Introduction to Business Teaching Module on Saudi Arabia - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Introduction to Business Teaching Module on Saudi Arabia

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Title: Introduction to Business Teaching Module on Saudi Arabia


1
Introduction to Business Teaching Module on
Saudi Arabia
  • Created by
  • Kathleen P. Hess, PhD
  • Assistant Professor, Management Dept.
  • Salem State College Bertolon School of Business
  • USA
  • With much guidance and assistance by
  • Salem M. Al-Ghamdi
  • Assistant Dean Of CIM Graduate Programs
    Associate Professor Of Management
  • College Of Industrial Management
  • King Fahd University Of Petroleum Minerals
  • Saudi Arabia
  • Draft Presentation
  • 2/21/2008

2
Purpose of these slides
  • These slides are being developed as a teaching
    module to be used in Salem State Colleges
    introduction to Business class.
  • They are still under development
  • They are meant to be rather high-level to
    introduce relevant ideas
  • The main objectives are to introduce topics that
    must be considered when doing business with
    different cultures, and to create interest in
    learning more about Saudi Arabia
  • An upper-level module is being developed for the
    International Business course
  • Many thanks go to Dr. Salem M. Al-Ghamdi for his
    guidance and assistance on this project

3
Introduction to Business Culture and Economy
  • The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

4
Outline
  • The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Facts
  • Cultural Influences
  • Economic Influences
  • Conditions for Growth
  • Key Industry Sectors

5
The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Facts
  • Founded in 1932
  • Ruled by the Al Saud family
  • Population 27M
  • Strategically located between Africa and mainland
    Asia
  • Capital and largest city is Riyadh
  • Religion Islam
  • very influential

6
Facts (cont)
  • The Saudi work week is Saturday through Wednesday
  • The summer season (May to September) is hot
  • Business activity slows during the month of
    Ramadan businesses shut down for the five daily
    prayer times
  • Islamic law greatly influences business and
    social life in the Kingdom
  • Personal Conduct
  • Dress
  • Language
  • Behavior
  • Most leading Saudi business persons are
    Western-educated and have travelled extensively.
  • Comfortable dealing with visiting businesspeople.
  • Hospitable
  • place a great deal of emphasis on an outward
    expression of politeness and quiet demeanor.
  • Avoid aggressive and demonstrative behavior
  • It will not be well received
  • Results in the Saudi business person losing
    face
  • Breaks down the line of communication
  • It can rapidly diminish any chance of meaningful
    business engagement.

7
Facts (cont)
  • Characteristics of the Saudi Arabian Market
  • It is the largest market in the Middle East, with
    considerable spending power from its 25 holding
    of global oil reserves.
  • 4th largest market in gas reserves.
  • It has a sound economy, with a fast-growing and
    young population.
  • It has a well-managed banking system.
  • It has good infrastructure-hotels, air travel and
    telecommunications.
  • It has generally low import duties and barriers,
    although strict attention must be paid to
    documentation and labeling.
  • Its business community is familiar with Western
    practices.
  • It is intensively competitive.
  • There is a wide selection of potential agents and
    distributors, requiring time and care to screen
    and appoint.
  • Decision cycles can be lengthy and protracted.
  • There are eight sea ports and 26 airports.

8
Cultural Influences
  • Age
  • Great respect must be shown to elders at all
    times
  • E.g., when first entering a room, shake hands
    with the most senior person first, then go
    counterclockwise
  • High Uncertainty Avoidance
  • The society does not readily accept change and
    is very risk adverse
  • Highly role-oriented with laws, rules and
    regulations
  • A Collective Society (not individualistic like
    US)
  • Close long-term commitment to the member group
  • family influence and personal connections often
    take precedence over other governing factors

9
Cultural Influences
  • High Power Distance
  • There exists a distinct, and respectful,
    dichotomy between subordinates and managers
  • Those in authority are expected to issue complete
    and specific directives to others
  • High Context Communication
  • The message people are trying to convey often
    relies heavily on other communicative cues such
    as body language and eye-contact rather than
    direct words
  • Preference for face-to-face meetings

10
High and low context cultures
  • High context
  • (Saudi Arabia, Japan)
  • Low context
  • (USA, Germany, Switzerland)
  • Information resides in context
  • e.g., body language, eye-contact, tone of voice,
    use of silence, facial cues
  • Emphasis on background, basic values
  • Less emphasis on legal paperwork
  • Focus on personal negotiation
  • Messages are explicit and specific
  • Words carry all information
  • Reliance on legal paperwork
  • Focus on non-personal documentation of credibility

11
Economic History
  • The economic history of Saudi Arabia is built on
    oil.
  • The first wells flowed in 1938 and full-scale
    production began after World War II.
  • The hydrocarbons sector is dominant
  • oil-related activities account for 3545 of GDP
  • The Kingdom has sought to diversify the economy

12
Table Conditions for growth
13
Table Conditions for growth (Cont)
Adapted from the Arab World Competitiveness
Report 2005
14
Key Industry Sectors
  • Oil and gas
  • Finance
  • Engineering services
  • Health care
  • Infrastructure
  • Transport
  • Water
  • Information technology
  • Building and construction
  • Agriculture
  • Food
  • The retail sector
  • Automotive
  • Education and training
  • Mining

15
Saudi economy indicators (2006)
  • GNP for 2006 is 373.00 billion dollars (ranking
    20 world wide).
  • Hard currency reserves up to 2006 is 269 billion
    dollars
  • Saudi economy ranks 12 in the volume of exports
    and 20 in the volume of import world wide
    according to SAMA statistics (2005).
  • 80 of Saudi income comes from sales of crude
    oil
  • The Growth rate of Saudi economy is in the range
    of 3.5 to 4
  • Emerging lucrative market in stocks real state
  • Over 500 billion dollars in Saudi stock market
  • Over 250 billion dollars in Saudi real state
    market

16
Key indications on Saudi labor movement
  • 60 of Saudi population are below 50 years old
  • 24 of the Saudis labor force work in the
    industry sector
  • 31 of the Saudi labor force work in the
    commerce sector
  • 350,000 Saudis enter the labor market every year
  • The unemployment rate is considerably high among
    Saudis.
  • Approximately one million Saudis work in
    government agencies, out of which 400,000 are
    women.
  • About 1.8 million Saudis work in private sector,
    out of which 20 are women.

17
Why invest in Saudi Arabia
  • Saudi Arabia is a full member of WTO since 2005
  • Political stability
  • Free economy system
  • Excellent infrastructure
  • Availability of reasonably cheap labor (Mainly
    from Egypt, India, Pakistan, and Philippine).
  • Genuine government support they target to have
    Saudi Arabia among the top 10 countries to
    attract F.D.I. by 2010
  • Saudi Arabia ranks 38 out of 177 countries in
    the most favored nations for investment
    opportunities according to world bank 2006
  • Low inflation rate (1 in 2006 expect to be
    2.2 by end of 2007)
  • Government spending in the next few years for
    already approved under execution projects are
    as follows
  • 69 billion dollars in oil gas section
  • 45 billion dollars in petrochemicals
  • 43 billion dollars in infrastructure
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