  • Quadrant 4
  • enterprises where innovation strategy is
    dominant.
  • this strategy affects HRM practices directly,
    indirectly and extensively
  • these enterprises may well represent the case of
    hard convergence

18
Transfer abroad
  • Zhang 2003 study of HR practices in 6 UK
    subsidiaries of Chinese companies
  • Business is no longer centrally planned by their
    parent companies, and subsidiary managers have
  • some autonomy
  • Line managers are involved in some HR activities
  • Market-led recruitment, employment contract and
    remuneration systems are emerging
  • The traditional job for life system is no longer
    dominant
  • The 6 companies recruited largely from the local
    market

19
Chinese Management in UK
  • The companies also use a UK remuneration
    structure and criteria for the salary and
    benefits of UK staff.
  • The variable adoption of UK practices has been a
    matter of choice
  • None of the companies recognise trade unions
  • The culture of personal support and harmonious
    relations has not been discarded
  • Employee welfare and communication are
    emphasised, while western style practices such as
    redundancy are reluctantly adopted
  • The influence of the Chinese national business
    system is still apparent in all of the companies.

20
Expatriates in China
  • Littrell (2003)
  • In hotel chains in China
  • Successful managers demonstrate
  • High relationship and task orientation
  • Subordinates in Chinese groups prefer leadership
    style in which leaders maintain harmonious
    considerate relationships with fellows and define
    clear-cut tasks for each member of the group
  • Chinese prefer authoritarian leadership style in
    which a benevolent and respected leader is not
    only considerate of his fellows but also able to
    take decisive and skilled action

21
JV organisational culture change
  • Hoon-Halbauer (1999) suggests
  • When Sino-Foreign JVs set up Chinese see 3
    classes of change
  • Structural organisation/management/pay
  • Behavioural skills/knowledge/leadership
  • Technological machinery/coordination/integration

22
Outcomes of change
  • Study of Beijing Jeep Shanghai VW
  • Anxiety
  • Tension
  • Resistance
  • 4 ambiguities
  • Environmental
  • Structural
  • Cultural
  • Role
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