0% found this document useful (0 votes)
75 views25 pages

Need For Environmental Scanning

The document discusses strategic planning for multinational corporations (MNCs). It describes the basic elements of strategic planning as including external environmental scanning, internal resource analysis of the MNC's strengths and weaknesses, and establishing strategic planning goals. It then discusses different approaches to strategic planning, including those based on economic, political, quality, and administrative imperatives. The appropriateness of each approach depends on pressures for cost reduction and local responsiveness in different countries.

Uploaded by

Gayatri Chopra
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as ZIP, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
75 views25 pages

Need For Environmental Scanning

The document discusses strategic planning for multinational corporations (MNCs). It describes the basic elements of strategic planning as including external environmental scanning, internal resource analysis of the MNC's strengths and weaknesses, and establishing strategic planning goals. It then discusses different approaches to strategic planning, including those based on economic, political, quality, and administrative imperatives. The appropriateness of each approach depends on pressures for cost reduction and local responsiveness in different countries.

Uploaded by

Gayatri Chopra
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as ZIP, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 25

8

Strategy Formulation and Chapter

Implementation
The specific objectives of this chapter are:
1. IDENTIFY the basic steps in strategic planning, including
environmental scanning, internal resource analysis of the
MNC’s strengths and weaknesses, and goal formulation.
2. DESCRIBE how an MNC implements the strategic plan,
such as how it chooses a site for overseas operations.
3. REVIEW the three major functions of marketing,
production, and finance that are used in implementing a
strategic plan.
8
Strategy Formulation and Chapter

Implementation
The specific objectives of this chapter are:
1. DESCRIBE how an MNC implements the strategic plan,
such as how it chooses a site for overseas operations.
2. REVIEW the three major functions of marketing,
production, and finance that are used in implementing a
strategic plan.
3. EXPLAIN specialized strategies appropriate for emerging
markets and international new ventures.
Strategic Management

• Strategic management

• Process of determining an organization’s basic mission and


long-term objectives, and then implementing a plan of
action for pursuing this mission and attaining these
objectives
• How to allocate finite resources to achieve long-term
objectives
• Growing need for strategic management

• Increasingly diversified operations in a continuously


changing international environment.
• More resources, more places to allocate them
• Increased complexity
Approaches to Strategic Planning

Economic
Imperative

Administrative Political
Coordination Imperative

Quality
Imperative
Approaches to Strategic Planning

• Economic imperative focused MNCs employ a


worldwide strategy based on cost leadership,Economic
differentiation, and segmentation Imperative
• They often sell products for which a large portion of value is added
in the upstream activities of the industry’s value chain

• Research and development


• Manufacturing
• Distribution
• Strategy also used when the product is regarded as a generic good
and therefore does not have to be sold based on name brand or
support service
Approaches to Strategic Planning

• MNCs using the political imperative


approach to strategic planning are country- Political
Imperative
responsive; their approach is designed to protect
local market niches
• Success of the product or service depends heavily on

• Marketing
• Sales
• Service
• These MNCs often use a country-centered or
multidomestic strategy.
Approaches to Strategic Planning

• Two paths of quality imperative



Quality
Imperative
• Change in attitudes and a raising of expectation
for service quality
• Implementation of management practices designed to
make quality improvement an ongoing process

• “Total quality management,” (TQM)


• Cross-training personnel to do the jobs of all members in their


work group
• Process re-engineering designed to help identify and eliminate
redundant tasks and wasteful effort
• Reward systems designed to reinforce quality performance
Total Quality Management

• Quality is operationalized by meeting or exceeding


customer expectations
• The quality strategy is formulated at the top management
level and is diffused throughout the organization

• Deliver quality products or services to internal and external


customers.
• TQM techniques

• Traditional inspection (no!) and statistical quality control


• Cutting-edge human resource management techniques, such
as self-managing teams and empowerment
Approaches to Strategic Planning

• Administrative coordination approach



Administrativ
e
• MNC makes strategic decisions based on merits
Coordination
of the individual situation rather than using a
predetermined economic or political strategy
• Least common approach to formulation and
implementation of strategy because of the firm’s desire to
coordinate its strategy both regionally and globally
Approaches to Strategic Planning

• Globalization

• Production and distribution of products and services of a


homogeneous type and quality on a worldwide basis
• Many customers of MNCs have homogenized tastes, which
helps spread international consumerism
• National responsiveness

• Understand different consumer tastes in segmented regional


markets
• Respond to different national standards and regulations
imposed by autonomous governments and agencies
• Adapt tools and techniques for managing the local
workforce
Global Integration vs. National
Responsiveness

Low

Glob
strate

Global integration

Internat
strate

Adapted from Figure 8–1: Global Integration vs. National Responsiveness


Summary of Approaches to Strategic
Planning
• The appropriateness of each strategy depends on pressures for cost
reduction and local responsiveness in each country served
• A global strategy is a low-cost strategy which attempts to benefit from
scale economies in production, distribution, and marketing
• A transnational strategy should be pursued when there are high cost
pressures and high demands for local responsiveness

• Pressures for cost reduction and local responsiveness put


contradictory demands on a company because localized product
offerings increase cost
• Organizations that can find appropriate synergies in global
corporate functions can leverage a transnational strategy
effectively
Elements of Strategic Planning for
International Management

External Environmental Internal Resource Analysis of


Scanning for MNC MNC Strengths and
Opportunities and Threats Weaknesses

Strategic Planning
Goals

IMPLEMENTATI
ON
Adapted from Figure 8–2: Basic Elements of Strategic Planning for International Management
Elements of Strategic Planning for
International Management
• Environmental scanning External Environmental
Scanning for MNC

Opportunities and Threats
■ Provide management with accurate forecasts of trends that relate
to external changes in geographic areas where the firm is
currently doing business or considering setting up operations
■ These changes relate to the economy, competition, political
stability, technology, and demographic consumer data
■ ECLIPTER

■ Econography, Culture, Legal Systems, Income Profile, Political


Risk, Tax Systems, and Exchange Rates


Elements of Strategic Planning for
International Management
• Internal Resource Analysis Internal Resource Analysis of
MNC Strengths and

Weaknesses
■ Evaluate the MNC’s current managerial, technical, material, and
financial strengths and weaknesses

■ Assessment then is used to determine its ability to take


advantage of international market opportunities
■ Match external opportunities (gained through the
environmental scan) with internal capabilities (gained
through the internal resource analysis
■ Key factors for success
■ The key question for the MNC is: Do we have the people and
resources that can help us to develop and sustain the necessary
Elements of Strategic Planning for
International Management
• Strategic Planning Goals Strategic Planning
Goals

■ Goal formulation often precedes the first two steps of


environmental scanning and internal resource analysis
■ However, more specific goals for the strategic plan come out of
external scanning and internal analysis

■ These goals typically serve as an umbrella beneath which


the subsidiaries and other international groups operate
■ Profitability and marketing goals almost always dominate
the strategic plans of today’s MNCs
■ Once the strategic goals are set, the MNC will develop
specific operational goals and controls for the subsidiary or
Formulation of MNC Goals

Adapted from Table 8–1: Areas for Formulation of MNC Goals


Formulation of MNC Goals

Adapted from Table 8–1: Areas for Formulation of MNC Goals


Elements of Strategic Planning for
International Management
• Implementation IMPLEMENTATI
ON

■ Provides goods and services in accord with a plan of action


■ Often, this plan will have an overall philosophy or series of
guidelines that direct the process
■ Considerations in selecting a country

■ Advanced industrialized countries because they offer the


largest markets for goods and services
■ Amount of government control.
■ Restrictions on foreign investment.
■ Specific benefits offered by host countries
Elements of Strategic Planning for
International Management
• Implementation IMPLEMENTATI
ON

■ Local issues

■ Once the country has been decided, the firm must choose the
specific locale
■ Important factors influencing this choice include

■ Access to markets
■ Proximity to competitors
■ Availability of transportation and electric power
■ Desirability of the location for employees coming in
Elements of Strategic Planning for
International Management
• Implementation IMPLEMENTATI
ON

■ Production

■ When exporting goods to a foreign market, the production


process traditionally has been handled through domestic
operations.
■ More recently MNCs have found that whether they are
exporting or producing the goods locally in the host country,
consideration of worldwide production is important.
■ A recent trend has been away from multi-domestic approach
and toward global coordination of operations
Elements of Strategic Planning for
International Management
• Implementation IMPLEMENTATI
ON

■ Finance

■ Transferring funds from one place in the world to another,


or borrowing funds in the international money markets,
often is less expensive than relying on local sources
■ Issues include

■ Re-evaluation of currencies
■ Privatization
■ Strategies for the base of the pyramid

Elements of Strategic Planning for
International Management
• Implementation IMPLEMENTATI
ON

■ Strategies for the “base of the pyramid” (BOP)


■ Emerging market customers


■ People at the bottom of the economic pyramid (4 billion)
■ Marketing at BOP forces consideration of smaller-scale
strategies

■ Building relationships with local governments, small


entrepreneurs, and nonprofits
■ Less dependence on established partners such as central
governments and large local companies
Elements of Strategic Planning for
International Management
• Implementation IMPLEMENTATI
ON

■ International New Ventures and “Born-Global” Firms


■ firms that engage in significant international activity a short


time after being established
■ Successful born-global firms leverage a distinctive mix of
orientations and strategies

■ Global technological competence


■ Unique-products development
■ Quality focus

Cases

• Poland (p. 258)


• KNP (p. 345)

You might also like