Transcript Chapter 4

Topic 5
The Global Environment:
Strategic Considerations for
Multinational Firms
What is Globalization?
The strategy of
approaching worldwide
markets with standardized
products
Some
Reasons for Going Global –
Proactive Approach
• Additional resources
• Economies of scale
• Lowered costs
• Power and prestige
• Taxes / Incentives
• Protect home market
via offense in
competitor’s home
Some
Reasons for Going Global –
Reactive Approach
• Trade barriers
• International competition
• Regulations
Strategic Orientation of Global
Firms
• Ethnocentric
• Values and priorities of parent organization should guide
strategic decision making of all operations
• Polycentric
• Culture of country in which strategy is implemented dominates
decision making
• Regiocentric
• Parent firm attempts to blend its own predispositions with
those of region under consideration
• Geocentric
• Parent firm adopts global systems approach to decision
making, emphasizing global integration
Beginning to Globalize:
Key Steps
• External assessment
– Careful examination of critical features of the global
environment, particularly to host nation’s status in
• Economic progress
• Political control
• Nationalism
• Internal assessment
– Identification of resources in … technical and managerial
skills, capital, labor, raw materials
– Identification of capabilities in … product delivery, financial
management systems
differences in
Factors that Affect Strategic
Management in the U.S. and
Internationally
Obvious … but important …
Factor
U.S. Operations
Int’l Operations
Language
English used almost
universally
Use of local language
required in many
situations
Culture
Relatively homogeneous
Quite diverse, both
between countries and
within countries
Politics
Stable and relatively
unimportant
Often volatile and of
decisive importance
Economy
Relatively uniform
Wide variations among
countries and among
regions within countries
Differences (contd.)
Labor
Skilled labor available
Skilled labor “may” be
scarce, requiring training
or redesign of production
methods
Financing
Well-developed financial
markets
Poorly developed markets;
capital flows subject to
government control
Media research
Data easy to collect
Data difficult and
expensive to collect
Advertising
Many media available, few
restrictions
Media limited, many
restrictions
Money
U.S. dollar used universally Different currencies;
problems created by
changing exchange rates
Stakeholder Activism
Refers to demands placed on the
global firm by the foreign
environments in which it
operates, principally by foreign
governments
Multidomestic vs. Global
Industries
A multidomestic industry is one in
which competition is essentially
segmented from country to country
A global industry is one in which
competition crosses national borders
Factors Increasing Degree to Which
an Industry is Multidomestic
• Need for customized products to meet tastes or
preferences of local customers
• Fragmentation of industry, with many
competitors in each national market
• Lack of economies of scale in functional
activities
• Distribution channels unique to each country
The Global Challenge
• Few “pure” cases of either global or
multidomestic industries exist
• The challenge – global firms must
• Decide what activities should be performed where
• Determine what degree of coordination should exist
among them
International Strategy Options
High
Joint venture
Foreign branch
Licensing, contract
manufacturing,
franchising
Joint venture
Export
Low
Licensing, contract
manufacturing,
franchising
Market complexity
Wholly owned
foreign subsidiary
Foreign branch
Joint venture
High