The Strategy of International Business
The Strategy of International Business
The Strategy of International Business
The Strategy of
International
Business
Introduction
Question: What actions can you as a
manager take to compete more
effectively in a global economy?
Answer:
You as a manager must consider the following:
the benefits of expanding into foreign markets
which strategies to pursue in foreign markets
the value of collaboration with global
competitors
the advantages of strategic alliances
What is Strategy?
A firms strategy refers to the actions
that managers take to attain the goals
of the firm
Firms need to pursue strategies that
increase profitability and profit growth
Profitability is the rate of return the
firm makes on its invested capital
Profit growth is the percentage
increase in net profits over time
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What is Strategy?
To increase profitability and profit
growth , firms can:
add value
lower costs
sell more in existing markets
expand internationally
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What is Strategy?
Determinants of Enterprise Value
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Value Creation
To increase profitability, value must
be created for the consumer
The firms value creation is the
difference between P (the price that
the firm can charge for that product
given competitive pressures) and C
(the costs of producing that product)
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Profitability
V
V = Value =
Profitability
P = Price of Product
C = Cost of
Production
Then:
V = f{P,C} or
V=PC
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Value Creation
Profits can be increased by
1.Using a differentiation strategy adding value to a product so that
customers are willing to pay more for it
the higher the value customers
place on a firms products, the
higher the price the firm can
charge for those products
2.Using a low cost strategy lowering costs
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Value Creation
Value Creation
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Strategic Positioning
Michael Porter argues that firms need to choose either
differentiation or low cost, and then configure internal
operations to support the choice.
So, to maximize long run return on invested capital,
firms must:
pick a viable position on the efficiency frontier
configure internal operations to support that
position
have the right organization structure in place to
execute the strategy
Strategic Positioning
Strategic Choice in the International Hotel Industry
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2. Support activities
provides the inputs that allow the primary
activities of production and marketing to occur
information systems, logistics, human resources
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Location Economies
Firms should locate value creation activities where
economic, political, and cultural conditions are most
conducive to the performance of that activity
Location economies are the economies that arise from
performing a value creation activity in the optimal
location for that activity, wherever in the world that
might be
By achieving location economies, firms can
lower the costs of value creation and achieve a low cost position
differentiate their product offering from those of competitors
Experience Effects
The experience curve refers to the systematic
reductions in production costs that occur over the life of a
product
by moving down the experience curve, firms reduce the
cost of creating value
to get down the experience curve quickly, firms can
use a single plant to serve global markets
Learning effects are cost savings that come from
learning by doing
When labor productivity increases
individuals learn the most efficient ways to perform
particular tasks
managers learn how to manage the new operation
more efficiently
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Experience Effects
The Experience Curve
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Experience Effects
Economies of scale refer to the reductions in
unit cost achieved by producing a large volume of
a product
Sources of economies of scale include
spreading fixed costs over a large volume
utilizing production facilities more intensively
increasing bargaining power with suppliers
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Competitive Pressures
Firms that compete in the global marketplace
face two conflicting types of competitive
pressures
the pressures limit the ability of firms to realize
location economies and experience effects, leverage
products, and transfer skills within the firm
Competitive Pressures
Pressures for Cost Reductions and Local Responsiveness
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Choosing a Strategy
Question: How do the pressures for cost
reductions and local responsiveness influence a
firms choice of strategy?
Answer:
There are four basic strategies to compete in
the international environment
1. global standardization
2. localization
3. transnational
4. international
Choosing a Strategy
There are four basic strategies to compete in
international markets
the appropriateness of each strategy depends on
the pressures for cost reduction and local
responsiveness in the industry
Choosing a Strategy
2.Localization - increase profitability
by customizing goods or services so
that they match tastes and
preferences in different national
markets
makes sense when there are
substantial differences across nations
with regard to consumer tastes and
preferences and when cost pressures
are not too intense
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Choosing a Strategy
3. Transnational - tries to simultaneously
achieve low costs through location
economies, economies of scale, and
learning effects, differentiate the
product offering across geographic
markets to account for local differences,
and foster a multidirectional flow of
skills between different subsidiaries in
the firms global network of operations
makes sense when cost pressures are
intense and pressures for local
responsiveness are intense
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Choosing a Strategy
4.International take products first
produced for the domestic market
and sell them internationally with
only minimal local customization
makes sense when there are low cost
pressures and low pressures for local
responsiveness
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Choosing a Strategy
Four Basic Strategies
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The Evolution of
Strategy
An international strategy may not be viable
in the long term
to survive, firms may need to shift to a global
standardization strategy or a transnational
strategy in advance of competitors
The Evolution of
Strategy
Changes in Strategy over Time
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