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International Strategy and Organization (ISO) ( Advanced Topics: Networks of the MNC ). Josef Windsperger Professor of Organization and Management. International Strategy and Organization (ISO) ( Advanced Topics: Networks of the MNC ). Lecturer: Josef Windsperger
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International Strategy and Organization (ISO)(Advanced Topics: Networks of the MNC) Josef Windsperger Professor of Organization and Management
International Strategy and Organization (ISO)(Advanced Topics: Networks of the MNC) Lecturer: Josef Windsperger E-mail:josef.windsperger@univie.ac.at Homepage: www.univie.ac.at/IM Phone: 00431-4277-38180
The course consists of two parts (Hs. 4): • Lectures on ISO: 7. 4. , 28. 4., 5.5. 2006, 9.00 – 13.00 (course material is published on the web page: www.univie.ac.at/im under ‘Lehrveranstaltungen’). • Case Studies on ISO: 12.5. (9-13.00) , 19. 5. (9 – 14.30) and 16.6. 2006 (9.00 – 13.00) and 17. 6. 2006 (9 – 13.00) • The public lectures are on Friday (11.00 – 12.30); for details see www.univie.ac.at/im. • 1. Public Lecture: May 5, 2006: 11.00, Hs. 4 • Headquarter-Advantages of Vienna in CEE (Mag. Thumser, CEO Henkel Austria • 2. Public Lecture: May 19, 2006: 11.00, Hs. 4 • International Market Entry through Franchising (Mag. W.Martius, Synchon International)
Content Part I 1 MNC as Global Network: Existence and Evolution 1.1 Product Life Cycle Theory 1.2 Transaction Cost Theory 1.3 Eclectic Theory 1.4 Network Approach 2 Culture, Strategy and Organization of the MNC 2.1 Country and Organization Culture 2.2 Strategy and Organization Design 3. Theoretical Foundations of Networks 3.1 Economic Approaches of Networks 3.2 Efficiency of Network Design 3.3 Networks, Trust and IT
Content Part II 4 Design und Management of Networks of the MNC 4.1 International Licensing 4.2 International Strategic Alliances and Joint Ventures 4.3 International Franchising-Networks 4.4 Networks and M&As 4.5 Market Entry through Networks: An Integrative Approach 4.6 Internationalization through Countertrade 4.7 International Clusters 5 Organization Design of the MNC of the Future
1 MNC als Global Network 1.1 Product Life Cycle Theory Vernon (1966): Extension of the product life cycle view to explain the internationalization of the firm.
1.2 Transaction Cost Theory Transaction costs = • costs of using the price mechanism (Coase 1937) Search costs Information costs Costs of decision making Negotiation costs Planning period: Ex ante costs
Transaction Costs Monitoring or control costs Contract execution costs Adjustement costs Contract execution period: Ex post costs
Transaction Cost Theory O. E. Williamson (1975) Atmosphere Bounded Rationality Uncertainty/Complexity ‚Information Impactedness‘ Opportunism Transaction Specifity
Market and Hierarchy CC Organizational costs (Setup-costs) Transaction costs Degree of organization
Quasi-Rents, Specific Investments and Hold-up g BA A B g AB D g AC C g BD B‘s profit with A: gBA A‘s profit with B: gAB A‘s quasi-rent: QRAB = (gAB – gAC) B‘s quasi-rent: QRBA = (gBA – gBD) HOLD-UP Potential of B (HB) Quasi-rent of A (QRBA) =
2 Culture, Strategy and Organization of MNC2.1 Country and Organization Culture • “Culture is the collective programming of the mind.”Geert Hofstede
Hofstede Individualism/collectivism Masculinity/femininity Uncertainty avoidance Power distance
Power Distance beschreibt The extent to which people tollerate unequal distribution of power in economy and society. Individualism beschreibt The degree of integration of individuals in groups Individualism: Individual values, individual responsibility, goal orientation Collectivism: Group values, loyal behavior, common responsibility
Masculinity beschreibt How strong are masculin values (for instance achievement, success, money) compared to feminin values (security, life quality, social contact)? Uncertainty Avoidance beschreibt How tolerant are the people concerning new and unstructured situations? high UA: Many Rules, regulations and legal norms to minimize risk
Uncertainty Avoidance • Family or tribe (Asiatic) • Centralized decision making • Loyal, personal relationships • Sozial control (clan control) low • Village market (nordic) • Decentralized, flexible • Coordination through personal and informal communication Formalization • Well-oiled machine • (Germanic) • Decentralized decision • making • Strong role of experts • Coordination through rules • and routines • Traditional bureaucracy • „Pyramid of people“ (Latin) • Centralized decision making • -Central personal coordination • Informal relationships high Power distance low high Hierarchy
Model of Trompenaars:Country and Organization Culture Decentralization Guided Missile Incubator Goal Orientation (formal) Persons (informal) Eiffel Tower Family Centralization
2.2 Strategy und Organization design of the MNC2.2.1 Strategies of the MNC What is a competitive advantage? Sustainable cost and/or revenue advantages compared to the best competitor Ressources Capabilities Strategy Industry structure
I. Strategic Approaches: Porter‘s Model Competitive advantage through low costs and differentiation monopolistic Rents Low-cost, differentiation and focus strategy
Resource-based Approach (Barney, Wernerfelt) Strategy Strategic Rents Competitive advantage Change of the resource bundle Competencies Resources Tangible and intangible resources
II. International Strategies: Perlmutter Ethnocentric Strategy Polycentric Strategy Geocentric Strategy Regiocentric Strategy
Bartlett/Ghoshal-Model high Trans-national Strategy Global Strategy Cost pressures Multi-national Strategy International Strategy low high low Pressure for local responsiveness
2.2.2 Strategy and Organisation Design Chandler (1962): „Structure follows Strategy“ Matrix structure Product-/geographic Structure Functional Structur Differentiation strategy Low-cost strategy
Global Heterarchy (Hedlund)Transnational Organization (Bartlett/Ghoshal) Country competence centers Local and global advantages Decentralisation of decision making Centralization of control IT-enabled strategy Organization culture as clan control
3. Theoretical Foundations of Networks Hierarchy Stable Network Internal Dynamic Network Network One Firm Several Firms
External Networks Joint Venture Consortium High Countertrade Interaction Level Franchising Cluster Cross-Licensing Licensing Cooperation low Competition Cooperation Cooperation Propensity
Keiretsu Other Financial Institutions Banks Insurance Companies Trading Companies Production Companies Subcontractors A B C D F Internal Network External Network Equity: Finance: Goods: