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International Business Strategy, Management

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Chapter 18 Human Resource Management in the Global Firm International Business Strategy, Management & the New Realities Cavusgil, Knight & Riesenberger – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: International Business Strategy, Management


1
International BusinessStrategy, Management the
New RealitiesCavusgil, Knight Riesenberger
  • Chapter 18
  • Human Resource Management in the Global Firm

2
Challenges of International Human Resource
Management
  • Recruiting, managing, and retaining human
    resources at a firm with extensive global
    operations are especially challenging.
  • For example, in 2005, German firm Siemens had
    460,800 employees in some 190 countries 290,500
    throughout Europe, 100,600 in the Americas,
    58,000 in the Asia-Pacific region, and 11,900 in
    Africa, the Middle East, and Russia.
  • Each of Volkswagen, Nestle, IBM, Unilever,
    Wal-Mart, McDonalds, and Matsushita has more
    than 150,000 employees outside the home country.

3
International Human Resource Management
  • International human resource management the
    planning, selection, training, employment, and
    evaluation of employees for international
    operations.
  • How a firm recruits, trains, and places skilled
    personnel in its worldwide value chains sets it
    apart from competition.
  • The combined knowledge, skills, and experiences
    of employees are distinctive and provide myriad
    advantages to the firms operations worldwide.

4
Three Employee Categories at the MNE
  • Host-country nationals (HCNs) citizens of the
    country where the subsidiary or affiliate is
    located. HCNs make up largest proportion of
    employees that the firm hires abroad. Examples
    the labor force in manufacturing, assembly, basic
    service activities, clerical work, and other
    non-managerial functions.
  • Parent-country nationals (PCNs) also known as
    home-country nationals, PCNs are citizens of the
    country where the MNE is headquartered.
  • Third-country nationals (TCNs) employees who are
    citizens of countries other than the home or host
    country. Most work in management have unique
    skills

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6
Differences between Domestic and International
IHRM
  1. New HR responsibilities. E.g., international
    taxation, international relocation and
    orientation, services for expatriates, host
    government relations, language translation
    services.
  2. Need for a broader perspective. E.g.,
    establishing a fair and comparable compensation
    scale when there is a mix of PCNs, HCNs, and
    TCNs.
  3. Greater involvement in employees personal lives.
    E.g., housing arrangements, health care,
    childrens education, safety, security, proper
    compensation, higher living costs abroad.

7
Differences between Domestic and International
IHRM (cont.)
  • Managing the mix of expatriates versus locals.
    The firm may staff each location with HCNs, PCNs,
    and TCNs. The mix of staff mainly depends on the
    firms international experience, cost-of-living
    abroad, local laws, and availability of qualified
    local staff.
  • Greater risk exposure. Exposure to political risk
    and terrorism may require increased compensation
    and security arrangements.
  • 6. External influences of the nation and culture.
    E.g., taxes, local work regulations, unique
    cultural circumstances, traditional work
    practices.

8
Key Tasks of IHRM
  1. Staffing activities directed at recruiting,
    selecting, and placement of employees.
  2. Training and developing employees.
  3. Performance appraisal involves providing
    feedback necessary for the employees
    professional development.
  4. Compensation or remuneration of employees
    including formulation of benefit packages that
    vary greatly from country to country.
  5. Management of labor unions and collective
    bargaining processes, known as industrial
    relations.
  6. Achieving diversity in the workplace.

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10
Staffing Searching for Talent
  • Recruitment searching for and locating potential
    job candidates to fill the firms needs.
  • Selection gathering information to evaluate and
    decide who to employ in particular jobs.
  • Managers must proactively identify potential
    candidates and groom them to become corporate
    leaders, train personnel to meet evolving
    business needs, and ensure the talent supply
    keeps pace with the growth of the firm.

11
Employee Characteristics ThatFacilitate
International Effectiveness
  • Technical Competence. Must have adequate
    managerial and technical capabilities.
  • Self-Reliance. Entrepreneurial, proactive
    mindset expatriate managers function with
    considerable independence, and limited support
    from headquarters.
  • Adaptability. Ability to adjust to foreign
    cultures, cultural empathy, flexibility,
    diplomacy, and a positive attitude.
  • Interpersonal Skills. Ability to build
    relationships is key.
  • Leadership Ability. Must view change positively,
    and proactively manage threats and opportunities.
  • Physical and Emotional Health. Life abroad is
    stressful.
  • Spouse / Dependents Prepared for Living Abroad

12
Expatriate
  • An employee who goes to work abroad for an
    extended period, usually years
  • Repatriation return of the expatriate to the
    home country. Requires advance preparation.
    Unless managed well, returning expatriate may
    encounter problems, such as career disruptions
    and reverse culture shock.
  • Expatriate failure the premature return of an
    expatriate, due to an inability to perform well
    abroad. Costly to the firm (lost productivity and
    relocation costs) and to expatriates themselves
    (family stress and career disruption).

13
Culture Shock
  • The confusion and anxiety, often akin to mental
    depression, that can result from living in a
    foreign culture for an extended period. Often
    affects family members most.
  • A leading cause of expatriate failure.
  • Especially a factor for those assigned to
    culturally dissimilar countries, such as China,
    Yemen.
  • Can be reduced via advance preparation, training,
    language skills, deep interest in the new
    country.
  • Regular exercise, relaxation techniques, or
    keeping a detailed journal of experiences are
    helpful.

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15
Three Components of Training Personnel for
International Assignments
  • 1. Area studies factual knowledge of the
    historical, political and economic environment of
    the host country
  • 2. Practical information knowledge and skills
    necessary to function effectively in a country,
    including housing, health care, education, and
    daily living
  • 3. Cross-cultural awareness ability to interact
    effectively and appropriately with people from
    different language and cultural backgrounds.

16
Training
  • In order of increasing rigor, training methods
    include videos, lectures, assigned readings,
    case studies, books, Web-based instruction,
    critical incident analyses, simulations,
    role-playing, language training, field
    experience, and long-term immersion.
  • Role-playing and simulations involve the employee
    acting out typical encounters with foreigners.
  • Long-term immersion places the employee in the
    country for several months or more, often for
    language and cultural training.

17
Cultivating a Geocentric Orientation
  • Ethnocentric views are common in many MNEs.
  • More progressive MNEs follow a geocentric
    orientation, staffing HQ and subsidiaries with
    the most competent personnel, regardless of
    nationality. Characterized by an openness to, and
    articulation of, multiple cultural and strategic
    realities on both global and local levels.
  • Best to hire, develop, nurture, and recognize
    employees who possess a global mindset and offer
    global leadership potential.

18
Performance Appraisal
  • Performance appraisal formal process of
    assessing how effectively employees perform their
    jobs.
  • Helps identify problem areas where an employee
    needs to improve and additional training is
    warranted.
  • Determines compensation and company performance.
  • MNEs devise procedures to assess the performance
    of individual employees ascertain if any
    problems are attributable to inadequate skill
    levels provide additional training and
    resources and terminate employees who
    consistently fail to achieve goals.
  • Often very challenging in international business.

19
Compensation of Personnel
  • Compensation varies internationally due to
    differences in legally mandated benefits, tax
    laws, cost of living, local tradition, and
    culture.
  • Employees posted abroad expect to be compensated
    at a level that allows them to maintain their
    usual standard of living, which can make
    compensating expatriates very costly.
  • Includes base remuneration, benefits (e.g.,
    health care plans), allowance (e.g., for housing,
    childrens education, travel), incentives

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21
Labor Unions and Collective Bargaining
  • Management and workers determine the job
    relationships that will be in effect at the
    workplace.
  • Collective bargaining involves negotiations
    between management and workers regarding wages
    and working conditions.
  • Labor regulations vary substantially, with
    minimum regulations in Africa and India to very
    detailed regulations in Northern Europe.
  • Union membership has declined in most countries,
    but remains high in several European countries.
  • Strikes can disrupt international operations.

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25
Trends in International Labor
  • Mobility of labor across national borders has
    increased substantially. Reasons
  • Growing interconnectedness of national economies
  • Rapid expansion of multinational firms
  • Rise of international collaborative ventures and
  • Greater emphasis on global teams.
  • Many countries are coping with an influx of
    immigrants, both legal and illegal, who compete
    with established workers by providing low-cost
    labor. Trend is significant in Europe, Persian
    Gulf countries, and the United States (but not in
    Japan).

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27
Women in International Business
  • Women currently occupy relatively few top
    management positions (in Europe, women occupy
    only 15 of senior executive posts)
  • Reasons for scarcity of women in international
    jobs
  • Senior managers often assume women do not make
    suitable leaders abroad (e.g., due to cultural
    challenges)
  • Some female managers prefer to remain in the home
    country, to fulfill family obligations or avoid
    disrupting partners career.
  • Most companies do not accommodate child-rearing
    or other family responsibilities.
  • There are fewer women with sufficient experience
    to be sent abroad for senior jobs.

28
Recent Positive Trends
  • Many more women are obtaining university degrees
    in business.
  • Female graduates account for some 50 of recruits
    joining European firms
  • Businesswomen increasingly form their own
    networks, such as Women Directors on Boards in
    the United Kingdom, and The Alliance of Business
    Women International in the United States
    (www.abwi.org).
  • Overall trend is positive (except in strongly
    Islamic countries). See examples Ashley L. and
    Maria R.

29
Success Strategies for Women in IB
  • In many countries, being a foreign woman can be
    an advantage. Women stand out more, and competent
    women earn respect. Smart women leverage their
    gender to their advantage.
  • Women overcome biases abroad by acquiring
    managerial, language, and international skills.
  • Over time, managerial competence wins out over
    bias.
  • Gaining substantial experience as a domestic
    manager or in short international assignments can
    greatly improve prospects for working abroad.
  • Once abroad, women report the reaction of
    surprise is often replaced by professionalism and
    respect.
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