1 / 15

Marketing Pres

Marketing Pres

Télécharger la présentation

Marketing Pres

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Cross-Border Collaboration Managing across Corporate Boundaries

  2. The Bigger, the Better • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TqqISjfTbJ4 • Companies desire multi-dimensionality • Expanding internationally allows bigger business • Must be able to manage assets and resources • Costs and risks associated with managing internationally

  3. Roles of Management Traditional • Protect profits from competitors or bargain power • Strong control over firm’s activities New • Develop interdependent and integrated network within company • External relationships with other firms, customers,etc. • Caused by rising costs, shortened product life, barriers to entry

  4. Friendly Competition? • Strategic Alliances • Companies that were once strict competitors have now allied • AT&T and Toshiba • Traditional alliance • MNE in industrialized corporation joint ventures with junior local partner in less-developed country • New alliances can be between two industrialized countries • Motivation for Strategic Alliances are technology exchange, global competition, industry convergence, economies of scale, and alliances as alternative to merger

  5. Partners can pool resources and concentrate activities to raise the scale of activity or rate of learning • Alliances share and leverage strengths • Trading saves high cost of duplication • Risk-hedging since none of the participating firms bears the full risk • Renault-Nissan

  6. Lomptit bloc onigea • Form alliances to compete with other international companies of similar size • Evens out playing field • Symbian alliance of psion, Eericsson, Nokia, Matsushita, and Motorola created as response to Microsoft’s entry into PDA market.

  7. StarAlliance and OneWorld are airline alliances formed to avoid merging into one company • Created because rules against foreign ownership • When rules lifted, mergers are created • Alliances like Concert and Unisource created Worldcom, France Telecom and Deutsche Telekom

  8. ??? • Speeds up communication • Breaks boundaries between industries • Increases R&D technology • IT, electronics, pharmaceuticals,, specialty chemicals • Material supplies team up with auto companies to transfer and adapt to market • GEC trasferred Ford Xenoy bumper technology from Europe to U.S.

  9. Producers of computers and telecommunications are merging • Biological and chip technologies intersecting • Develop the complex and interdisciplinary skills necessary in the time frame required

  10. Era of Alliance “Euphoria” • 1980s fueled concepts of triad power and stick-to-your-knitting • Triad power emphasized developing significant positions in U.S., western Europe, and Japan • Focus investments, efforts, and attention on only those tasks they have significant competitive advantage • Outsource or use alliances for other tasks

  11. Risks of Competitive Collaboration • Assymetry • SonyEricsson • Risk could be that one of the partners will learn and internalize other’s skill while protecting its own • Ajinomoto Japanese food giant allied with General Foods • Also capturing investment initiative to use the partnership to erode other’s position • Possibility that alliance breaks, one partner is made stronger

  12. Strategic and Organizational Complexity • International partnerships represent a mix of different economic, political, social and cultural systems • Creates organizational challenge • Xerox and Fuji Xerox (Japan)

  13. Building Cooperative Ventures • Partner Selection: Strategic and Organizational Analysis • Availability of partner • Tangible assets • Time and distance • Strategic capabilities • Ongoing process. “Thrill of the Chase” • People are different after the chase is over • Strategic capabilities • Simplicity and Flexibility

  14. Managing Cooperative Ventures • Managing the Boundary • Start with limited agreement? • Always easier to expand • Managing Knowledge • Must prevent outflow of any info or knowledge they don’t want partners to know • InterfaceManagers • Well versed in organizational processes • Personal credibility • Governing Structure • If partners are equal, hard to achieve anything

  15. Conclusion • Alliances don’t have to be permanent • Flexibility is important • Always learn

More Related