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Cross-Cultural Alliances

Cross-Cultural Alliances. Experience Helps – Sometimes. Sometimes cross-cultural joint ventures can reap enormous benefits, especially for companies that are experienced in doing them. Example : Alliance between Corning and Samsung  Success

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Cross-Cultural Alliances

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  1. Cross-Cultural Alliances

  2. Experience Helps – Sometimes • Sometimes cross-cultural joint ventures can reap enormous benefits, especially for companies that are experienced in doing them. • Example: • Alliance between Corning and Samsung  Success • Alliance between Corning and Vitro Group in Mexico  Failure • An example of a successful intercultural collaboration on a grand scale (Airbus)

  3. There are subcultures within many country cultures • It is important to verify whether the cultural assumptions that you are making are valid for the specifics of your alliance issues • Example: The degree of formality

  4. Cross-Cultural Learning Exchanges • A benefit that is often undervalued in cross-cultural alliances is the transfer of techniques that work in a non-U.S. - based alliance back to this country’s operations. • Senior management often expresses a desire for 2-way learning • workers who are on the front lines operation can see successful practices in foreign operations of the same company as a threat to their job security. • Example: Motorola Management in Malaysia

  5. The Cross-Cultural Interpreter • Someone who either comes from or has lived at length in both your and the partner’s cultures • Understanding value across cultures • It’s difficult for an organization to compete in the global arena without international partners and alliances • This is not only because of the need to defray immense fixed costs, but also in order to truly understand cultural perceptions of value. • The strategy of selecting the right partner is also important in developed countries where chances of failure are exacerbated because of cultural miscommunications.

  6. Riding Political Waves • Understanding the political culture and issues is critical for success abroad • Often times, acceptable profits for one country may be unacceptable for another Ex: U.S.A and Japan • You must assess the situation; Is staying in the protected environment of your home country the best way to compete in the future global economy?

  7. The Right Leaders • It is important to put the right people in the right places • An executive with a solid understanding of the culture and the business will more than likely be best suited to run the subsidiary abroad • There are differences in rules, legislations, reportings, and regulations abroad

  8. Globalism and Progression • English has become the dominant language throughout the world and more and more people are jumping on board • It is essential in large multinational companies to have a strong understanding of English and preferably American culture • In terms of progression of a company, when we start a new subsidiary venture, we must have someone in place that has been there since the beginning and is capable of carrying on in an efficient way and that you can rely on

  9. Elements of Country Culture 1) Power Distance: extent that culture accepts power hierarchy in organiazation 2) Uncertainty Avoidance: extent that corporate culture is afraid of uncertainty 3) Individualism/Collectivism: common thought of in-groups and the right people 4) Masculinity/Femininity: male-dominated, female-dominated, acceptance?

  10. Cultural Differences • Each culture, including corporate cultures have their own unique differences and similarities, it is essential for companies to analyze and develop the appropriate framework to synergize with these companies if they intend to do business with them • Arranging for management teams from other cultures where professional management is more readily available is a possibility, con’t 

  11. Cultural Differences • However, it is important to note that that manager, or management team will need to take into account the national management characteristics of the dominant culture • Choosing the wrong partner, or manager for cross-cultural management can be devastating to both organizations

  12. Cultural Differences • Delegating Authority: It is essential that there is a relationship built on a solid foundation of trust and mutual benefits, corporate culture must be included in the fore-thought of the alliance, it is no longer an after-thought of alliance

  13. 2. Delegating Authority • Delegate responsibilities to subordinates • Japan 72% • Sweden 70% • U.S. 68% • Adventurer - needs to get things done by himself - leads to weak management structure and lack of management depth

  14. 3. Marketing Push and Product Quality • Abilities of managers to sell product and how these abilities related to the quality of the product sold. • The highest reputation for both market push and high-quality products - Japan - Switzerland - Sweden - Denmark • U.S. is ranked as the second in marketing push and fourteenth for product quality.

  15. 4. Willingness to Create and Exploit Technological Innovation • The relationship between the stated readiness of corporations to exploit innovation and the average number of patents granted per 100,000 inhabitants of the country. • In the past, U.S. has been perceived worldwide as the most innovative culture and the most embracing of novel ideas and technologies. • In fact, the survey shows that Japan is a world leader in technological innovation. • The willingness to exploit innovation is backed by - huge capital - low interest government subsidies - policy supporting industrial research • Innovation characteristics must be interrelated with national cultural norms.

  16. Planning the Cross-Cultural Alliance • The key skills of managers. - work in ambiguous, unfamiliar, cross-functional, and transcultural relationships. • The team must include a cultural interpreter. • The home office has to recognize the constraints as well as the opportunities in international markets • Integrate local product needs and management attitudes and adjust own perceptions of time, leadership, and reward into the plans • The omission of these critical perspectives increase the failure potential of international alliances.

  17. Culture Clash : Making Shoes in China • American company operating in China • Problems - manufacturing process - not good quality - late production - slipping delivery schedules • Causes - different cultures - poor communication and misunderstanding how to make decisions - collectivism and femininity vs individualism

  18. Culture Clash: Bringing Swedish Pharmaceuticals to the U.S.A • a strong commitment or responsibility • sense of identification with the corporate entity National cultural characteristic :

  19. Culture Clash: Bringing Swedish Pharmaceuticals to the U.S.A • Purpose of both companies: Open up their market in a particular area of medical devices and diagnostics. • U.S company interest: the technology developed by the Swedish firm • Swedish company interest: the experience and knowledge of how to negotiate and succeed in the FDA approval process and want to penetrate the U.S. market and create distribution network to generate sales.

  20. Culture Clash: Bringing Swedish Pharmaceuticals to the U.S.A • Cause of Failure: • 1) The U.S. Company does not create a joint implementation plan with the Swedes and independently decides on the composition of the team for the new division and staffing it with scientists and planners. • 2) The Swedish Company thinks that the U.S. partner which is large, reputation, and experience in U.S. market know exactly what they are doing.

  21. Culture Clash: Bringing Swedish Pharmaceuticals to the U.S.A • These two points imply: • 1) Lack of cross-functional teams containing the talent necessary to achieve the goals of the parties. • 2) Misalignment of the partners’ objectives.

  22. Culture Clash: Bringing Swedish Pharmaceuticals to the U.S.A Getting worse when: • U.S. team starts to reengineer the Swedish product and the planners push the FDA application date further out • the U.S. representatives explain that they only present the highest quality products with their imprint and scientific expertise to the FDA Trust destroyed

  23. The problems can be analyzed both strategically and culturally: First • The Swedes purpose is low on the Pyramid of Alliances • required less capital • lower risk • less use of human resources The U.S. Company sees the alliance as being higher up on the Pyramid of Alliance - R&D which is required higher risk

  24. The problems can be analyzed both strategically and culturally: Second • The Swedish company was a Start-up and their project was Bet the Farm • This means that the willingness to wait for U.S. Company to bring the product to market is limited. • they want to see market entry and revenue increased within a fairly short period of time. In contrast, U.S. Company sees the project as Experimental. They allocate resources, but the wrong ones.

  25. HOW THESE MISALIGNMENTS WERE HANDLED HAS TO DO PRIMARILY WITH CULTURAL MISCOMMUNICATION, BOTH CORPORATE AND COUNTRY. • Miscommunication - from he very beginning o the Mature company. The adventurer mangers might thought that they know what they are doing or look how successful hey have been. The FDA process is complicated and takes time, so best is to wait. • Cultural issue:The Swedes part, “We will let them know that we are concerned about the loss of a market window of opportunity”. “We see the stereotype of all U.S> companies as market savvy and also a cultural reluctance o confront”

  26. HOW THESE MISALIGNMENTS WERE HANDLED HAS TO DO PRIMARILY WITH CULTURAL MISCOMMUNICATION, BOTH CORPORATE AND COUNTRY. • The American part, they see to gain access to Swedish technology as the achievement of their primary goal. Once they had examined and evaluated the technology, obtaining FDA approval was something they intended to do. The result is completely breakdown of the relationship which are no trust, no confidence, and loss of face and opportunity on both sides.

  27. Migratory and Embedded Knowledge and Country Culture • crucial to understand the issue of cultural differences in the way information communicated • communication will be interpreted differently according to the rules of each culture In China-U.S. joint ventures, misunderstanding can be occurred because U.S. partner will state goals clearly, namely and access to the Chinese market. Whereas, the Chinese partner indirectly approaches the relationship and hind its real agenda

  28. Unintended Knowledge Transfer to China • Transfer of embedded knowledge also led to strong feeling of being taken advantage of EX. Chinese representatives came to visit continuously to the U.S. Company to update information.

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