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savings to cut prices and increase marketing spending in an effort to gain market share and
thus further lower costs through the attainment of scale economies.
This time the strategy seemed to be working. Between 2003 and 2007 P&G reported strong
growth in both sales and profits. Significantly, P&Gs global competitors, such as Unilever,
Kimberly-Clark and Colgate-Palmolive, were struggling between 2003 and 2008.
(Source: L.P. Willcocks, using multiple published sources, including annual reports.)
first corporate websites. It featured catalogues of products for clients as well as financial and
company information for analysts. Zambrano also launched a logistics system that enabled
customers to track shipments online. In 2000 CEMEX formed a subsidiary to manage its ebusiness efforts. One of these was Contrumex, a construction industry online marketplace
aimed at small and medium-sized businesses in Latin America. Another was Latinexus, an
online exchange for indirect goods and services created in partnership with other leading
companies in Mexico and Brazil. CEMEX renamed its subsidiary Neoris and relaunched it
as an independent company offering website services, e-consulting and web architecture to
companies other than CEMEX.
The basis of CEMEXs e-business strategy was fivefold:
1. The boundaries between companies and industries was becoming increasingly blurred.
2. The relationships between companies and their markets was changing.
3. Time has sped up. Information is everywhere, readily available and virtually free.
CEMEX needed to seize the opportunity to differentiate itself by speed of decisionmaking and new business strategies
4. The internet is changing the nature of work. Computers and networks can replace human
hands and minds in many routine activities. This frees up people to take on the more
information-intensive activities that create value for the firm and customers.
5. There has been a shift in value creation from owning assets to leveraging assets through
networks.
Internationalisation
Cement is a very cyclical industry and its presence in several countries with counter-cyclical
economies would ensure a more predictable stream of cash flows. The companys
performance was intimately pegged to the evolution of the Mexican economy. This meant
high cash-flow volatility and high costs of capital. In the mid-1980s, international
opportunities were substantial, but CEMEX would have to make focused decisions, first
because of the reduced amount of available resources and, second, because only a focused
player would be able to compete with the larger MNCs operating in various international
markets. The man with this vision was Lorenzo Zambrano. Ricardo Castro, CEMEXs senior
vice-president of Strategic Business Development for Asia and Africa, describes his
chairmans vision:
He saw opportunities in both the Mexican cement market and markets beyond its national borders. So his
strategy was to transform the Mexican conglomerate into a focused cement player with global coverage.
Initially, the company divested its non-core assets, becoming first a regional Mexican cement producer.
Subsequently, the company expanded nationally, and finally became global. 1
One of the early steps to internationalisation was to export cement from Mexico to the United
States and Latin America. However, given its structural economic characteristics and
particularly the high transport costs, international trading had limited potential. In 1992,
CEMEXs first direct investment was in Europe with the acquisition of Valenciana and
Sanson in Spain. At the time, Spain was one of Europes most attractive markets and through
this acquisition CEMEX instantly became the market leader in Spain and the worlds fifth
largest cement producer, with 36 million tons of capacity. It was also the companys first
major encounter with its global competitors, the French company, Lafarge, and the Swiss
company, Holcim (at the time Holderbank). The success in Spain spurred further international
expansion, this time in South and North America. In 1994 CEMEX acquired Vencemos,
Venezuelas largest cement company; Cemento Bayano in Panama; and a plant in Texas.
1
Quoted in Lassserre, P. Cemex: Cementing a global strategy. Case 3072331. (France: Insead, 2007).
Further acquisitions in the Dominican Republic in 1995 and Colombia in 1996 were
completed.
By this time the expansion strategy was already paying off. When Mexico entered its 1994
crisis, leading to its currencys the Pesos massive devaluation, CEMEX was able to offset
severe losses with profits from its international operations. In the mid-1990s CEMEX began
its expansion into Asia, a region that clearly matched its strategy for high growth potential
markets. Government infrastructure spending was on the rise, and per capita cement
consumption was still very low but growing fast. Asia represented more than 20 per cent of
the worlds capacity of 1.4bn tons.
By 1994 CEMEX set up trading operations in Southeast Asia and in 1999 established
CEMEX Asia Holdings (CAH), with a mission to develop new partnerships and cementrelated businesses in that region. In 1997, it made its first acquisition, a 30 per cent stake in
Rizal Cement in the Philippines. However, immediately after acquiring Rizal Cement, the
Asian crisis set in and caught CEMEX, and everyone else, by surprise. The industry saw a
huge reduction in demand throughout the region in the Philippines by 17 per cent, Indonesia
by 30 per cent, Malaysia by 37 per cent and Thailand by 35 per cent. But the crisis, which
made many regret the high acquisition prices paid prior to 1997, also presented the cement
MNC with an opportunity. Heavily indebted local producers now wanted to sell and prices
were going down. By late 1998, CEMEX had guaranteed a 70 per cent stake in Rizal Cement,
and also bought Apo Cement, the lowest cost producer in the Philippines.
In Indonesia, CEMEX was named preferred bidder for Sement Gresik, a state-owned
company that had consolidated three out of the five state-owned cement producers and
controlled about 40 per cent of domestic production. The government wanted to privatise the
company and by May 1998 CEMEX was planning on taking a majority stake. But after strikes
and protests, the government backed off and CEMEX only took a 25 per cent share of the
company. Since it was unable to take control of the company CEMEX divested itself of its
stake in August 2006. With Asia on hold, CEMEX expanded its operations in America and
Europe. In November 2000 CEMEX acquired Southdown, No. 2 in the United States, with 12
plants serving 27 states. Southdown operates at full capacity and serves only the American
market, providing a stable stream of cash flows. In 2005 it acquired the RMC group, based in
the UK, which increased its capacity by around 20 per cent, strengthened its position across
the cement value chain, reinforced its presence in Europe and made CEMEX the worlds
largest producer of ready-mix.
Going global
From 1996 to 2008, CEMEX had consolidated its position as the third largest cement
producer in the world, behind Lafarge/Blue Circle and Holcim. By 2005 it had achieved an
estimated production capacity of 94 million tons per year. It was the number one producer of
ready-mix, with 76 million tons; one of the largest aggregate producers, with 175 million
tons; and one of the top cement traders in the world, selling more than 17 million tons in 2005.
What truly makes CEMEX a global company and not simply a multinational? According to
the companys executives, there are several factors that make CEMEX a truly global company.
First, the international expansion strategy was a planned and organised move, rolled out in
several phases. As a consequence, today CEMEXs international network is not a sum of
different operations in different locations, but can be seen as a network of systems. Initially,
CEMEX represented a Mexican cement production system. Later it became a system of
cement production and trading in the Caribbean region, with ramifications in Europe, Latin
America and North America. It later advanced into the Mediterranean region, and went as far
as Asia in 1995 (although the first acquisition in Asia only occurred in 1997).
Secondly, CEMEX full integrates its international operations into the CEMEX network. This
is mainly achieved via a common technological platform, organisational structure and
corporate culture. In addition, its trading activity is important in achieving a true
interconnection between CEMEX and independent production systems. This activity allows
CEMEX to maintain a strong relationship between cement producers and customers
worldwide.
Finally, the company has developed a knowledge community through a series of practices
known as the CEMEX Way. This can be summarised as follows:
The CEMEX way:
identifies and disseminates best practice and standardises business processes across the globe
has common management principles and systems for the entire organisation
encourages all managers to speak the same language when discussing business
issues
implements knowledge and experiences gathered over many years of doing business in
various countries.
The CEMEX way specifies everything about the running of the company, down to the make
of computers employees must use. It also insists on mutual learning across subsidiaries. It also
uses a post-merger integration (PMI) process that is put in place after each acquisition, to
ensure that the acquisition is quickly and well assimilated. CEMEX specified three conditions
for an acquisition to go ahead. The acquisition should provide a return on investment much
bigger than the cost of capital. Second, it should enable CEMEX to maintain its financial
strength and credit quality. Third, CEMEXs management expertise should be able to increase
the acquired companys value. In the integration process, CEMEX decides on which
operations should be decentralised and those that need centralised decision-making and
standardisation. It uses the CEMEX brand, and sources people and assets internationally. It
standardises management practices, but if local practices are particularly effective, it
standardises those for CEMEX as well.
A key issue for CEMEX has been its management of people. There is a clear career path to
ensure the best of new employees find their way quickly up the company. There is an
intensive induction programme educating people into the CEMEX way. Multiple training and
education programmes are made available to staff, including over 260 e-learning courses on
operations, business and managerial skills.
CEMEX is also notable globally for its extensive leverage on technology. For example, while
it was still mainly a domestic company based in Mexico, ready-mix concrete trucks were
equipped with computers on board. This allowed for central tracking by global-positioning
satellite systems and precise planning of cement delivery schedules. Technology has allowed
CEMEX to become one of the lowest cost producers anywhere in the world. Its technological
backbone also allowed CEMEX to specialise in markets that lack highly developed road
systems or solid telephone networks and where competing becomes a matter of showing
customers that you can save them from uncertainty. What CEMEX did was adapt global
technology to the developing worlds almost limitless range of local problems.
CEMEX is also strong on global branding and its concern for customer satisfaction. While the
CEMEX brand is strongly used, it also has product sub-brands, designed to suit the needs of
the customer in whichever part of the world they are in. Historically, by managing all the
critical activities IT, staff, innovative marketing methods, acquisition strategy and effective
customer support CEMEX had delivered superior value to all its stakeholders.
This section is based on annual reports from 20082013 and Vivek, M. et al. Cemexs cost of globalised growth
The cash crunch? IBSCDC case 3101061. (Cranfield: Case Clearing House, 2010).
One of the secrets behind the Portman-Ritz-Carltons success is that the general manager
interviews every prospective employee. Of course this is a time-consuming process for a busy
general manager. Yet, by doing that, the general manager is able to get a feel for the
intangible nature of the potential employees attitudes. In terms of the questions that the
general manager asks, DeCocinis shared that he usually asks them about themselves and tries
to make a connection. But the most important question he asks is: Why do you want to join
our hotel? and Whatever they say, the most important notion needs to be I enjoy working
with people, not just using the phrase I like people I really want to find out what
motivates them 2 If the person smiles naturally, thats very important to the Ritz-Carlton, it
turns out, because this is something that they feel the candidate cant force. In a culture where
people tend to have more reserved expressions, service personnel who smile naturally are
valuable and rare resources appreciated by hotel guests.
The Portman-Ritz-Carltons employee satisfaction rate is 98 per cent, and its guest
satisfaction is between 92 per cent and 95 per cent. To translate excellent HR management to
better firm performance, the hotels performance goals are aligned with the Ritz-Carltons
corporate goal from the company to the hotel, and from the hotel to each division. This
means that everyone is part of the whole. Every employee comes up with a plan to reach the
goal for the next year, measured by guest satisfaction, financial performance and employee
satisfaction. Bonuses at the end of the year are based on improvements made.
In China, many multinationals face a constant shortage of talent and high employee turnover.
Yet, the Portman-Ritz-Carlton has not only been able to attract, but also to retain, high-quality
staff to deliver excellent customer service and ensure profitable growth. What are the secrets
behind its ability to retain these individuals? To illustrate this ability, a senior executive
pointed to one incident. During the 2003 SARS crisis, business started to deteriorate. By April,
the Ritz Carlton occupancy rate, which should have been at 95 per cent, had dropped to 35 per
cent. The first step was for the executive team to take a 30 per cent pay cut. But then it got
worse. By May, the occupancy rate was 17 per cent to 18 per cent. The hotel reduced the
working week to four days, and staff were asked to take their outstanding paid leave days.
And then, when these reserves were used up, everyone really pulled together. Employees who
were single gave their shifts to colleagues who had families to support. Some employees were
worried that their contracts would not be renewed given the low occupancy rates, so the hotel
chain renewed them without a second thought. Employee satisfaction rate that year was 99.9
per cent. This was a negative situation that turned out to have extremely positive
consequences.
1
2
Quoted in Peng, M. Global strategic management. (London: Cengage, 2009) [ISBN 9780324590982] Chapter 3.
Ibid.
10
11
12
brands that Unilever sold from 1,600 to just 400 and to market these on a regional or global
scale. To support this new focus, the company planned to reduce the number of
manufacturing plants from 380 to 280 by 2004. The company also established a new
organisation based on just two global product divisions a food divisions and a home
personal care division. Within each division are a number of regional business groups that
focus on developing, manufacturing and marketing either food or personal care products
within a given region. For example, Unilever Bestfoods Europe, with its headquarters in
Rotterdam, focuses on selling food brands across Western and Eastern Europe, while Unilever
Home and Personal Care Europe do the same for home and personal care products. A similar
structure can be found in North America, Latin America and Asia. Thus, Bestfoods North
America, with its headquarters in New Jersey, has a similar charter to Bestfoods Europe, but,
in keeping with differences in local history, many of the food brands marketed by Unilever in
North America are different to those marketed in Europe.
(Source: L.P. Willcocks, using annual reports, and Hill, C. International business. (New York: McGraw Hill,
(2010) [ISBN 9780071220835].)
13
14
system worked well and credited much of its success to the quality of the decisions it
facilitated.
By the mid-1990s, however, Dow had refocused its business on the chemicals industry and
had divested itself of its pharmaceutical activities where the companys performance had been
unsatisfactory. Reflecting the change in corporate strategy, in 1995 Dow decided to abandon
its matrix structure in favour of a more streamlined structure based on global business
divisions. The change was also driven by realisation that the matrix structure was just too
complex and costly to manage in the intense competitive environment of the 1990s,
particularly given the companys renewed focus on its commodity chemicals where
competitive advantage often went to the low-cost producer. As Dows then CEO put it in a
1999 interview: We were an organisation that was matrixed and depended on teamwork, but
there was no one in charge. When things went well, we didnt know whom to reward, and
then things when poorly, we didnt know whom to blame. So we created a global divisional
structure and cut out layers of management. There used to be 11 layers of management
between me and the lowest level employees; now there are five. In short, Dow ultimately
found that a matrix structure was unsuited to a company that was competing in very costcompetitive global industries, and it had to abandon its matrix to drive down operating costs.
(Source: L.P. Willcocks, using multiple published sources, including annual reports.)
15
16
17
viewed as a lead plant within Hewlett Packards global network, with primary responsibility
not just for manufacturing but also for the development and design of a family of small ink-jet
printers targeted at the US market.
(Source: L.P. Willcocks, using multiple published sources, including annual reports.)
18
Chao, L. As rivals outsource Lenovo keeps production in-house, Wall Street Journal, 9 July 2012;
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303302504577325522699291362.html (accessed 22 May 2013).
19
aid a new push into new types of smartphones, tablets and internet-connected televisions.
Early in 2012 Lenovo unveiled its first internet-connected television, the K91 Smart TV, then
made it available for sale in China. Lenovo said it needed to line up deals with content
providers before it could sell the TV in the USA and elsewhere, and did not know how
quickly that would happen. Later in 2012, Lenovo planned to start selling its first smartphones
powered by a chip designed by Intel Corp. It also was getting ready to start selling the
IdeaPad Yoga, an ultrathin laptop with a keyboard that can swing behind the monitor to
transform the gadget into an iPad-like tablet.
David Wolf, chief executive of Wolf Group Asia, a Beijing-based marketing strategy firm,
said the challenge for Lenovo was to develop products that are not just good products, but that
people cant wait to have. But, according to him, Lenovo recognise that theres a pathway and
they need to be on it. Sales of Lenovos newest products are small but growing. According to
the IDC, the company was the fourth-largest vendor of tablets in the first quarter of 2012 with
a 2.8 per cent share of unit shipments, up from number eight in the fourth quarter of last year.
Apple, meanwhile, garnered a 63 per cent share of tablet shipments with its iPad. Apple chief
executive Tim Cook has not been impressed with Lenovos tinkering with tablets. In an
earnings call in April, when analysts asked if he would consider making a device to provide
optional keyboards to iPads, he commented that you can converge a toaster and a refrigerator,
but those things are probably not going to be pleasing to the user you wind up
compromising both and not pleasing either user.
Yang spent a lot of time at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas in January looking
at products from competitors. He said later that compared to Samsung, LG and those
companies in terms of design, Lenovo still have room to improve. For him, those companies
products are both fashionable and stylish. That represents a real challenge for Lenovo.
Yang started out at the predecessor company of Lenovo in 1988, delivering computers by
bicycle in the early days. In the USA, there is an infrastructure to fulfil a companys every
need. In China, by contrast, Lenovo had no infrastructure, so had to do it themselves. Its first
advertisement was taped to the window of its office which Lenovo displayed by turning the
lights on at night.
Yang moved up the ranks after catching the eye of the companys co-founder, Liu. He became
chief executive in 2001 at the age of 36. That year, he led a team of 10 executives on a world
tour of companies like Cisco Systems, Intel and Hewlett Packard, which at the time were
more than three times Lenovos size by revenue. After Lenovo bought IBMs PC unit in 2005,
Yang moved to the USA; he stepped back from the CEO position and became chairman of the
company, bringing US executives in to take his place. The integration of the two companies
was rocky, but Lenovos profits were climbing sharply by mid-2008.
However, the global economic downturn exposed huge vulnerabilities within the company.
The IBM ThinkPad business was heavily reliant on commercial sales at a time when
companies were reducing spending on technology, and Lenovos consumer business was
strong only in China. The company struggled to get its products on the shelves of major
retailers in the USA, and its global market share dropped to less than 7 per cent worldwide by
unit shipments, lagging behind Hewlett Packard, Dell and Taiwans Acer.
Lenovo co-founder Liu decided to return as chairman in 2009 while Yang shifted from the
chairmans seat back to being CEO. Liu has since stepped down, and in 2012 Yang was both
chairman and CEO. He had a four-year plan. He refocused the company on China as well as
other emerging markets. He expanded its vast network of resellers around China so that even
in rural areas customers would be close to a Lenovo store with customer service, and he made
an aggressive push into India and Russia, where IBMs ThinkPads were well known but
20
Lenovos brand wasnt. Others in the industry have been sceptical of this approach. Steve
Felice, Dells president, was asked in an earnings call in May 2012 why the company didnt
go after the market for competitively priced PCs, particularly in Asia. He replied that Dell had
backed off of that market. He added that Dell would watch the situation carefully, but he
didnt think that type of competition was sustainable at an industry-wide level.
As part of the plan, Yang sat down in 2009 with Lenovos supply chain senior vice president,
pouring over charts and analyses of the costs and benefits of in-house manufacturing. They
decided to increase the company's in-house manufacturing to 50 per cent (from less than 30
per cent). Although three years before, the whole industry believed that the future was about
outsourcing, Lenovo came to the conclusion that the company could move faster if it was
more vertically integrated.
Lenovo chief technology officer said in 2012 that the companys strategy was playing a key
role in the development of new products. Looking at the industry trends, most innovations for
PCs, smartphones, tablets and smart TVs were related to innovation of key components such
as display, battery and storage. Differentiation of key parts, for him, was very important. So
Lenovo started investing more, and working very closely with key parts suppliers for products
like bigger and thinner touch screens. He said consumers could expect to see some of these
efforts embodied in new products from Lenovo by the end of 2012.
Lenovo already has had some misses in its recent efforts to branch out into new products. One
of its earliest efforts to show the world its innovative abilities was its U1 Hybrid, a
combination notebook and tablet with a detachable keyboard unveiled in 2010, which proved
too costly to make and which missed its release date. Eagerness drove Lenovo to show off the
U1 Hybrid before it was ready. Still, the device, which was a novel idea at the time, did attract
a lot of attention for the company, including from David Roman, formerly an executive at HP
and Apple, who signed up that year to become Lenovos chief marketing officer. He says he
joined the company because he was impressed by Lenovos innovative efforts and Yangs
determination, and saw its lack of brand identity as an opportunity.
Roman said he wanted to find ways to make Lenovo into a brand considered to be cool and
innovative rather than cheap by consumers around the world. But, as it turned out, his task
started from inside the company. There were very emotional discussions in the beginning
about actually having Lenovo on the front of the ThinkPad. The logic was the Lenovo name
could actually be damaging to ThinkPad, but Roman could not see the logic of putting
Lenovos best product on the market without its logo.
Since then, Roman has launched an overhaul of the companys image, purchasing advertising
slots during hit prime-time TV shows such as Glee and National Football League broadcasts.
One advertisement shows a Lenovo laptop activating a parachute after being tossed out of a
plane to show how quickly it boots. In Lenovos US offices, slogans from the campaign
Lenovo for those who do are plastered everywhere.
Senior executives at Lenovo consider building a brand to be a crucial part of Lenovos next
phase of growth now that the PC business is on an upswing. The message from the senior
executives is: to have higher market share, you need to have a brand.
(Source: L.P. Wilcocks, using multiple published sources, including Chao, L. As rivals outsource Lenovo keeps production
in-house, Wall Street Journal, 9 July
2012; http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303302504577325522699291362.html (accessed 22 May 2013).
21
22
Latina, has established a number of computer-related programs that help train software
professionals.
And its timing has been right. By 2007 the global tech boom was in its second decade, with an
accelerating global demand for software professionals in both wealthy and emerging nations
and an ensuing labour crunch and a related problem of turnover as people jumped from job to
job in the hot market seeking higher salaries. At the same time, baby boomers in Europe and
the United States were racing toward retirement, with US Labor Department estimates that by
2020, there will be a 28 million person shortage in the labour force. And so, after looking at
the overheated markets in India and China, and the upcoming crunch in the USA, many have
turned to labour markets in Latin America to fill the void. PanGenesis is one of the companies
that was in the right place.
PanGenesis is an IT services firm targeting and servicing multinational clients. Thus, its
foreign clients outsource IT support offshore (nearshore) to PanGenesis. PanGenesis was
founded in 2002 and is headed by three experienced leaders. American CEO and founder
Richard W. Knudson is an old hand in offshoring, having lived in India for seven years
consulting to the Indian IT industry. Among his many accomplishments, Knudson was
involved in early capability maturity model (CMM) evaluations in India and China. The
firms president is Jim Kamenelis, the former CIO of Xerox Palo Alto Research Centre, one
of the most venerated R&D centres in modern US history. Carlos Apstegui heads operations
in Costa Rica. He is a native of Costa Rica and has 20 years of successful IT business
operations in Costa Rica.
PanGenesis is building several programmes for tapping inexpensive but well-trained IT
labour.
Apprentice programme
CEO Knudson and President Kamenelis began working with the newly elected Able Pacheco
government in 2002 to create apprentice programmes. Working with influential people in
Costa Rica and making his case directly to the president and the science and technology
minister, Pardo-Evens, many of the elements of the programme were in place in 2007.
At its core, the programme targets young, poor students just out of secondary school. There
are many excellent students who are not funnelled through career tracks for various reasons.
Typically they are busy working to contribute to the family income. Only about 20 per cent of
2,500 applicants who apply at the state-funded public university computer science (CS)
program are accepted, with the remaining 80 per cent ripe for an apprentice programme. Of
those who are accepted into the CS programs, 60 per cent are unable to finish. A related
source of apprentices are the 450 students who finish the strong high school IT track,
comprising 2,500 hours of work. In spite of their computer prowess, many seek structure in
their computer career plans.
All of these students can be turned into productive software engineering professionals through
the apprentice programme. The students undergo a rigorous six-month training programme
that includes English immersion; intensive programming concepts; configuration management
using well-known software; quality assurance audits; nightly code reviews; training in
documentation; and teamwork, scheduling and statistical analysis. Once the training is
successfully completed, the graduates become engineering apprentices and are assigned to
support a seasoned software engineer for four hours a day. This pair acts as a development
team. The qualification for an apprentice is modelled in Figure 1 below.
23
Figure 1.
The apprentice relieves the software engineer from having to perform important but nonengineering housekeeping tasks that take up a substantial amount of time. This frees the
engineer to focus on high-impact software engineering tasks.
While fully educated and experienced software engineers are charged out at up to $30 an
hour, an apprentice is charged to the client at a much lower rate. PanGenesiss income for the
apprentice is used to fund the apprentices living expenses, pay the university for the
apprentices four-year university education to receive a software engineering degree, and
sponsor grants for underprivileged students and support university classrooms and
laboratories.
To remain an apprentice the student must pursue a university degree as a software engineer,
maintain high grades, properly and diligently perform his or her apprenticeship assignments,
and commit themselves to working for PanGenesis after graduating from the university. The
apprentice works four hours each day and attends the university the remainder of the time.
This programme is modelled in Figure 2 below.
Figure 2.
As shown in Table 1 that follows, the apprentice model allows PanGenesis to significantly
underbid competitors while substantially reducing project and development costs and delivery
times. In addition to schedule and cost benefits, the services and products receive a substantial
improvement in quality due to 100 per cent code reviews and frequent quality audits
conducted by the well-trained apprentices. This value-added to quality and project cost is not
factored into the savings already achieved by the apprenticeship model.
24
Hours
4.0
2.5
1.5
In the traditional model, assume a typical project with the following parameters:
Traditional model
Total project hours
Rate charged in offshore outsourcing
Skills needed: Engineers experienced in J2EE, Web applications
Metrics
10,000
$30 per hour
5 or more years
experience
In the PanGenesis apprentice model, the apprentice takes over some of the software
engineers productive housekeeping tasks:
Apprentice model
Number of total productive hours (1,000 hours added for apprentice
management)
Metrics
11,000
Engineering rate
Apprentice rate
Total weekly charge to customer of a team of engineers and
apprentices
Charge rate by PanGenesis (engineers with five or more years of
experience)
300 hours
37 weeks
$253,000
$1,380
$23 per hour
25
26
many unique and useful features, SAP General Ledger has the ability to automatically and
simultaneously post all sub-ledger items in the appropriate general accounts, simultaneously
update general ledger and cost accounting areas, and evaluate and report on current
accounting data in real time. Grace also liked SAPs centralised approach to general ledger,
including up-to-date references for the rendering of accounts across all of its divisions.
Consolidating multiple ledgers is a difficult task. SAP General Ledger helped Grace to
simplify the process. SAP Consulting and an SAP General Ledger migration team assisted the
company along the way. SAP implementations feature an SAP team leader and project
manager as well as a migration cockpit. The migration cockpit is a feature of SAP
implementations that offers a graphical representation and overview of the general ledger
migration process. The cockpit displays steps of the migration in sequence and manages logs,
attachments, and other materials important to the general ledger. The migration cockpit helps
to ensure that sufficient planning goes into the general ledger consolidation process, and that
the necessary business process changes accompany the technical changes of implementing a
unified general ledger. SAP and Grace split the project into two main components: General
Ledger Data Migration and Business Process Testing. General Ledger Data Migration
involved acquiring all of the relevant data from Graces three separate ledgers, combining it
and eliminating redundancies, and supplying it to the SAP General Ledger. A small team
executed this half of the project. Grace decided to standardise its reporting processes around
profit-centre accounting and built its general ledger design with that standard in mind.
Business process testing was completed by a global SAP team performing multiple full-cycle
tests. In other words, SAP testers accessed the system remotely and tested all of the functions
of SAP General Ledger to ensure that the system would work as planned. The SAP General
Ledger project manager oversaw both components of the project. During the testing process,
SAP testers used a technique called unit testing, common to many system upgrades of this
type. The testers set up a dummy system with a prototype version of the general ledger and
used it to test different types of accounting documents. Grace wanted to modify the
configuration of the general ledger to conform to the companys unique needs and
circumstances, and made sure that the people who knew what was needed were building the
system and designing its specifications. Because of these adjustments, unit testing was critical
to ensure that configuration changes had not affected the overall integrity of the system. SAP
testers also performed basic scenario tests, complex scenario tests and tests on special
accounting document types in an effort to ensure that the general ledger was equipped to
handle all of the tasks Grace expected it to perform. They also tested in-bound finance
interfaces, such as the HR interface, bank statements and upload programmes, as well as
special document types used by those interfaces. SAP and Grace both knew that a significant
effort would be required to properly test the general ledger, and SAPs experience with
similar upgrades in the past was helpful in ensuring that SAP performed the proper number of
tests. After the data migration was completed, Grace had to decommission its old ledgers,
which were still pivotal sources for many of the custom reports that the company was
generating on a regular basis. For example, reports are automatically generated from the
special-purpose ledger, or reports that group all the transactions that took place within a
particular country in the past year, and so on. To decommission its old ledgers, Grace had to
eliminate as many of those custom reports as it could, and move the essential ones over to the
new general ledger. Grace recruited employees from all areas of their financial division to
identify the most critical reports.
With the general ledger migration completed, all of WR Grace shares a common accounting
infrastructure. Now management can quickly develop an overall picture of the companys
financial status, and most of the ledger can be accessed or updated in real time. The financial
28
reconciliation processes at the end of each reporting period were totally eliminated, allowing
Grace to devote less energy to managing its ledgers and more on actually running its business.
The eventual savings in all areas of the business should pay for the installation in a short time.
Graces accountants and financial planners will be much more efficient. Managers will spend
less time getting the information they need. The total IT costs for maintaining a single ledger
will be far less than the costs for maintaining three, and fewer errors will make their way into
the general ledger system. Best of all for Grace, the implementation was completed on time
and under budget.
Grace hopes to use the General Ledger platform to continue making other improvements with
SAP. Grace plans to upgrade its consolidation systems, financial planning and analytics
functions to SAP systems. Grace already had a strong relationship with SAP. In 1997, Grace
installed SAP software for the first time, and prior to the general ledger migration, Grace was
already using SAP Business Information Warehouse and NetWeaver Portal globally. This
pre-existing relationship made the process of implementing SAP General Ledger much easier.
Its also the reason why Grace is so optimistic that by switching to SAP solutions it will
achieve similar gains in other areas of its business.
(Source: L.P. Willcocks, using multiple published sources.)
29
30
planning module in Europe first, and then once the concept is validated, additional rollouts
will follow around the world. In Asia-Pacific, 3M is implementing its ERP system over the
next few years. In the past, executive managers in the USA did not have timely, accurate or
consistent information on how all the firms business units, regions and products were
performing. To a large extent, 3M was not manageable or governable prior to the current
effort to rationalise its systems. One solution will be SAPs business intelligence (BI)
software which will enable 3Ms management to access accurate and timely data on business
performance across its divisions to support informed decision-making. The SAP software
agreement enables 3M to integrate the best practices it has gained with its existing BI
deployments from the SAP BusinessObject portfolio in the USA and in other regions into the
global rollout template. One advantage of having integrated global systems is the ability to
transfer what you learn in one region to another region. In a further sign that 3M management
has a keen understanding of corporate structure and strategy, the firm plans to maintain a
large measure of independence among the six divisions because their histories and products
are so different. It will not force the divisions to adopt a single instance of the SAP products
but instead will allow substantial variation among divisions what one wag called virtual
instances of the software that reflect the needs of customers served by the various divisions.
3Ms efforts to create a global IT infrastructure identify some of the issues that truly global
organisations need to consider if they want to operate across the globe. Like many large,
multinational firms, 3M grew rapidly by purchasing other businesses in foreign countries, as
well as through expanding domestic operations to foreign countries. In the process, 3M
inherited hundreds of legacy software systems and developed new systems, few of which
could share information with one another, or report consistent information to corporate
headquarters. 3Ms legacy information systems simply could not support timely management
decision-making on a global scale.
To solve its global management and business challenges, 3M adopted an integrated suite of
software applications from SAP, one of the worlds largest software firms. 3M had to devise a
flexible, modular implementation strategy that integrated both the existing legacy systems and
preserved some measure of autonomy for the six divisions that are the basis of the company.
3M is now able to respond to changes in business conditions around the globe and around the
clock.
(Source: L.P. Willcocks, using multiple published sources.)
31
32
This case is based on real client and supplier companies but the two organizations have been renamed to
preserve the anonymity requested. Participants from the two companies have also had their names changed in
the text. All detail is otherwise accurate except where confidentiality or competitiveness issues arise, in which
case the data has been suppressed or generalised. The case has been designed for class discussion only rather
than to indicate good or bad practice in the particular circumstances prevailing. The authors are Dorottya
Kovasznai and Leslie Willcocks of the LSE.
33
The aim of the contract was to provide a HRO solution that covered the full employee
lifecycle from recruitment to termination, supporting all HR domains (recruitment, HR
administration, payroll, compensation, benefits, training,etc.). The designed business
processes were based on XperTrans self-developed HR Information Technology Services.
The HR IT Services included the management and administration of a centralised and
consolidated global HR system that was deployed to manage and administer employee data
and reporting.
34
Recruitment of EMEA
regional implementation
team begins
Febr 2010:
-XperTrans CEO &
president replaced
March 2010:
-XperTrans sells HR Management line of
business to competitor ANG
2006
June 2010:
-ANG takeover comes into effect
July 2010:
-C&C takes payroll back
in-house globally
Early 2009:
-Series of Wave A
country delays
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
Oct 2009:
-Majority of Wave B
resources released
Aug 2009:
-Project put on hold for an unspecified period
and XperTrans asked to stabilise Wave A
operations
-Announcement of Wave B resources' layoff
June 2009:
-Temporary freeze of global Wave B
preparation activities announced
-No new go live date specified
36
37
38
The project had an extremely ambitious timeline: global design workshops were to be
finished in late 2007, regional design and implementation were supposed to be completed
within the following two years, and all countries were expected to go live by mid-2010
(see Figures 2 and 3). However, the EMEA implementation team encountered a series of
difficulties when they commenced the development of regional HR business processes
because the adjustment of the US-developed service model to the local circumstances
emerged as a far from straightforward process. In particular, the US model could not
easily accommodate the immense complexity of the country-specific labour legislation
requirements and the diverse HR practices present in the EMEA region.
After the go-live with the first wave of countries (Wave A: South Africa and Germany)
in early 2009 (see Figure 2), XperTrans experienced a series of serious operational issues
which made it clear that the implemented HRO solution was far from ideal. The main
problem was XperTranss inability to meet the payroll accuracy service level agreement,
which obviously raised concerns on C&Cs side. To make things worse, the
implementation team was struggling to meet the development deadlines set for the
upcoming project waves and consequentially numerous country-go lives had to be
postponed.
Still, in spite of the growing problems surrounding the project, it came as a surprise for
XperTrans that in June 2009 C&C requested to delay the Wave B go-live scheduled for
the following month (see Figure 2). Finally, in August 2009 the client requested
XperTrans to put the entire project on hold for an unspecified period of time and asked
them to concentrate on the stabilisation of the live Wave A countries. Although in the
EMEA region Wave A only involved a relatively small employee population in South
Africa and Germany, on a global level XperTrans were already servicing more than 50
per cent of C&Cs total headcount. This was due to the fact that in North America the
USA and Canada with a significant employee population had already gone live. At
this stage, Clean&Cure were worried that the outsourcing project might jeopardise their
entire HR operations, but in their view, it was already too late for them to back out of the
contract.
From August 2009 to February 2010 XperTrans worked diligently on stabilising the
project, but the majority of their resources hired to support the Wave B countries were
laid off. In early 2010 XperTrans announced that their CEO and president were to be
replaced, and in March 2010 they agreed to sell their HR management line of business to
ANG (a competitor in the HRO arena) with an effective date of 1 June 2010. ANG took
over all client accounts from XperTrans and XperTranss own in-house HR operations.
ANG also brought its own clients to the Budapest-based service centre XperTrans and
C&C had established. The future of the project became insecure. In practice, Clean&Cure
decided to take payroll back in-house globally in July 2010, but there was no decision on
the future of the remaining outsourced HR operations.
Throughout the winter of 201011 ANG worked initially on the idea of expanding the
number of clients serviced from Hungary, but after reviewing the XperTrans contracts
they had taken over, they changed plans. In March 2011 C&C decided to backsource
their entire German account with immediate effect. The outsourcing arrangement there
39
was not working well, and C&C found themselves facing a series of further decisions to
sort out their HR sourcing strategy and future.
Outsourcing management
Francesca Harding contemplated this history with little pleasure. She could see that the
timelines were ambitious and that there was a lot more complexity than both companies
originally saw in what they were undertaking. She also drew on her long experience and
did an analysis of other issues against the better practice she had seen in many other
outsourcing arrangements. In particular she focused on strategy, contracting, relational
governance and project management.
On strategy, C&C had turned to outsourcing to harmonise their disparate HR systems into
a more cost effective global HR system. The aim was to outsource all their HR activities
except that which was considered strategic. For XperTrans, HRO had always been a
small part of its operation, and this major deal offered a great opportunity to strengthen
this line of business by creating a prestige client and site. At the time the deal was signed
there were hardly any global HRO contracts of this size and scope, so there were no
robust benchmarks available. XperTrans were selected because they seemed to provide
the best combination of cost, scope, timeline and transformation. Harding knew some of
the senior managers involved on the XperTrans side and managed to get to talk to several
of them on the telephone. One gave her some insight into the selection process:
The people we had on-board during the sales pursuit were incredibly convincing. They
were saying our capabilities were fantastic if we get this deal we are able to build the
plane while flying it. (XperTrans regional operations implementation manager).
As far as Harding could work out, contract crafting had been a long and meticulous
process, but it involved mainly sales people from XperTranss side and no experts with
global service centre operation experience. In an attempt to please the client, XperTrans
had also committed to provide a level of service that they were not providing to any other
client. They also set an ambitious timeline. XperTrans had also promised to implement
their US HR outsourcing solution with minimal changes to the EMEA region, without
verifying the viability of this model. It was a fee-for service contract (employee/month)
which turned out to be not at all profitable for XperTrans. A senior manager from
XperTrans gave Harding some further insight that sounded useful:
American companies signing global deals have a very narrow minded vision, they dont
quite still understand that you cant do it the same way in 44 countries as you do it in one.
It would be important to have people from operations involved when crafting the contract
to avoid setting unrealistic service levels. (XperTrans senior operations manager).
Harding contemplated governance, relationships and project management. The
relationship between the two companies seemed to have been generally positive and
cooperative. C&C agreed to make payments towards the initial investment that
XperTrans had to make upfront. The joint governance procedures were specified in detail
by the contract including escalation, dispute resolution and change request procedures.
The appointed contract managers on both sides were responsible for overseeing the
development of the project on an ongoing basis. C&C was a very hands-on client and
they were following the project closely at every stage. On the face of it there was not
much wrong in these areas, as far as Harding could see.
40
She decided to dig deeper still, but in another way. Harding re-looked at the case details
and the interviews she had carried out, firstly at the macro level, then at middle and micro
levels. She asked herself how could this outsourcing arrangement secure continuous
commitment from both organizations over several years, despite the obvious question
marks that kept coming up in that period amongst everyone she talked to who had been
involved in the project?
Escalation at the macro-level
The picture that emerged made it clear that the roots of XperTranss commitment to the
C&C project went back to the history of the HRO business line within the supplier
organisation. According to a senior XperTrans manager:
In the early 2000s XperTrans wanted to go into HRO, because it was fashionable and it
seemed to be a big market. They thought it was similar to the other call centre businesses
the company had already been in, but this was a mistake they made. In the US HRO is
still relatively simple, but here in EMEA it is so massively complicated.
In 2007 XperTranss HRO business line was still not profitable and winning a huge
global contract with C&C was perceived as a great opportunity to turn things around.
C&C fitted XperTranss desired client profile and there was a determination to learn from
past mistakes and to do outsourcing with this client well. Furthermore, the project meant
great opportunities for XperTrans locally as well, because the scope for Europe was
massive. As a consequence, it soon became received wisdom that the C&C project was
vital for both XperTrans as a company and for the Hungarian service centre. However, as
the events unfolded, it turned out that the project was vital for XperTranss HRO business
line only.
XperTranss original aim was to implement their US HR outsourcing solution based on
an integrated technology platform with minimal local customisations in all C&C
countries worldwide. Although it soon turned out that for some HR domains (e.g. payroll,
benefits) the US solution could not be easily applied to Europe, the EMEA resources had
no choice but try and make the solution stipulated in the contract work by every means
possible. To make things worse, XperTrans had committed to provide a level of service
that they were not providing to any other client at the time. They also decided to start the
EMEA implementations with a particularly complicated country, namely, in this case,
Germany.
Harding could see that there had been a strong disconnect between what was promised,
the level of in-house knowledge XperTrans had, the timeline that was given and the
actual requirements of the individual countries. The people who had a high level view
and who made the high level judgements simply did not have the detailed information
about what exactly would be required. This resulted in a serious resource planning issue
and a series of middle-level and micro-level problems. A senior operations manager from
XperTrans gave Harding the following summary:
They did not take into consideration the language differences and the fact that each of
the 44 EMEA countries has its own unique legal regulatory system. I believe that the staff
headcount calculations were fundamentally flawed as well. The complexity of the whole
project was not mapped adequately and thus the IT support base of the whole operation
41
could not be calibrated adequately. XperTranss HRO model works in the US, but not in
Europe due to the local complexities and due to cultural differences.
Escalation at the middle-level
The XperTrans EMEA team assigned to the C&C project started to experience
difficulties during the local design workshops. Though they were following the process
development instructions provided by the US team diligently, it was not clear to them
how the documents created at the workshops could be turned to usable work processes at
the end of the day. According to one XperTrans manager:
The atmosphere at the local design workshops was generally very cooperative, but I
think initially people did not really understand what their input was supposed to be At
that point I thought. How on earth will this all come together?
In addition, as more and more countries were postponed to later project waves, it became
a problem in itself that the development team was still working from the information
collected on the local design workshops a long time previously. As one XperTrans
manager told Harding:
Some of the information we used as an input to our work processes were based on threeyear-old C&C decisions which had not been revised as time went by. This of course led
to missed targets and serious escalations and disputes. It was simply unrealistic to expect
that XperTrans was going to provide a service of six sigma accuracy under these
circumstances.
The sheer size of the venture and the high number of different teams working on the
project often created situations when the stakeholders interests clashed. There were no
people from operations involved in the contract crafting process, and as a result,
XperTrans committed to providing unrealistically high service levels in an attempt to
please the client. As the regional operations implementation manager from XperTrans put
it:
Operations should have been involved in the design and in setting the service level
agreements (SLAs), not just sales. What sales people tend to forget is that they should
regard operations as the end user, because it is operations who actually need to run the
service centre when it is fully implemented.
All interviewees commented on the communication problems between the different
working groups. Apparently, the XperTrans team had worked in silos: the solutions
experts designed the processes, the IT specialists tried to translate them into IT
functionality, and finally it was the operations team who had to work along the lines of
those processes. To complicate things further, the IT specialists were all highly paid
contractors who did not understand operations. Being outsiders, IT people did not have
any incentive to spend time on trying to understand operations needs and this of course
impacted the developed solution in a negative way.
Finally, XperTranss practice of evaluating progress and making decisions had been
heavily based on routines. The high-level contact managers never stopped to reassess the
overall viability of the venture as a whole they solely monitored project milestones and
deadlines. According to a XperTrans training manager:
42
We got to a stage where instead of creating processes adequately, people were rushing
to finalise processes towards particular deadlines. We have been replacing many of the
processes created before go-live, because they were created by people who were told to
create processes, but who did not have a stake in creating those processes accurately.
Some of the processes were very, very high level and vague, others were patchy and
incomplete.
Escalation at the micro-level
The macro-level decision to try and implement XperTranss US HR outsourcing model in
all C&C countries worldwide seemed to have had plenty of micro-level consequences. As
a result of the complexity of the project, the ambitious timeline, the extremely strict SLAs,
the flawed resource planning and the inadequate level of in-house expertise, the Wave A
countries experienced serious difficulties after go-live. According to one project
coodinator:
There were a series of seemingly insignificant practical issues which caused huge
problems after we went live. There were numerous translation and data conversion
problems, which caused serious SAP errors in the live system. The translation of
fulfilment items to local languages had not been performed adequately and there were
certain hard copy retention requirements the service centre had no information about. In
some cases, processes were developed without taking into consideration the realities of
the countries in question (e.g. you cannot build a process which relies on the postal
services in South Africa.)
According to one senior C&C manager, XperTrans started to lose credibility with C&C
when they decided to hire external consultants to help them manage the implementation
in the EMEA region:
A company employing consultancy in anything is doing so because it does not have
enough knowledge in-house. And that is fine. But if you are supposed to be a HRO
provider, its a bad sign if you have to hire consultants to tell you about employment law
in certain countries.
Organisational characteristics seemed to have further compounded the situation by
preventing decision-makers from getting a clear picture of the real state of the project. On
the clients side, C&C had not requested early feedback from their own team internally
they waited for almost a year before they looked into the evaluation of the project. On
XperTranss side, the delay in the clients feedback had helped to maintain the
impression that the project was more or less on track. Interestingly enough, there had
been no employee transfers between C&C and XperTrans, which contributed to the low
level of transparency between the two organisations. As XperTrans had not had prior
experience in HRO projects of this scale, they did not have adequate planning,
monitoring and self-assessment procedures in place:
At the beginning a lot of time was spent on having fun at workshops (and a lot of money
was spent on travelling and staying in luxury hotels). But by the time got to 2009, travel
restrictions had to be imposed because we were exceeding budgets; deadlines needed to
be extended and panic started. I just think that there have not been realistic estimates
made of the time and resources needed. (XperTrans training manager).
43
Harding recalled that the contract had failed to take into consideration the circumstances
of the regions outside the USA, and global leadership had not paid attention when
European managers were raising concerns about the viability of the model in EMEA.
Furthermore, XperTrans were not only working in silos, but in many cases the roles and
responsibilities within the teams had not been clarified either. Harding could see that this
made it hard to oversee the real status of the project and to assess the progress made.
According to one senior manager:
The gaps were frustrating: the initial processes did not specify responsibility areas,
decision-making points and exact escalation routes. At go-live no-one had the authority
to initiate a comprehensive clean-up to evaluate what went well and what was missing.
From April 2009 onwards we had been experiencing serious operational issues, but there
was no-one there to put the project back on track. We had to wait until October 2009 for
the stabilisation team to arrive. (XperTrans project coordinator).
In addition to the broken communication lines and the lack of clarity over roles, timing
was another issue. Many functionalities were not finalised until a couple of weeks before
go-live, so operations people had not been able to be properly trained:
We had to wait until go live to see what actually happens in the systems and how. The IT
specialists of course had known it, but they would not share, not even with the
implementations team. We were talking about fictional theoretical systems up until the
very last day before go-live. (Implementation team coordinator)
From the point of view of technology, SAP HR was supposed to be configured in a
standard way globally, but eventually the EMEA context had made country-specific
customisations unavoidable. Due to cost and time constraints, there were a lot of SAP
items not finished in time, while others were configured incorrectly. There was also an
extraordinary lack of resources available for testing the systems. In addition, the testing
did not go well, which made the client very concerned. At the end of the day, inadequate
IT planning had cost XperTrans a lot of money, because it negatively impacted on the
service centres readiness for go-live and it resulted in missing service levels on a regular
basis. Finally, Harding noted that, although the driver of HR outsourcing was supposed to
have been automation, XperTrans operation managers estimated that only around 50 per
cent of the C&C projects service centre processes were automated as of July 2010.
Conclusion
In rereading her notes the same questions kept coming back to Francesca Harding. She
had seen it all too frequently in her career and not just in outsourcing. It seemed to be all
too common in all sorts of organisational ventures. Was she seeing it again here? The
phenomenon of escalation. Why do organisations embark upon questionable outsourcing
ventures and why do they persist with them well beyond an economically defensible
point? How and why does such escalation of commitment occur? And how do you deescalate and turn such projects around? She also was intrigued to see the extent to which
the XperTrans-C&C case followed the better practices she regularly recommended to
clients and which also appeared in recent reviews of outsourcing practices. Harding
turned her mind to writing a report. She had two days of work ahead. She drafted out the
questions she needed to answer:
44
1. How do the client and supplier outsourcing practices exhibited in the XperTransC&C case compare against what is recommended as best or effective practices
by outsourcing advisers and researchers?
2. Why did the escalation of commitment to this IT-enabled HR business project
occur? What de-escalation should have been carried out, and when?
3. How can de-escalation of the project be managed, going forward, and how should
C&C set up its project practices to ensure they do not repeat such an experience?
4. What implications does this experience have for C&C for redesigning its back
office IT function to help business functions like HR get their IT delivered using
both internal expertise and external services?
5. What should C&C do now? Clearly a sourcing strategy had to be developed, and
within it there are immediate challenges to be dealt with and decisions to be made.
While the new supplier had taken over the contract in July 2010, there seemed
little interest on all sides to continue with the project, at least on existing terms.
Should C&C terminate the contract, renegotiate with ANG, bring all HR back inhouse as done with payroll or terminate the contract then relet it through a new
competitive bid process? Each of these options had their own challenges. Harding
knew her hard-won experience was going to be vital if she was going to make
headway on making a recommendation for the way forward.
(Source: Kovasznai, D. and L.P. Willcocks Escalation in global outsourcing projects the Expertrans
C&C BPO case, Journal of Information Technology Teaching Cases 2, 10-16 (March 2012), pp. 17.
Reprinted with kind permission of the authors and Palgrave MacMillan.)
45
46
Shell also set up a global information and advice network known as The Outpost to
provide support for families contemplating a foreign posting. The Outpost has its
headquarters in The Hague and now runs 40 information centres in more than 30
countries. The centre recommends schools and medical facilities and provides housing
advice and up-to-date information on employment, study, self-employment and volunteer
work.
(Source: L.P. Willcocks, using multiple published sources and annual reports.)
47
48
have to be very astute about making sure that those principles are applied in every local
market so that you remain responsive to the needs of people in different environments. 1
(Source: L.P. Willcocks, using multiple published sources, including Hill, C. International Business. (New York,
McGraw Hill, 2010) [ISBN 9780071220835] Chapter 18.)
Quoted in Hill, C. International business. (New York: McGraw Hill, 2010) [ISBN 9780071220835]
Chapter 18.
49