Global management European and international business Overview • Global integration • Global rankings • Global corporate strategy • Establishing and managing the competition • Czech republic & cases Reasonability of the topic & objectives - To become familiar with the situation in Czech Republic, regarding international business - To understand basic structures and forms of international business Is today´s economy global? • your ideas? • Thomas Friedman • Ghemawat • … Overview • Global integration • Global rankings • Global corporate strategy • Czech republic & cases Global integration • Theoretical approach – Competitive advantage – Comparative advantage Segmented markets Consequences – Price dispersion – Home bias – Access to markets Integration within trading block Consequences – Price convergence within trading block – Expansion of efficient firms – Focus on their competitive advantage – Relation between specialization of firms according to competitive advantage and the specialization of a country according to comparative advantage – Attractivity of successful regional trading blocks Global integration Consequences – Global price convergence – Home market bias disappears – Efficient firms prevail – Firms focus on their competitive advantage, countries specialize according to their comparative advantage From theory to practice • Price convergence • Home market bias • Turning to corporate specialization due to integration • Relation between intergration and comparative advantage of countries Overview • Global integration • Global rankings • Global corporate strategy • Czech republic & cases Global rankings The Czech Republic ranking The Czech Republic ranking Overview • Global integration • Global rankings • Global corporate strategy • Czech republic & cases Global corporate strategy Companies that go abroad have to face a set of key questions: • Why do they want to expand across borders? • What factors make them decide? • What strategies will they follow? • Which entry mode will they choose? • What are the consequences for their corporate organizational model? • How do they balance the global strategy? • … Global corporate strategy Which entry mode to choose? • exporting, licensing, joint venture, and sole venture • all of these modes involve resource commitments , firms' initial choices of a particular mode are difficult to change without considerable loss of time and money [Root 1987]. • factors that influence the choice of an entry mode for a selected target market • Dunning [1977, 1980, 1988] - the choice of an entry mode for a target market is influenced by three types of determinant factors: ownership advantages of a firm, location advantages of a market, and internalization advantages of integrating transactions within the firm. Global corporate strategy • Extended Dunning´s theory • Not predictive – it does not help to find out how the FDI will evolve in the future, it is rather descriptive – it helps companies to ask the right question about global corporate strategy • Useful check-list approach • Focuses on 3 main questions: Why do companies go abroad? (Ownership advantages) Where the company wants to operate? (Location advantages) How the company intends to enter the market? Global corporate strategy Why do companies go abroad? (Ownership advantages) – Monopolistic advantages – Technology, knowledge – Economies of scale – Reputation – Organizational architecture (logistic models,..) Company has to investigate to what extent those strengths allow the company to differentiate itself from competitors on foreign markets Global corporate strategy Where the company wants to operate? (Location advantages) • Factors that determine the location decision: – Sources of national comparative advantage – Sources of regional comparative advantage – The degree to which four freedoms are realized – Political, social, cultural aspects Global corporate strategy How the company intends to enter the market? • entry mode that minimizes transaction cost • internalization advantages • typology of market entry strategies: – home based strategies – market-seeking strategies – value chain strategies Overview • Global integration • Global rankings • Global corporate strategy • Czech republic & cases J4 J 4 was established in 1994 and deals with the development and production of cyclothermic tunnel band baking ovens and with delivering complete baking and bakery lines and bakeries. The ovens are not only designed for baking rye, rye-wheat or wheat bread, but also various types of bread and pastries, fancy breads, pies, stuffed cakes, cookies, gingerbread, sponge cake biscuits, salted sticks and numerous other baked products. During the short time of its existence, the company has become a lead player on European markets, and markets in the Middle East and Far East. At the present the company supplies baking equipment to England, Belarus, Brazil, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Egypt, England, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Kuwait, Moldavia, Mongolia, the Netherlands, Romania, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Slovakia, Spain, Sweden and the Ukraine. Škoda auto a.s. – Russia – market seeking strategy – production plant • "Opening our first production plant in Russia is a milestone in Škoda Auto's expansion to eastern markets, because the region is growing very dynamically and we look at it with high hopes as far as the future of Škoda Auto is concerned," said Škoda Auto BOD Chairman Reinhard Jung. • The key factor in selecting the location for the Group's plant was the fact that the biggest portion of the sales volume in the Russian market is in Moscow that is less than 200 km away from Kaluga. Another important thing is the transport infrastructure, because Moscow and Kaluga are linked by both railway and a motorway. On top of that, the technical university in Kaluga is likely to be a source of qualified manpower in the future. Organizational structure • Stopford a Wells Organizační struktura nadnárodních podniků • Bartlett – Ghoshall International Multinational Multinacionální podniky Nestlé Peter Brabeck (Chief Executive of Nestlé): „Link with local consumers is very important to us. Therefore, our business remains fragmented and therefore we try to stay as close to the customer as possible. (Financial Times, 13 March 2000) Transnational Literature • ŠTRACH, Pavel. Mezinárodní management. 1. vyd. Praha : Grada, 2009. 167 s. ISBN 9788024729879. • GOODERHAM, Paul N; NORDHAUG, Odd. International management : cross-boundary challenges. 1st ed. Malden : Blackwell, 2003. 473 s. ISBN 0631233415. • VERBEKE, Alain. International business strategy : rethinking the foundations of global corporate success. 1st ed. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2009. 481 s. ISBN 9780521681117 • ZADRAŽILOVÁ, Dana. Mezinárodní management. Vyd. 2. V Praze : Vysoká škola ekonomická v Praze, nakladatelství Oeconomica, 2007. 182 s. ISBN 9788024512433 • PICHANIČ, Mikuláš. Mezinárodní management a globalizace. Vyd. 1. Praha : Vysoká škola ekonomická v Praze, nakladatelství Oeconomica, 2002. 105 s. ISBN 8024504219 • Prof. Filip Abraham, Internalization and globalization, teaching materials • http://www.weforum.org/en/initiatives/gcp/Global%20Competitiveness%Report/index.htm Thank you for attention!