Title: (Textbook) Behavior in Organizations, 8ed (A. B. Shani)
1(No Transcript)
2- BADM 633 Wk 13
- International Business Culture
3Hershey Plots Cadbury Bid
Chocolate Maker Could Link With Italy's Ferrero
to Counter Kraft's 16 Billion Offer
- WSJ 17 Nov 2009
- Chocolate giant Hershey Co. is in talks with
banks to line up billions of dollars to launch a
rival bid to Kraft Foods Inc.'s 16 billion offer
for British candy maker Cadbury PLC, said people
familiar with the matter. - Hershey, emboldened by improving financial
markets, looks much more willing than it did just
weeks ago to make a run at Cadbury, these people
said. The Pennsylvania maker of Hershey bars and
Reese's Peanut Butter Cups is considering a bid
of its own or with a partner such as Ferrero SpA,
the Italian maker of Tic-Tacs, Nutella hazelnut
spread and Ferrero Rocher chocolates. - Hershey Chief Executive David West in the last
two weeks has spoken with Ferrero bankers at
least twice about teaming up to buy Cadbury, one
person familiar with the matter said. Those
discussions are in preliminary stages and
financial specifics haven't been discussed
4 Heinz Seeks to Tap Mexico's Taste for
Ketchup Food Giant Pours It On to Promote
Flagship Product in Fast-Growing Emerging Market
- WSJ 24 Nov 2009
- Mexicans eat more ketchup by sales value than
consumers in all but eight other countries. Many
of them slather the thick red sauce on chicken,
pasta and eggseven pizza. At the start of 2007,
U.S. ketchup giant H.J. Heinz Co. held less than
1 of the Mexican ketchup market. In fact, Mexico
was such a low priority that Heinz had fewer than
10 salespeople in the country, which is nearly
three times as large as Texas. - Tuesday, when Heinz releases quarterly earnings,
its executives plan to boast that Heinz now
accounts for 12 of the ketchup poured in Mexico,
where a spokesman says the company now has 150
ketchup sales and marketing employees. - The shift illustrates Heinz is positioning itself
for growth in emerging markets. - Heinz's management, which CEO Wm. Johnson said
overlooked Mexico while chasing sales in China,
Russia, Indonesia and other emerging markets,
didn't begin focusing on the country until the
mid-2000s. Few restaurants in Mexico carried
Heinz ketchup and, at retail, it was mostly sold
in the imported-goods sections of grocery stores.
Even so, Mexico's overall retail sales of ketchup
had climbed more than 70 since 2000.
5 Heinz Seeks to Tap Mexico's Taste for
Ketchup Food Giant Pours It On to Promote
Flagship Product in Fast-Growing Emerging Market
6 Changing Demographics in a Global Economy
- United States dominance in world trade
- United States dominance in Foreign Direct
Investment - Dominance of United States multinational firms
- Centrally planned economies off-limits
7Changing Demographics -contd
- Anti-globalization debate
- Jobs
- Income
- Environment
- Spread of democracy
- Global terrorism
- Economic transformation
- Deregulation
- Privatization
- Legal systems
8 What are Laws ?
Slide 4-7
9Laws
Laws are societys values and standards that are
enforceable in the courts.
Slide 4-47
10 What are Ethics?
Slide 4-7
11Ethics
Ethics are the moral principles and values
that govern the actions and decisions of an
individual or group. They serve as guidelines
on how to act rightly and justly when faced with
moral dilemmas.
Slide 4-7
12UNDERSTANDING ETHICS
- Ethical principles vary from religion to
religion. True or false?
- FALSE - The five fundamental ethical
- principles are
- Do no harm
- Make things better
- Respect others
- Be fair
- Be loving
Slide 4-10
13UNDERSTANDING ETHICS
- What is right in one part of the world might not
be right in another part. True or false?
- FALSE - What people believe to be right may
- differ from one country to another, but this
- does not mean that what actually IS right
- differs.
- Ethics attempts to discover what IS right
- and wrong, regardless of accepted practice.
Slide 4-10
14UNDERSTANDING ETHICS
- Ethical principles change over time. True or
false?
- FALSE - The aforementioned five ethical
- principles have existed since the beginning
of - civilization and will remain so until its
end.
Slide 4-10
15UNDERSTANDING ETHICS
- Being honest is the most important ethical rule
of all. True or false?
- FALSE - In some situations, rare as they
- may be, other ethical considerations may
- take precedence.
- For example, during WWII, courageous
- men and women in Europe who hid Jews
- from the Nazis had to lie to the Gestapo.
Slide 4-10
16UNDERSTANDING ETHICS
- Sometimes, one not only has a right to keep
private things private, but has a duty not to do
so. True or false?
- TRUE - As with the example of lying above,
- the duty to maintain confidentiality is not
an - absolute moral obligation. When a patient
- tells his psychiatrist that he intends to
- commit murder, the psychiatrist has the
- right to not keep this information to
herself, - but has a duty not to do so.
Slide 4-10
17UNDERSTANDING ETHICS
- Avoiding harm is a moral imperative, but being
loving is not ethically required. True or false?
-
- TRUE - Whatever a persons relationship is
- to you, you have a duty to not harm him or
- her. Being loving, kind or compassionate
- might be better viewed as ideals to which we
- should aspire, rather than as principles of
- duty. If you fail to act charitably toward
the - driver who chops you off, you are not acting
- unethically (although you may be expressing
- the deepest aspects of your humanity).
Slide 4-10
18UNDERSTANDING ETHICS
- People often disagree about what is important in
life. True or false?
- TRUE - This is a sociological fact and says
- nothing about what should constitute the good
- life. Even if most people that you encounter
- believe acquiring wealth is their main
objective, - it does not follow that becoming rich and
- famous is a worthwhile goal. What they
- might be saying is that being famous will
- make me happy.
Slide 4-10
19Business Ethics
- Ethical issues in international business
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA)
- Moral obligations
- Ethical perceptions across cultures
20 A framework for understanding ethical
behavior
Slide 4-9
21Global Competition
- Ethics is it good business?
- Going Green
- vs.
- Increasing tockholder Equity
22- Rockefeller Rebellion Turns Up Heat on Exxon
- John D.'s Heirs Seek Change -- and Respect
- WSJ - May 24, 2008 Page A1
- Two decades ago, Neva Goodwin Rockefeller grew so
tired of all the baggage that came with her
fabled family name that she changed it and became
plain Neva Goodwin. But now, Ms. Goodwin, 63
years old, is embracing the powerful Rockefeller
name as she publicly challenges the management of
Exxon Mobil Corp., successor to the oil company
founded by her great-grandfather, John D.
Rockefeller. As Neva Rockefeller Goodwin, she has
marshaled four generations of Rockefellers to
join her in a campaign to force major changes at
one of the most profitable companies in the
world. The battle will come to a head at Exxon's
annual meeting Wednesday in Dallas. (Scheduled
for 28 May.) - Some members of the family joined the fight out
of a passionate belief in the threat of global
warming others were concerned that Exxon is
overlooking business opportunities or risks. Many
seem offended that the company appears impervious
to the wishes of its shareholders, including
those named Rockefeller.
Slide 4-7
23- Exxon Withstands Activist Proposals
- Chairman, CEO Jobs To Remain Joined Environment
Still Issue - WSJ - May 29, 2008 Page B3
- DALLAS -- Exxon Mobil Corp. shareholders rejected
a proposal to create an independent chairman in a
heated proxy fight over the future of the giant
oil company . . . The proposal to create an
independent chairman, which would have stripped
Chairman and Chief Executive Rex Tillerson of one
of his titles, drew 39.5 of the votes cast at
Wednesday's annual shareholder meeting. Support
for the measure edged down from last year, when
it received 40 of the votes cast. - The shareholder unrest also reflected some
concerns that Exxon isn't doing enough to prepare
for climate change or develop a more robust
renewable-fuels strategy. (The chairman)
acknowledged activists' environmental concerns
without offering any concrete promises. He said
Exxon must continue to generate needed energy
while taking steps to "lower our environmental
footprint." But he also said he didn't think
non-fossil fuels would make a significant dent in
global energy demand until 2050 or so.
Slide 4-7
24Global Competition
- Ethics is it good business?
- The Question
- Companies spend billions of dollars doing good
works -- such as developing eco-friendly
technology -- and then trumpeting them to the
public. But does it pay off?
25Global Competition
- Ethics is it good business?
- The Test
- In a series of experiments, consumers were shown
the same products -- coffee and T-shirts -- but
one group was told the items had been made using
high ethical standards and another group that low
standards had been used.
26Global Competition
- REWARD AND PUNISHMENT
- What consumers were willing to pay for a pound
of coffee based on what they were told about the
company's production standards - Ethical standards . . . . . . . . . 9.71
- Unethical standards . . . . . . . . 5.89
- Control (no information) . . . . 8.31
- Source Remi Trudel and June Cotte
27Global Competition
- A MATTER OF DEGREE
- How much consumers were willing to pay for
all-cotton T-shirts based on what they were told
about the proportion of ethical production - 100 organic cotton . . . . . . 21.21
- 50 organic cotton . . . . . . . . 20.44
- 25 organic cotton . . . . . . . . 20.72
- Unethical behavior . . . . . . . .17.33
- Control (no information) . . . . 20.04
- Production harms environment
28Global Competition
- ATTITUDE ADJUSTMENT
- Consumers with high ethical expectations of
companies doled out bigger rewards and
punishments than consumers with low expectations.
What each group was willing to pay for a pound of
coffee based on production standards - Consumers with high expectations
- Ethical standards . . . . . . . 11.59
- Unethical standards . . . . . . . 6.92
- Consumers with low expectations
- Ethical standards . . . . . . . 9.90
- Unethical standards . . . . . . 8.44
29Global Competition
- The Results
- Consumers are willing to pay a small premium for
ethically produced goods. But they'll punish an
unethically made product even more harshly, by
buying it only at a steep discount.
30Global Competition
- Six Products, Six Carbon Footprints
- Everybody's talking about it. But what exactly is
a carbon footprint? And how is it calculated? - By JEFFREY BALL WSJ 06
Oct 2008 - A new concept is entering the consumer lexicon
the carbon footprint. - First came organic. Then came fair trade. Now
makers of everything from milk to jackets to cars
are starting to tally up the carbon footprints of
their products. That's the amount of carbon
dioxide and other greenhouse gases that get
coughed into the air when the goods are made,
shipped and stored, and then used by consumers. - So far, these efforts raise as many questions as
they answer. Different companies are counting
their products' carbon footprints differently,
making it all but impossible for shoppers to
compare goods. And even if consumers come to
understand the numbers, they might not like what
they find out. - For instance, many products' global-warming
impact depends less on how they're made than on
how they're used. That means the easiest way to
cut carbon emissions may be to buy less of a
product or use it in a way that's less
convenient.
31Global Competition
32Carbon Footprints
- CARS -The simplest statistic in the
carbon-footprinting game may be this For every
mile it travels, the average car in the U.S.
emits about one pound of carbon dioxide. Given
typical driving distances and fuel-economy
numbers, that translates into about five tons of
carbon dioxide per car per year. - The vast majority of those emissions -- 86 --
came from the car's fuel use, the study found.
Just 4 of emissions came from making and
assembling the car. That means consumers can
lower their footprint by buying a car with better
fuel economy. - The Prius, the hybrid gasoline-and-electric car
that averages 42 miles per gallon, has a lifetime
carbon footprint of 44 metric The Corolla, a
small sedan with 29 MPG, has a footprint of 64
tons. The Camry (23 MPG) has a footprint of 95
tons. And the 4Runner, an SUV rated at 16 MPG,
has a footprint of 118 tons. - SHOES -You may think you're at one with nature
going for a walk in the woods in your sturdy
hiking boots. But those boots pack a lot of
carbon. The big reason the leather. -
- Timberland Co., a shoe company with an outdoorsy
image, has assessed the carbon footprint of about
40 of the shoe models it currently sells. The
results range from about 22 pounds to 220 pounds
per pair. Each of the shoes that has been
carbon-footprinted comes with a label assessing
its greenhouse-gas score on a scale of zero,
which is best, to 10, which is worst.
33Carbon Footprints
- LAUNDRY DETERGENT - The recipe for a low-carbon
load of laundry Use liquid detergent instead of
powder, wash your clothes in cool water and hang
them out to dry. - But consumers who care about their carbon
emissions should do more than switch detergent
forms, the labels advise. Doing the wash in
cooler water -- 86 degrees Fahrenheit instead of
104 degrees -- will shave the carbon footprint of
each load by 0.3 pounds. That's as much of a
reduction as you get from switching to liquid
from powder. - The biggest way to cut the environmental impact
of cleaning clothes, however, is to stop using a
clothes dryer. Drying laundry outside on a line,
Tesco says, will cut the carbon footprint of
every load by a whopping 4.4 pounds. - JACKETS Patagonia Inc.'s Talus jacket looks
like a naturalist's dream. In fact, its carbon
footprint is 66 pounds. That is 48 times the
weight of the jacket itself. - Over the past year the outdoor-equipment maker
has computed and posted on its Web site the
carbon footprints of 15 of its products. Because
most of Patagonia's products are made overseas
and sold in the U.S., the company that a big
chunk of the carbon footprints came from - The fabric for the Talus is made in China, the
zippers come from Japan, and the jacket is sewn
in Vietnam. Yet all that transportation adds up
to less than 1 of the product's total carbon
footprint, Patagonia says. The majority of the
footprint -- 71, or about 47 pounds -- comes in
producing the polyester, which originates with
oil.
34Carbon Footprints
- MILK - Several studies of milk's carbon footprint
are under way in the U.S. Each has come up with a
different number, largely because each is
counting things differently. - A recent study by National Dairy Holdings, a
Dallas-based dairy, found that the carbon
footprint of a gallon of its milk in a plastic
jug is either 6.19 pounds or 7.59 pounds. The
difference rests in what kind of cases the jugs
are placed in during transport from the
milk-processing plant to the distribution center.
Plastic cases, because they take more energy to
produce, yield more carbon-dioxide emissions than
do cardboard ones. - BEER - When New Belgium Brewing Co. set out last
year to compute the carbon footprint of a
six-pack of its Fat Tire Amber Ale, it figured it
would find transportation was the biggest
problem. That's the emission source New Belgium
thinks about most often. The microbrewer has been
expanding into more states, necessitating more
trucking of its beer. - When the numbers came in this summer, they showed
that a six-pack's carbon footprint was about
seven pounds. The real surprise was where the
bulk of that number came from the refrigeration
of the beer at stores. Transportation came in
fourth, behind manufacturing the glass bottles
and producing the barley and malt. Refrigeration
poses a tougher problem. Stores selling Fat Tire
aren't owned by New Belgium, so even if the
brewer wanted them to stop refrigerating the
beer, they might not do so. Many stores could
switch from less-efficient, open-front beer
chillers to more-efficient models enclosed by
clear doors. But that presents its own hurdle,
Ms. Orgolini notes "People don't want to have to
open the door."
35Carbon Footprints
- S-o-o-o, as you can see, measuring carbon
footprints is a very complex issue. It goes well
beyond SUVs vs. sub-compacts, McMansions vs.
apartments/condominiums or coal vs. solar-power
for electricity generation. - Regarding your personal choices, based on what
weve have just seen, do you choose . . .
MILK or BEER ???
36FORD AND FIRESTONE WHOS TO BLAME?
Slide 4-42
37Now, lets compare and contrast this PR debacle
with . . .
Slide 4-10
38 Johnson Johnson TYLENOL
Slide 4-42
39Implications for Global Managers
- The most common ethical issues that one may
encounter in an international business setting
are - employment practices,
- human rights,
- environmental regulations,
- corruption and
- the moral obligation of multinational
corporations. - Ethics Trust do the hard right thing
40- Have a Happy Thanksgiving !