PowerPoint Lecture 8
PowerPoint Lecture 8
Competitive Strategy
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KNOWLEDGE OBJECTIVES
Explain incentives that can influence firms to use an international
strategy.
• Relatively Stable
DOMESTIC • Relatively Predictable
• Less complex
• Globalisation is reducing the
MARKETS number of domestic-only markets.
• Unstable
GLOBAL • Unpredictable
• Complex and risky
• Globalisation is enabling global
MARKETS markets.
Internationalisation as a Strategy
Incentives to Internationalise
Going International TO EXTEND PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE
3. Location advantages
• Certain markets may offer superior access to
critical resources, such as raw materials, lower-
cost labour, energy, suppliers and key
customers.
• Cultural influences may be advantageous, as a
strong cultural match facilitates international
business transactions.
• Physical distances affect cost (e.g.
transportation costs) and influence firms’
location choices.
Business-Level Internationalisation
– cost leadership
– differentiation
– focused cost leadership
– focused differentiation
– integrated cost leadership/differentiation.
Activity
Consider some of the following firms’ internationalisation
strategies and say which benefits (e.g. market increase,
economies of scale, location advantage) they have derived
through their expansion into Australia:
Subway, BMW, Aldi, Coca-Cola, H&M, U.S. Military, plus other
examples you can think of.
Corporate level Internationalisation
Multi-domestic approach
Strategy and
operating
The strategy
decisions are Products and The focus is
Business assumes
decentralized services are on
units in each markets
to strategic tailored to competition
country are differ by
business local in each
independent. country or
units (SBU) markets. market
regions
in each
country
Deciding how best to operate across borders
Global Approach
Firm offers
The home
standardised
Strategic and office attempts
products This involves
operating to achieve
across country interdependent The strategy
decisions are integration
markets, with SBUs produces
centralised at across SBUs,
the competitive operating in lower risk
the home adding
strategy being each country .
office. management
dictated by the
complexity
home office
Global Strategy
Global strategy
• Is facilitated by improved global reporting
standards (i.e. accounting and financial)
• Emphasises economies of scale
• Is less responsive to local market opportunities
• Requires resource sharing and coordination across
borders (hard to manage)
• Offers less effective learning processes (pressure
to conform and standardise)
• Is more effective in areas where regional
integration is occurring
Trans-National Strategy
Transnational strategy
• The strategy seeks to achieve both global efficiency
and local responsiveness, which are competing
goals.
• It requires both:
– centralisation – global coordination and control
– decentralisation – local flexibility.
• The global competitive landscape fosters intense
competition, and thus pressures to reduce costs,
while at the same time information sharing has
intensified the desire for specialised, customised,
differentiated products.
International Approaches
• ADVANTAGE: BOTH
TRANSNATIONAL • local responsiveness and global
efficiencies
International Approaches
EXPORT
LICENSING
STRATEGIC ALLIANCE
ACQUISITION
NEW WHOLLY
RISK CONTROL
OWNED SUBSIDIARY
INCREASES INCREASES
Export
• Exporting
– occurs when a firm sends products it
produces in its domestic market to
international markets
– requires minimal expense to establish
operations in the host country
– often involves contractual agreements
– involves high transportation costs.
• Tariffs may be imposed
• There is little control over marketing and
distribution.
Licensing
Licensee:
• Pays a royalty to the licensor on each unit
sold
• Takes higher risk
• Invests in manufacturing
Strategic Alliance
A strategic alliance:
• is collaboration with a partner firm for
international market entry
• involves shared risks and resources
• facilitates development of core competencies
• involves fewer resources and costs required for
entry
• may involve possible incompatibility, conflict or
lack of trust with partner
• is difficult to manage.
ACQUISITIONS
With reference to
Subway, BMW, Aldi,
Coca-Cola, H&M, U.S.
Military, and many
other examples, what
are the main modes of
entry that have been
used by them when
entering foreign
markets?
International Risks
EXAMPLES OF POLITICAL AND
ECONOMIC RISKS
? ?
?
?
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LIMITATION TO INTERNATIONAL EXPANSION
Important issues:
Cross-cultural awareness
Aculturalisation (getting used to another culture)
Legal matters
Financial conventions
Power-distance (how much authority does a leader hold)
Reporting relationships (chain of command issues)
Compensation (hardship allowance?)
Repatriation
Important issues:
Reverse culture-shock
Re-aculturalisation (getting used to one’s own culture over again)
Banking, Tax and Legal adjustments
Autonomy – re-fitting within the organization (where do I fit in
now? Maybe they feel like their manager has less experience))
Career Plan - reporting relationships and the management of
expectations (very important to keep the returning expat
motivated)
Case Analysis – Carlsberg (p504)