8 Flashcards

1
Q

How can companies adapt and rethink the way they do business?

A

Emergence of circular economies, indispensability of access to digital technologies, rethink purely cost-driven supply chain approaches, focus on and alignment of all stakeholders.

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2
Q

What is international diversification?

A

International diversification is a strategy through which a firm expands the sales of its goods or services across the borders of global regions and countries into different geographic locations or markets.

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3
Q

The transnationality index is the average of what ratios?

A

foreign to total assets, foreign to total sales, foreign to total number of employees.

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4
Q

What are the four strategic motives that are not mutually exclusive?

A

Natural resource seeking, market seeking, efficiency seeking, innovation seeking.

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5
Q

What is natural resource seeking?

A

Acquiring natural resources for own production processes or re-selling to customers.

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6
Q

What is market seeking?

A

Increase sales by leveraging strong customer demand and willingness to pay.

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7
Q

What is efficiency seeking?

A

Improve cost efficiency through higher economies of scale, lower wages, and lower material costs.

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8
Q

What is innovation seeking?

A

Enhance innovative capacity through better human capital, R&D cooperation’s, and innovative ecosystem.

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9
Q

Regarding where to enter, what is the general decision criteria?

A

Consider strategic goals: given that different locations offer different benefits, it is imperative that firms match strategic goals with locations.

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10
Q

What are the location specific advantages?

A

Geographical advantages, agglomeration.

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11
Q

What is cultural distance?

A

The difference between two cultures along some identifiable dimensions.

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12
Q

What is institutional distance?

A

Comparing the regulatory, normative, and cognitive institutions.

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13
Q

What are the first mover advantages?

A

Proprietary, technological leadership; preemption of scarce resources; establishment of entry barriers for late entrants; avoidance of clash with dominant firms at home; relationships and connections with key stakeholders, such as customers and governments.

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14
Q

What are the later mover advantages?

A

Opportunity to free ride on first mover investments; resolution of technological and market uncertainty; first mover’s difficulty to adapt to market.

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15
Q

What are the advantages of being a pioneer? And the disadvantages?

A

Advantages: temporary monopoly; build market entry barriers; can set technological standards and has first access to resources, supply and distribution; move down experience curve before rivals.
Disadvantages: risky; highest costs; competitors benefit from the effort of the pioneer and can adapt more quickly to the market.

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16
Q

What are the advantages of the early follower? And the disadvantages?

A

Advantages: better access to reliable information concerning the market; can learn from pioneer’s previous mistakes; free-rider effects.
Disadvantages: entry barriers; first mover’s success.

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17
Q

What are the late follower advantages? And disadvantages?

A

Advantages: same as the early follower; even more limited risk.
Disadvantages: entry barriers; difficult to attract customers; only small market potential left.

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18
Q

What are the large scale entries?

A

Demonstration of strategic commitment and drawbacks of large-scale entries.

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19
Q

What is demonstration of strategic commitment?

A

Helps to assure local customers and suppliers, and deters potential entrants.

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20
Q

What are drawbacks of large-scale entries?

A

Limited strategic flexibility elsewhere, and potential huge losses.

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21
Q

What are the characteristics of small scale entries?

A

Less costly, focus on accumulating experience, learning by doing while limiting the downside risk, drawbacks of small-scale entries.

22
Q

What are the drawbacks of small-scale entries?

A

A lack of strong commitment, and difficulties in building market share and(or in capturing first mover advantages.

23
Q

What are the two types of entry modes?

A

Non-equity modes and equity modes.

24
Q

What are the non-equity modes?

A

Exports and contractual agreements.

25
Q

What are the equity modes?

A

joint ventures and wholly owned subsidiaries.

26
Q

What is direct exporting?

A

Direct contact with companies located in the foreign market.

27
Q

What is indirect exporting?

A

Intermediary firms provide knowledge and contacts necessary to sell overseas.

28
Q

What is licensing?

A

Arrangement whereby one firm (licensor) permits another (licensee) to use its intellectual property for a specified period of time. In return, the licensor receives a royalty fee from the licensee.

29
Q

What is Franchising?

A

Franchising is basically a specialised form of licensing. Franchisor sells intangible property to another independent entity. Franchisee agrees to abide strict rules. Franchisor receives royalty payment.

30
Q

What is a joint venture?

A

Entity owned by two or more parent companies. Each part contributes assets, has some equity and shares risk.

31
Q

What are the three types of joint venture?

A

Minority JV, 50/50 JV, majority JV.

32
Q

What is the wholly owned subsidiary?

A

Entry mode with highest degree of internationalization: Long-term relocation of value activities/resources to a foreign target country.

33
Q

What are the advantages of joint ventures? And disadvantages?

A

advantages: sharing costs, risks, and profits; access to partners’ knowledge and assets; politically acceptable.
Disadvantages: Divergent goals and interests of partners; limited equity and operational control; difficult to coordinate globally.

34
Q

What are the advantages of Greenfield operations? And disadvantages?

A

Advantages: complete equity and operational control; protection of know-how; ability to coordinate globally.
Disadvantages: Potential political problems and risks; high development costs; add new capacity to industry; slow entry speed (relative to acquisitions).

35
Q

What are the advantages of acquisitions? And disadvantages?

A

Advantages: same as Greenfield; do not add new capacity; fast entry speed.
Disadvantages: Same as Greenfield, except adding new capacity and slow speed; payment of a considerable acquisition premium to target shareholders; post-acquisition integration problems.

36
Q

What is cost reduction?

A

It calls for global integration and standardisation. In both domestic and international competition almost universal.

37
Q

What is local responsiveness?

A

Unique in international competition. Means reacting to different consumer preferences which can tremendously vary around the globe.

38
Q

What are the four strategic choices for MNEs?

A

Global standardisation strategy, transnational strategy, home replication strategy, and localisation strategy.

39
Q

What is global standardisation strategy?

A

The firm develops a standardised product that it sells to all customers throughout the world.

40
Q

What is transnational strategy?

A

The firm attempts to combine the benefits of global integration to achieve low cost with the benefits of being locally responsive.

41
Q

What is home replication strategy?

A

The firm uses the competitive approach it developed in its home market to enter international markets.

42
Q

What is localisation strategy?

A

The firm develops separate operating subsidiaries, each of which develops products to meet the specific needs of the international market it serves.

43
Q

What are the advantages of home replication? And disadvantages?

A

Advantages: leverages home country-based advantages; relatively easy to implement.
Disadvantages: lack of local responsiveness; may result in foreign customer alienation.

44
Q

What are the advantages of localisation? And disadvantages?

A

Advantages: maximizes local responsiveness.
Disadvantages: high costs due to duplication of efforts in multiple countries; too much local autonomy.

45
Q

What are the advantages of global standardisation? And disadvantages?

A

Advantages: leverages low-cost advantages.
Disadvantages: lack of local responsiveness; too much centralised control.

46
Q

What are the advantages of transnational? And disadvantages?

A

Advantages: cost efficient while being locally responsive; engages in global learning and diffusion of innovations.
Disadvantages: Organisationally complex; difficult to implement.

47
Q

What are the advantages of an international division?

A

Firms’ initial expansion abroad, later often phased out; assures international focus receives top management attention; unified approach to international operations.

48
Q

What is the silo effect?

A

International division activities are not coordinated with the rest of the firm, which focuses on domestic activities.

49
Q

What are the advantages of a geographic area structure?

A

Organises the MNE according to different geographic areas; its ability to facilitate local responsiveness is both a strength and a weakness.

50
Q

What are the two types of wholly owned subsidiaries?

A

Greenfield operations and acquisitions.

51
Q

What are the factors of production?

A

Skilled labor, infrastructure, research institutions.