Title: ADMS 3960
1ADMS 3960
2Chapter 11 The Strategy of International Business
3Chapter Objectives
- To identify how managers develop strategy
- To examine industry structure, firm strategy, and
value creation - To profile the features and functions of the
value chain framework - To assess how managers configure and coordinate a
value chain - To explain global integration and local
responsiveness - To profile the types of strategies firms use in
international business
4The Role of Strategy in International Business
5Industry, Strategy ,and Firm Performance
- Industry organization paradigm leading strategy
perspectives - The exceptions of imperfect competition
- The idea of industry structure The Five Forces
Model
6Five Forces Model
7Industry Change
Industry structure changes because of events
like Competitors moves Government policies
Changes in economics Shifting buyer
preferences Technological developments Rate
of market growth
8Competition
- In its pure form it refers to the conditions that
are present in the marketplace when buyers and
sellers interact to establish prices and exchange
goods and services. - It refers to the means whereby the self interest
of buyers and sellers acts to serve the needs of
society as well as those of individual market
participants.
9The Practical Significance of Perfect Competition
- A large number of small firms and many buyers do
not possess the power to influence the behavior
of the participants in the marketplace. - That power is thoroughly dispersed throughout the
marketplace. - Perfect Competition rarely exists in the real
world.
10Desirable Conditions for Workable Competition
- A market structure with at least two buyers and
two sellers, but preferably more - A mixture of large and small firms
- No collusion or coercion among sellers
11Desirable Conditions for Workable Competition
- As much market information as possibly is
available to buyers and sellers - No barriers to entry and exit
12Strategy and Value
- Strategy helps managers assess the companys
present situation, identify the direction the
company should go, and determine how the company
will get there.
13Strategies
- Strategy is a set of goals and policies or
actions to achieve those goals. - A strategic plan must link to sub-strategies at
the operations level.
14Strategic Programming
- This focuses on, who what and how much.
- Day to day priorities
- Roles and responsibilities
15Tactics and Execution
- This focuses on how to get it done
- Immediate objectives with a focus on adjustment
based on new information
16Michael Porter
- Competitive strategy, is all about being
different from others. As a nation or a company
your differences will allow you to excel in areas
that other will not. - Strategy is not about one activity, but a series
of complementary and reinforcing activities.
17What does strategy give us?
- Organizational purpose
- Competitive domains
- Interpretations of opportunities, threats,
strengths and weaknesses - Defines managerial tasks and processes
- Defines the impact that the firm intends to make
on its shareholders - Determines investment
18Value
- Value is what remains after costs have been
deducted from the revenues of a firm. Cost
leadership emphasizes high production volumes,
low costs, and low prices. Firms that choose this
strategy strive to be the low-cost producer in an
industry for a given level of quality. This
strategy requires that a firm sell its products
at the average industry price to earn a profit
higher than that of rivals or below the average
industry prices to capture market share.
19Value Chain
- What is the value chain?
- A value chain disaggregates a firm into
- Primary activities that create and deliver the
product - Support activities that aid the individuals and
groups engaged in primary activities - Value chains identify the format and interactions
between different activities of the company.
20Porters Value Chain
21Purpose of The Value Chain? Cost Analysis
- Define the value chain in terms of sources of
competitive advantage - Establish the relative importance of each
activity in terms of total product cost - Compare costs by activity and against competitors
- Identify cost drivers
- Identify linkages between activities
- Identify opportunities for reducing costs
22Using the Value Chain
- Using the value chain leads to
- Configuration of the Company
- Macro Cost Factors
- Logistics analysis
- Industry Clusters
- Digitization
- Economies of Scale
- Business Environment
23Digitization
- The process of digitization involves converting
an analog product into a string of zeros and
ones. Increasingly, products like software,
music, and books, as well as services like call
centers, application processing, and financial
consolidation, can be digitized and, hence,
located virtually anywhere. Equipped with
networked computers, workers can move goods and
services anywhere in the world at negligible cost
and complication. - Consequently, the potential for digitization of
goods or services influences how a company
configures its value chain.
24Clusters
- An industry cluster is a system of businesses and
institutions engaged with one another at various
levels.
25Manufacturing
- Manufacturing costs vary from country to country
because of wage rates, worker productivity,
resource - availability, and fiscal and monetary policies.
26Logistics
- Logistics entails how companies obtain, produce,
and exchange material and services in the proper
place and in proper quantities for the proper
value activity.
27Economies of Scale
- The concept of economies of scale refers to a
situation wherein a firm doubles its cumulative
output yet total cost less than doubles due to
efficiency gains. Effectively, reductions in the
unit cost of a product result from the increasing
efficiency that comes with larger operations.
28Economies of Scale
- Sources
- The division of labour This is related to
specialization particularly in mass production.
Leads to lower unit costs, machinery output
increased, quality control improvements, time
savings. - Economies of massed resources Theory rests on
the idea of large numbers. This is what
insurance is based on. Any company needs excess
resources and capacity. The larger the firm, the
smaller the proportion of duplicate capacity
needed.
29Economies of Scale
- Sources
- Firm-level economies of scale
- Administrative economies
- Financial economies
- Marketing economies
30Porters Value Chain
31Economies of Scale
- Limits
- Diseconomies of scale in distribution
- Complexity of large-scale management
- Costs of product differentiation
- HRM costs in large plants
32Economies of Scale
33Coordination
- Coordination Concerns
- As companies globally configure value activities,
they must develop coordination tools. Coordinated
well, MNEs can leverage their core competencies,
using them to serve customers, boost sales, and
improve profits.
34National Cultures
- Cultures impose hurdles in coordinating a
transaction from one stage of the value chain to
another. Units anchored in individual versus
collectivist cultures may disagree over
information sharing or collaboration
responsibilities conflicts complicate
coordination.
35National Cultures
- Hence, features of national culture require
managers to understand their implications to the
collaborative relationship that shape the
coordination of value activities.
36Learning Curve
- Learning curve is the commonsense principle that
the more one does something, the better one gets
at it. - Companies configure value chain activities to
exploit the learning curve.
37The Experience Curve
- The Experience Curve
- Unit cost reductions arising from experience of
production - Benefits accrue to first movers and those who
facilitate learning
38Experience leads to Core Competency
- A core competency can emerge from various
sources, including - Product development
- Employee productivity
- Manufacturing expertise
- Marketing imagination
- Executive leadership
39Operational Obstacles
- Operating internationally inevitably runs into
communication challenges because of time zones,
differing languages, and ambiguous meanings.
Increasingly, companies rely on browser-based
communications methods to coordinate the handoffs
from link to link.
40Change and the Value Chain
- The configuration and coordination of value
chains respond to changes in customers,
competitors, industries, and environments. - Caveat The Risk of Strategy
41Global Integration versus Local Responsiveness
- Pressures for Global Integration
- Globalization of Markets
- A provocative thesis, increasingly supported by
global buying patterns and companies strategies,
suggests that consumers worldwide seek global
productswhether they are Apple iPods, Samsung
plasma screens, Facebook connections, Starbucks
espressos, Google searches, or Zara blouses.
42Global Integration versus Local Responsiveness
- Efficiency Gains of Standardization
- Global and local pressures challenge how the firm
configures and coordinates its value chain. The
convergence of national markets and quest for
production efficiency push for the global
integration of value activities.
43Standardization
- Standardization is the handmaiden of
globalization, encouraging supply conditions that
produce volumes of low-cost, high-quality
products. That is, standardization is the push
dynamic that drives supply, whereas the
globalization of markets represents the pull
dynamic that converges consumer preferences.
44Standardization
- The logic of standardization is straightforward.
Repeatedly doing the same task the same way
improves the efficiency of effort. Improving
efficiency in the value chain, in turn, supports
aggressive product development, lower-cost
production processes, and lower prices.
45Local Responsiveness
- Contrary to the globalization-of-markets thesis,
others argue that divergences in consumer
preferences across countries necessitate locally
responsive value chains. - Differences in local consumers preferences
endure due to cultural predisposition, historical
legacy, and endemic nationalism. Regardless of
the cause, consumers often prefer goods that are
sensitive to the particular idiosyncrasies of
their daily life.
46When Pressures Interact
- The Integration-Responsiveness grid helps
- managers measure the global and local
- pressures that influence the configuration and
- coordination of their value chains.
47Integration Responsiveness Grid
48Strategic Choices
49What Strategy to Pursue?
- Multidomestic Strategy
- Competition in one country is independent of
competition elsewhere. - Markets in each country have different consumer
behaviour. - Portfolio of independent subsidiaries
- Leads to product diversity.
50From International to Global Strategy
- Global Strategy
- Competition in one country influenced by
competition elsewhere. - Markets and consumer behaviour broadly similar in
all countries. - International coordination and integration.
- Leads to product standardisation
51Toyota
Our global strategy used to center on world
cars which we would modify slightly to
accommodate demand in different markets. Today
our focus is shifting to models that we develop
and manufacture for selected regional markets.
52Ford
53Transnational Strategies
Exploit experience-based cost economies and
location economies, transfer distinctive
competences within the company, and at the same
time pay attention to pressures for local
responsiveness (Bartlett and Ghoshal, 1989)
54Why Global? Scale is important but..
- Exposure to global best practices.
- Access to technology
- Ability to serve customers
- Ability to anticipate competitors
- Leaning and knowledge transfer
55Why Global? They are only viable if
- They serve locals better than the domestics
- Are hard to copy
- Are sustainable.
- Change the economics of the industry
- Are capable of further development.
56How to be BIG
- MNEs go through three phases on the path to
becoming a global powerhouse - 1. First there was the nineteenth-century
international model, whereby the company was
headquartered both physically and mentally in its
home country it sold goods, when it was so
inclined, through a scattering of overseas sales
offices.
57How to be BIG
- The third phase, the globally integrated
enterprise, is one that builds a company-wide
value chain that put people, jobs, and
investments anywhere in the world based on the
right cost, the right skills and the right
business environment . . . . now work flows to
the places where it will be done best, that is,
most efficiently and to the highest quality.
58How to be BIG
- Phase two of the evolution ushered in the
classic, multinational firm of the late twentieth
century. This model saw the parent company
creating smaller versions of itself in foreign
markets. These smaller satellite companies were
run by home-nation executives sent from
headquarters, who typically had great technical
expertise but little cultural fluency and minimal
foreign-language competency.
59Future Whats New in the World of Strategy Types
- Evolution of the Multinational Corporation
- Visions of the Future
- The Metanational Company
- Micro-Nationals
- The Cybercorp
60Metanational
- Thrives on seeking unique ideas, activities, and
insights that complement its existing operations
as well as creating leverage points. The
metanational company builds a new kind of
competitive advantage by discovering, accessing,
mobilizing, and leveraging knowledge from many
locations around the world.
61Metanational
62Micro National
- Although the number of MNEs grows worldwide,
their average size is fallingmost of the 70,000
or so firms that operate internationally employ
less than 250 people. This anomaly signals the
era of so-called micro-multinationals clever,
small companies that are born global and operate
worldwide from day one. Unlike their bigger
counterparts that expanded internationally by
gradually entering new markets,
micro-multinationals go global immediately.
63Cybercorp
- To this type of MNE, national boundaries no
longer organize consumers, locations, markets, or
industries. Instead, the cyberspace created by
evolving Internet technologiesnot the physical
geography of lines on a mapdefines markets. The
cybercorp develops competencies that let it react
in real time to changes in its customers,
competition, industry, and environment.
64Micro National